The Use of Serpentine Earth Coils in Ground Coupled Heat Pump Systems

1984 ◽  
Vol 106 (4) ◽  
pp. 438-446
Author(s):  
P. D. Metz

A research program at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) has studied ground coupling, i.e., the use of the earth as a heat source/sink or storage medium for solar-assisted and stand-alone heat pump systems. As part of this research program, five serpentine earth coil experiments were operated between December 1978 and September 1981. Heat was added to or removed from the earth coils according to weekly schedules based on computer simulations of solar-assisted and stand-alone, ground-coupled heat pump systems operated in the local (New York) climate. Each earth coil was operated according to a different control strategy. This paper presents experimental results from these experiments for the period December 1978 to April 1981, and compares these results to those generated by a comptuer model, GROCS, developed at BNL. The model is found to provide a reasonably good fit to the data, for the most part, using the experimental undisturbed soil thermal properties. In some cases, the use of a lower soil thermal conductivity provides a better fit, particularly during summer months when heat was added to the ground. Thus, given soil properties, GROCS can be used to predict earth coil performance. If given earth coil performance, the model can predict soil thermal properties. Serpentine earth coils are found to be suitable to provide auxiliary heat or heat rejection for solar heat pump systems. In fact, earth coil-based, stand-alone, ground-coupled heat pump systems can provide all heat needed for winter space heating and all heat rejection required for summer space cooling with no need for any auxiliary heating. Subfreezing winter operation is necessary for shallow earth coils in cold climates. No deleterious effects to the ground were observed from the long-term operation of these experiments.

Author(s):  
Yuefen Gao ◽  
Songling Wang ◽  
Guoqiang Zhang

Ground-coupled heat pump systems use the ground as a heat source and sink either with vertical or horizontal ground heat exchangers (GHXs) to supply heating in winter and cooling in summer. The ground heat source and sink has a near constant temperature, which is well suited to ground-coupled heat pumps, giving them consistent performance, regardless of the outdoor temperature. However, when the heat extracted from and rejected to the ground has great imbalance, the ground temperature will deviate from the original temperature with a long term operation. The deviation can reduce GHX performance greatly. As China has vast territory with variety climate, the annual cooling loads and heating loads are different at different places. And the imbalance between the extracted heat and the rejected heat also varies at different places. Therefore, it is necessary to analysis the regional suitability of the ground-coupled heat pump systems. The imbalance between the extracted heat and the rejected heat is analyzed by taking several typical cities in different climates. The new concepts of the Imbalance Ratio and the Extracted Heat to Rejected Heat Ratio are introduced as the weight factors to measure the imbalance in the ground. The values of the Imbalance Ratio and those of the Extracted Heat to the Rejected Heat Ratio are calculated. The optimum range of the Imbalance Ratio is recommended based on the vast investigation of the ground-coupled heat pumps. Some supplemental systems are put forward to supply heat in winter or to reject heat in summer at the places existing serious heat imbalance. The study is very meaningful to the scientific application of the ground-coupled heat pump systems in China.


1982 ◽  
Vol 104 (4) ◽  
pp. 366-372 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. D. Metz

A research program at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) has studied ground coupling, i.e., the use of the earth as a heat source/sink or storage element, for solar-assisted heat-pump systems. As part of this research program, four buried tank experiments were operated between December 1978 and March 1981 in order to determine the feasibility of ground-coupled tanks in these systems. Heat was added to or removed from the tanks according to a weekly schedule derived from computer simulations of solar heat-pump systems in the local (New York) climate. Each tank was operated according to a different control strategy. This paper presents experimental results from these tank experiments for this period, and compares these results to those generated by a computer model, GROCS, developed at BNL. The model is found to be valid, for the most part, using undisturbed soil thermal properties which provide the best fit to the data most of the time. Its results are very sensitive to soil thermal conductivity during periods of large heat addition to the tanks. A ground coupled tank is found to be desirable in series solar-assisted heat-pump systems. However, no important carry-over of summer-collected heat to winter was observed.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (5) ◽  
pp. e0252056
Author(s):  
Hang Zou ◽  
Peng Pei ◽  
Jin Zhang

Ground-coupled heat pump (GCHP) is used to recovery shallow geothermal energy, a widely distributed green energy source. Due to the imbalance between heat rejection and extraction, heat buildup underground is commonly associated with the long-term operation of GCHPs, which undermine system performance. Heat buildup intrinsically results the irreversibilities (entropy production) in subsurface heat sink, in which thermodynamic and transport properties are largely influenced by hydrogeologic properties, especially the existence of fractures and groundwater. This study investigates the influence of water flow in fractures on the thermodynamic performance of a single borehole heat exchanger (BHX) and heat buildup in the underground heat exchange zone (UHXZ). Potential influence factors were screened out, and new terms were proposed to quantify the scale of fractures and available heat and cold in the heat sink. Governing equations were established to calculate the impacts of vertical and horizontal fractures on the heat exchange rate in BHX as well as on the heat flow across the UHXZ. The analysis results show that water flow in fractures can significantly enhance heat transfer, reduce required number of boreholes, mitigate heat buildup and reduce irreversibilities underground. The results also suggest that the role of fracture scales and water velocity in GCHP operation should be carefully evaluated. Therefore, detailed hydrogeological survey is necessary. The study results provide a guide on more accurately evaluating the risk of heat buildup and how to take advantage of hydrogeological characters to improve the performance of GCHPs.


2012 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 664-668
Author(s):  
Min Zheng ◽  
Bai-yi Li ◽  
Zheng-yong Qiao

2021 ◽  
Vol 40 ◽  
pp. 102339
Author(s):  
Connor Dacquay ◽  
Hikari Fujii ◽  
Ed Lohrenz ◽  
Hartmut M. Holländer

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document