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]
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.
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 | Conventional | 55-65% |
Mid-efficiency | 78-84% | |
Condensing | 90-97% | |
Propane | Conventional | 55-65% |
Mid-efficiency | 79-85% | |
Condensing | 88-95% | |
Firewood | Conventional | 45-55% |
Advanced | 55-65% | |
State-of-the-Art | 75-90% |