Space heater

A space heater is a device used to heat a single, small area;[1] central heating is used to heat many connected areas, such as the rooms of a house. Space heaters are powered by electricity or a burnable fuel, such as natural gas, propane, fuel oil, or wood pellets. Portable space heaters are usually electric, because a permanent exhaust is needed for heaters which burn fuel.

Brass space heater, c. 1912

Operation

Space heaters are powered by electricity or the combustion of flammable fuel. Combustion space heaters burn flammable fuel, such as natural gas, kerosene, propane, or wood.

Electric space heaters fall into three main categories:[2]

  • Convection heaters pass electricity through a heating element, causing the element to become hot. The elements are either metal or ceramic, and the process is known as joule heating. Heat is transferred to the air in the room by convection. Some heaters have a fan to increase air circulation, but oil-filled space heaters do not have fans.
  • Infrared heaters also pass electricity through a conductive wire, heating it. Most of the heat is radiant heating, rather than convection. The hot wire emits infrared rays, which transfer heat to a solid surface rather than the surrounding air.
  • Heat pumps use the same process as refrigerators and air conditioners, but in reverse. While convective and infrared heaters make heat from electricity, heat pumps move the location of heat. Heat pumps move heat from outside a room to inside, warming it. Many are reversible, able to cool the room by pumping heat out.

Convective heaters

Many residential space heaters use convective heating. They can be divided into two categories: those with a fan (to distribute warmth), and those without a fan. Convective heaters provide constant, diffuse heat to well-insulated rooms.

With a fan

Goldair ceramic heater

Some convective heaters use a fan to help circulate warm air throughout a room.[3] Their heating elements are metal or ceramic and are in direct contact with room air, allowing fan heaters to warm a room quickly.

Without a fan

In convective heaters without a fan, the heating element is surrounded by oil or water. These heaters warm a room more slowly, because the liquid must be heated before the heat can reach the surrounding air. They produce more heat after being turned off, however, because of the hot liquid inside the heater. The risk of fire (and burns) is sometimes less with oil-filled heaters than those with fans,[4][5] but some fan-assisted heaters have a lower risk of fire (and burns) than other oil-filled heaters.[6]

Radiant heaters

Honeywell electric infrared radiant heater

The main advantage of radiant heaters is that the infrared radiation they produce is absorbed directly by clothing and skin, without first heating the air in a space. This makes them suitable for warming people in poorly insulated rooms or outdoors, and allows more distance between people and the heater.

Some of the earliest electric heaters were radiant, consisting of nichrome heating wires held by ceramic or mica insulation at the focal point of a (usually) polished metal reflector. The cost was very low since nothing else, not even a switch, was needed. Later models included a wire guard to prevent accidental contact with the heating wires or the hot ceramic.

The metal reflectors needed to be fairly thick, however; a thin metal housing would get too hot to be safe. Inexpensive mid-20th century heaters were radiant, with the heating wires stretched relatively closely across a larger, thin, metal reflector separated from a thin metal housing. A small fan blew just enough air between the housing and the reflector to cool them, and the main output to the room was radiant heat (not heated air). Stretching the heating wires across a larger area required fewer (expensive) ceramic insulators, and a small fan was cheaper than a larger (or heavier) housing.

Quartz heaters are radiant heaters which are more efficient in the amount and direction of heat, with coiled heating wire inside unsealed quartz tubing. The wires could be thinner (or operate at a higher temperature) than ceramic-supported wires. If the heating elements are at a higher temperature, proportionally more energy is radiated than open-wire heaters.

Halogen heaters have tungsten filaments in sealed quartz envelopes, mounted in front of a metal reflector in a plastic case. They operate at a higher temperature than nichrome-wire heaters but not as high as incandescent light bulbs, radiating primarily in the infrared spectrum. They convert up to 86 percent of their input power to radiant energy, losing the remainder to conductive and convective heat.[7] The halogen cycle reduces darkening of the quartz envelope, extending filament life.

Power sources

Many space heaters (including oil-filled radiators and natural stone heaters) are plugged into an electric power source, most commonly a two-prong – for older models – or three-prong outlet. Appliance power is measured in kilowatts (kW), which permits simple estimation of operating cost per hour (since electricity is billed in kilowatt hours, or kWh).

