Applicability evaluation of cast-in-place energy piles based on two-year heating and cooling operation

2021 ◽  
Vol 143 ◽  
pp. 110906
Author(s):  
Sangwoo Park ◽  
Seokjae Lee ◽  
Chihun Sung ◽  
Hangseok Choi
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lazaros Aresti ◽  
Paul Christodoulides ◽  
Georgios A. Florides

<p>Shallow Geothermal Energy, a Renewable Energy Source, finds application through Ground Source Heat Pumps (GSHPs) for space heating/cooling via tubes directed into the ground. There are two main categories of Ground Heat Exchanger (GHE) types: the horizontal and the vertical types. Ground Heat Exchangers (GHEs) of various configurations, extract or reject heat into the ground. Even though GSHP have higher performance in comparison to the Air Source Heat Pumps (ASHPs), the systems high initial costs and long payback period have made it unattractive as an investment. GSHP systems can also be utilized in the buildings foundation in the form of Thermo-Active Structure (TAS) systems or Energy Geo-Structures (EGS), with applications such as energy piles, barrette piles, diaphragm walls, shallow foundations, retaining walls, embankments, and tunnel linings. Energy piles are reinforced concrete foundations with geothermal pipes, whereby the buildings foundations are utilized to provide space heating and cooling. Apart from energy piles, another EGS system can be achieved by the incorporation of the building’s foundation bed as a GHE. Foundation piles are not required in all constructions, but a building’s foundation bed is mandatory. This configuration is still based on the principles of the energy pile.</p><p>Energy piles have yet to be applied in Cyprus and, thus, a preliminary assessment considered and investigated before application would be useful. The potential of the GSHP systems by utilizing the building’s foundation through energy piles is considered here, for a moderate climate such as Cyprus, towards a Zero Energy Building. Typical foundation piles geometry in Cyprus consists of a 10m depth, a 0.4m diameter and reinforced concrete as a grout material, which is used at the foundation bed of the building. A typical dwelling in Cyprus is selected to be numerically modelled in this study. It is a three-bedroom, two-storey house with a 190m<sup>2</sup> total floor area, matching the thermal characteristics of a Zero Energy Building (i.e., U-values of 0.4W/m<sup>2</sup>/K on all walls and ceiling and 2.25 W/m<sup>2</sup>/K on all doors and windows, respectively). A full-scale model is developed in COMSOL Multiphysics software, to examine the energy rejected or absorbed into the ground by taking the heating and cooling loads of the typical dwelling in Cyprus. The convection-diffusion equation for heat transfer is used with the three-dimensional conservation of heat transfer for an incompressible fluid on all domains except the pipes, where a simplified equation is used. Different months in winter and summer are accounted for the simulations and the fluid-in – fluid-out temperature difference is presented. Finally, an economic evaluation of the systems examined above is presented, in order to check its viability. It is concluded that utilizing the dwelling’s foundations can be a better investment than using GHEs in boreholes.</p>


Author(s):  
D. Cerra ◽  
M. Alberdi-Pagola ◽  
T.R. Andersen ◽  
K.W. Tordrup ◽  
S.E. Poulsen

We assess the feasibility of a collective district heating and cooling network based on a foundation pile heat exchanger in a new urban area in Vejle, Denmark. A thermogeological model for the area is developed based on geophysical investigations and borehole information. In tandem with a building energy demand model, the subsurface thermal properties serve as the input for a newly developed computational temperature model for collective heating and cooling with energy piles. The purpose of the model is to estimate the long-term performance and maximum liveable area that the energy piles are able to support. We consider two case studies where residential and office buildings dominate the building mass. We find that three to four floors can be supplied with heating and cooling from the energy piles, depending on the use and design of the buildings.


Author(s):  
Ondřej Šikula ◽  
◽  
Richard Slávik ◽  
Jan Eliáš ◽  
Jakub Oravec ◽  
...  

Equipping the foundation piles with a liquid circuit pipeline makes it possible to use the advantageous ther-mal capacity of the soil for heating and cooling buildings at low cost. The energy performance of the energy-pile in a soil is a transient phenomenon dependent on many parameters, which could be investigate by a computational model. The contribution deals with the description and verification of a new numerical computational software based on a simplified 2D and 2D rotational symmetrical heat conduction model being developed for energy-piles modeling.


