Mine water as a resource: space heating and cooling via use of heat pumps

2003 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 191-198 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Banks ◽  
Helge Skarphagen ◽  
Robin Wiltshire ◽  
Chris Jessop
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>


2019 ◽  
Vol 123 ◽  
pp. 01046 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivan Sadovenko ◽  
Oleksandr Inkin ◽  
Nataliia Dereviahina ◽  
Yuliia Khryplyvets

The aim of the paper is justification of the economically efficient technological scheme for development of a thermal resource of “Stashkov” mine after its closure, ensuring the maintenance of a favorable energy and ecological-hydrogeological regime in the region. A geotechnological scheme of environmentally safe usage of mine water was justified, involving water pumping up to the surface, heat removal and water reverse pumping into the seams. The suggested circulation system is characterized by an increased energy balance, since it is used to extract almost all the groundwater heat, as well as part of the heat of host rocks. In order to estimate the effectiveness of usage of this technology, calculations of usage of mine water as a source of low-potential energy in heat pumps in comparison with other alternatives (groundwater and surface water streams) using Mathcad software were performed, and it was established that this gives great conversion coefficients of mine water. A geotechnological scheme of usage of mine water was developed, which considers heat transfer, filtration direction, velocity and temperature of groundwater during pumping and removal of heat-transfer fluid from an aquifer for heating and cooling of buildings. The mechanism of heat removal in a flooded rock massif of amine during liquidation was studied with justification of environmentally safe usage of mine water.


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