Safety

Fire, burns, and carbon monoxide poisoning are the main risks of space heaters. About 25,000 fires are caused by space heaters in the United States each year, resulting in about 300 deaths. Roughly 6,000 hospital emergency department visits annually in the US are caused by space heaters, mainly from burns.[8]

Operation

Improper use can increase the risk of fire and burns. Safe operation includes:[9][8][10]

  • Plugging space heaters directly into a wall outlet or heavy-duty (14-gauge wire or larger) extension cord. Light-duty extension cords can overheat and cause fires.
  • Plugs and cords should be checked periodically for cracks or damage, and replaced if needed.
  • Flammable materials, such as curtains, furniture, and bedding, should be kept at least 3 feet (0.91 m) from the heater.
  • Turn off the heater when the last adult leaves the room or goes to sleep. Children and pets should be kept three feet from the heater.
  • Heaters should be placed on a flat, hard, nonflammable surface.
  • Avoid using heaters near flammable materials such as paint or gasoline.
  • Smoke alarms and carbon monoxide detectors should be installed nearby.

Features

No one type of heater is safer than any other type. The risk of fire and burns can vary, depending on model and manufacturer.[6] However, lower surface temperatures generally reduce the risk of fire and burns. Safety features have been added to some space heaters. Safety switches will shut off the heater if a dangerous situation is detected:

  • Tip-over sensors detect if the device is no longer upright (often found in the bases of halogen heaters).
  • Thermal shut-off switches detect if the heating element becomes too hot.
  • Airflow sensors detect if an object is blocking the heater exhaust.

Certifications

In the United States, Underwriters Laboratories' UL 1278[11] (for portable electric space heaters) and UL 1042[12] standards (for portable and fixed baseboard electric heaters) certify heater safety. Although the General Services Administration had Specification W-H-193[13] for electric space heaters, it was replaced in 1995 by the UL standards. Additional information on portable-heater safety may be found at the Department of Energy Energy Efficiency website.[14][15]

Efficiency

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has evaluated a number of space heaters, but none have received its Energy Star label.[16]

See also

References

  1. "the definition of space heater". Dictionary.com. Retrieved 2017-03-13.
  2. Tedeschi, Bob (2015-02-25). "Space Heater Reviews". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2018-01-16.
  3. "Space heater pros and cons Archives". Heater Magazine. Retrieved 2017-03-13.
  4. "Residential Energy Efficiency Space Heaters". Missouri Department of Natural Resources. Archived from the original on 2004-01-28. Retrieved 2015-03-07.
  5. New Fix-it-yourself Manual. Pleasantville, NY: The Reader's Digest Association. 2009. ISBN 0895778718.
  6. "Space Heater Ratings". Consumer Reports. Retrieved 2017-10-19.
  7. 2008 ASHRAE Handbook – Heating, Ventilating, and Air-Conditioning Systems and Equipment (I-P Edition) American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers, Inc., 2008, Electronic ISBN 978-1-60119-795-5, table 2 page 15.3
  8. "Portable Heaters". United States Department of Energy. Retrieved 2017-10-19.
  9. "Why Space Heaters Need Their Space". Consumer Reports. Retrieved 2017-10-19.
  10. "Space heaters involved in 79 percent of fatal home heating fires". National Fire Protection Agency. 2019-02-11. Archived from the original on 2019-02-26. Retrieved 2017-10-19.
  11. Underwriters Laboratories (2000-06-21). "UL 1278, Standard for Movable and Wall- or Ceiling-Hung Electric Room Heaters". Retrieved 2011-10-29.
  12. Underwriters Laboratories (2009-08-31). "UL 1042, Electric Baseboard Heating Equipment". Retrieved 2011-10-29.
  13. General Services Administration (1977-09-13). "W-H-193D, Heater, Space, Electric (Portable)". Retrieved 2011-10-29.
  14. Department of Energy (2011-02-09). "Portable Heaters". Retrieved 2011-10-29.
  15. Ikara, huo (28 October 2016). "Energy Efficient Space Heaters". Home Air. Retrieved 13 March 2017.
  16. Environmental Protection Agency. "Space Heaters". Retrieved 2011-10-29.
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