Heat pump cooling explained

A practical guide to how a heat pump works inside your home, including comfort cooling, heat emitters and room-by-room system design.

A heat pump can provide efficient heating in winter and, when designed correctly, comfort cooling in summer. The right setup depends on your property, your rooms and the type of heat emitters used throughout the home.

Can a heat pump cool your home?

A heat pump is best known for providing efficient heating, but some systems can also help cool your home during warmer months.
A reversible air source heat pump can work in two directions. In winter, it brings heat into the home. In summer, it can run in reverse, removing heat from inside the property and moving it outside.
This means a heat pump system can often provide:
  • Heating in winter
  • Cooling or air conditioning in summer
  • Room-by-room temperature control when designed with the right emitters

In the UK, this type of cooling is often called comfort cooling rather than traditional air conditioning, but the principle is very similar.

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How heat pump cooling works

In cooling mode, a reversible heat pump works by:

  1. Taking heat from inside your home
  2. Moving that heat outside
  3. Circulating cooler air back indoors
  4. Removing moisture created during the cooling process
  5.  
    For effective cooling, the system needs to be designed correctly. This usually includes a suitable indoor fan coil or ducted system, a correctly sized heat pump and a condensate drain to remove moisture created during the cooling process.

What is needed for effective cooling?

A cooling-ready heat pump system needs more than the outdoor unit. The design must include the right indoor emitters and practical details such as drainage.
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Correctly sized heat pump

The unit needs to be designed around the property, the rooms being used and the expected heating and cooling demand.
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Suitable indoor emitters

Fan coil units or ducted systems are usually needed where cooling is required, as not every heat emitter is suitable for cooling.
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Condensate drainage

Cooling creates moisture, so the system needs a way to safely remove condensation form each emitter.

Choosing the right emitters

The emitters are the parts of the system that heat or cool each room. These could include underfloor heating, fan coil units, trench heating or other suitable options.

The best choice depends on the property and how the system will be used. For example, some homes only need heating, while others need both heating and cooling. A new build may allow for more hidden systems, while a retrofit may need a more practical room-by-room approach.

When designing a heat pump system, key questions include:

• Do you need heating only, or heating and cooling?
• Is the property a new build or retrofit?
• Do rooms need a fast response, or gentle cooling?
• Do you prefer hidden emitters or visible units?
• Which rooms are most likely to need cooling?

Things to consider

Underfloor heating with cooling has a slower response time than some other options. Underfloor heating is mainly used for heating rather than cooling but is still an effective cooling option especially with a tiled floor.

Fan coil units

Fan coil units are one of the main emitter types used when a reversible heat pump is designed to provide both heating and cooling.

They are often a good choice for:

  • Bedrooms
  • Home offices
  • Loft rooms
  • South-facing rooms

Benefits of fan coil units

Fan coil units can provide both heating and cooling. They respond quickly, which makes them useful in rooms where temperatures change throughout the day. They are usually smaller than traditional radiators and are well suited to comfort cooling.

Things to consider

Fan coil units contain a fan, so there may be some sound when they are running. They also need an electrical supply and, when used for cooling, a condensate drain to remove moisture safely.

 

Trench heating/cooling and trench convectors

Trench heating/cooling can be used in areas where wall space is limited or where large areas of glazing can make temperature control more difficult.

It is often a good choice for:

  • Rooms with large glazing
  • Sliding doors
  • Conservatories
  • Open-plan areas with limited wall space

Benefits of trench heating/cooling

Trench heating/cooling is hidden within the floor, which keeps the system discreet. It can help reduce cold downdraughts near large windows or doors and can be paired with heat pump systems.

Things to consider

Trench heating/cooling can cost more than some other emitter options. It is also more complex to install and requires enough floor depth, so it may be better suited to certain properties or renovation projects.

 

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