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Annual fuel utilization efficiency

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Serobers (talk | contribs) at 15:00, 21 October 2015 (Standard Efficiency furnaces are above 78% AFUE per the current NAECA minimum. Furnaces are not available with efficiencies lower than this Federally mandated standard efficiency. This has been the case for over 20 years.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The annual fuel utilization efficiency (AFUE; pronounced 'A'-'Few' or 'A'-'F'-'U'-'E') is a thermal efficiency measure of combustion equipment like furnaces, boilers, and water heaters. The AFUE differs from the true 'thermal efficiency' in that it is not a steady-state, peak measure of conversion efficiency, but instead attempts to represent the actual, season-long, average efficiency of that piece of equipment, including the operating transients.[1] It is a dimensionless ratio of useful energy output to energy input, expressed as a percentage. For example, a 90% AFUE for a gas furnace means it outputs 90 BTUs of useful heating for every 100 BTUs of natural gas input (where the rest may be wasted heat in the exhaust). A higher AFUE means higher efficiency.

The method for determining the AFUE for residential furnaces is the subject of ASHRAE Standard 103. A furnace with a thermal efficiency (ηth) of 78% may yield an AFUE of only 64% or so, for example, under the standard's test conditions. When estimating annual or seasonal energy used by combustion devices, the AFUE is the better efficiency measure to use in the calculations.[2] But for an instantaneous fuel consumption rate, the thermal efficiency may be better.

Note that the theoretical limit for a conventional furnace's instantaneous efficiency is 100%, whereas a heat pump used for building heating may exceed 100%. For example, a COP of 1.5 is equivalent to 150%. Heat pumps are readily available for electric and gas sources.[3] So from a theoretical perspective, in some use cases the name "efficiency" may be misleading.

Some typical AFUE numbers[4]
Fuel Furnace/boiler AFUE
Heating oil Cast iron (pre-1970) 60%
Retention head burner 70–78%
Mid efficiency 83–89%
Electric heating Central or baseboard 100%
Geothermal heat pump see COP
Air-source heat pump see HSPF
Natural gas
Standard efficiency 78–84%
Condensing 90–97%
Propane
Standard efficiency 79–85%
Condensing 88–95%
Firewood Conventional 45–55%
Advanced 55–65%
State-of-the-Art 75–90%

See also

References

  1. ^ Systems and Equipment volume of the ASHRAE Handbook, ASHRAE, Inc., Atlanta, GA, USA, 2004
  2. ^ Heating and Cooling of Buildings, Kreider and Rabl, McGraw-Hill, New York, 1994
  3. ^ http://www.robur.com/products/e3-systems/e3-a/technical-form.html (accessed 2014-12-14)
  4. ^ Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, ed. (2008) [1993], A Guide to Residential Home Heating (PDF) (2008 ed.), ISBN 978-0-660-19848-4, retrieved 2009-03-23