An air-to-air heat pump works by transferring heat between the outside air and the inside air to either heat or cool a building. Here's a simple breakdown:
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Heating Mode (winter):
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Even when it's cold outside, there is still some heat energy in the air.
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The heat pump extracts that heat using a refrigerant that evaporates at low temperatures.
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The refrigerant absorbs heat from the outside air, becomes a gas, and is compressed, which raises its temperature even more.
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This hot refrigerant gas moves inside and releases its heat into the indoor air through a heat exchanger (basically like a radiator).
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After releasing the heat, the refrigerant cools down, turns back into a liquid, and the cycle repeats.
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Cooling Mode (summer):
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The cycle is reversed.
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The heat pump extracts heat from inside the building and releases it to the outside.
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This cools down the indoor air, working like an air conditioner.
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Main parts of an air-to-air heat pump:
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Outdoor unit: captures or dumps heat to the outside air.
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Indoor unit: releases or captures heat inside the house.
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Compressor: increases the pressure and temperature of the refrigerant.
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Expansion valve: lowers the pressure of the refrigerant so it can absorb heat again.