2014 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 310-316 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. W. W. Ng ◽  
C. Shi ◽  
A. Gunawan ◽  
L. Laloui

2020 ◽  
Vol 205 ◽  
pp. 05002
Author(s):  
Fatemah Behbehani ◽  
John S. McCartney

This paper focuses on the simulation of the coupled heat transfer and water flow in unsaturated soil layers surrounding a solitary energy pile undergoing heating and cooling cycles typical of a field-scale energy pile. The results indicate that heating leads to drying of the soil surrounding the energy pile, which has been shown in previous studies to result in an increase in axial capacity. During cooling, the degree of saturation was observed to recover to the value present before the start of heating initially, however, it will not recover in the following years. Which will lead to a cumulative effect after several cycles of heating and cooling. Heating and cooling cycles lead to an overall reduction in the thermal conductivity of the subsurface, reducing the heat transfer from the energy pile but also leading to greater storage of heat in the subsurface surrounding the pile.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2 (74) ◽  
pp. 2559-2564
Author(s):  
Chao Shi ◽  
P. A. Van Laak ◽  
Anthony Gunawan ◽  
Charles W. W. Ng

2020 ◽  
Vol 205 ◽  
pp. 06007
Author(s):  
Octavian Bujor ◽  
Iulia Prodan ◽  
Augustin Popa ◽  
Horia Ban

Performance and success of energy geostructures systems are already facts proven by research and practice. The number of implementations is in constant grow and due to their advantages, such systems have started to be implemented in a variety of structural elements. Among the various types, energy piles are the most common type of energy geostructures. However, most of the existing research, experimental sites and case studies refer to energy piles as a foundation element. This paper presents the concept and implementation steps of a different type of energy piles system which is a retaining wall of piles built in Cluj-Napoca, Romania. The paper is based on a real project case study, where large diameter piles are used as retaining wall for an urban excavation on a steep slope with high slope failure potential. The piles from the retaining system have been energy equipped in order to be used as an energy exchange element with the ground for heating and cooling demand of 3 new residential buildings from the same site. The paper will present the concept of an urban energy retaining wall and implementation stages of the project.


2016 ◽  
Vol 846 ◽  
pp. 325-330
Author(s):  
Abraham Kazzaz ◽  
Itai Einav ◽  
Gwénaëlle Proust ◽  
Yi Xiang Gan

Geothermal energy piles have emerged as a cost effective and efficient solution for heating and cooling buildings through renewable energy. Although significant research effort has been dedicated to investigating the performance of these systems, the effect of ground mineralogy has received little attention. This study examines the likely performance of energy piles in dense sand with varying mineralogy. A 3D thermal discrete element model is used to determine the dry thermal conductivity of quartz, feldspar and mica rich sand. This is then used in a 2D finite element analysis to estimate the dissipation/extraction capacity of the soil surrounding a typical energy pile. A 35% increase in quartz content is predicted to result in 51% improvement in the thermal performance of a pile.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (14) ◽  
pp. 4122
Author(s):  
Abubakar Kawuwa Sani ◽  
Rao Martand Singh

Geothermal energy piles (GEPs) are an environmentally friendly heat exchange technology that dualizes the role of the structural foundation pile for load support and in meeting the building heating/cooling need. Energy loops made from high-density polyethylene, which allow heat carrier fluid circulation, are fitted into the pile foundation elements to extract or inject and store heat energy in the soil surrounding the pile. This paper reports the results of a numerical study investigating the long-term behaviour of a group of energy piles embedded in unsaturated soils (sand and clay) under continuous cyclic heating and cooling load. Additionally, two scenarios were investigated where: (1) the whole GEPs were heated and cooled collectively; (2) alternate piles were heated and cooled. It was found that the trend of temperature magnitude at all the observed locations decreases with time as a result of the continuous heating and cooling cycles. Furthermore, subjecting alternate GEPs to the heating and cooling cycles result in lower temperature development in comparison to thermally activating all the GEPs in the group. This is attributed to the applied thermal load, which is 0.5 times that considered in the first case. However, this might not be the case where equal thermal load is applied on the GEPs in the two cases investigated.


IFCEE 2018 ◽  
2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roba Houhou ◽  
Abir Awad ◽  
Salah Sadek ◽  
Shadi Najjar

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