scholarly journals District Power-To-Heat/Cool Complemented by Sewage Heat Recovery

Energies ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 364 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcello Aprile ◽  
Rossano Scoccia ◽  
Alice Dénarié ◽  
Pál Kiss ◽  
Marcell Dombrovszky ◽  
...  

District heating and cooling (DHC), when combined with waste or renewable energy sources, is an environmentally sound alternative to individual heating and cooling systems in buildings. In this work, the theoretical energy and economic performances of a DHC network complemented by compression heat pump and sewage heat exchanger are assessed through dynamic, year-round energy simulations. The proposed system comprises also a water storage and a PV plant. The study stems from the operational experience on a DHC network in Budapest, in which a new sewage heat recovery system is in place and provided the experimental base for assessing main operational parameters of the sewage heat exchanger, like effectiveness, parasitic energy consumption and impact of cleaning. The energy and economic potential is explored for a commercial district in Italy. It is found that the overall seasonal COP and EER are 3.10 and 3.64, while the seasonal COP and EER of the heat pump alone achieve 3.74 and 4.03, respectively. The economic feasibility is investigated by means of the levelized cost of heating and cooling (LCOHC). With an overall LCOHC between 79.1 and 89.9 €/MWh, the proposed system can be an attractive solution with respect to individual heat pumps.

2021 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 786-802
Author(s):  
Kertu Lepiksaar ◽  
Kiur Kalme ◽  
Andres Siirde ◽  
Anna Volkova

Abstract District heating has proven to be an efficient way of providing space heating and domestic hot water in populated areas. It has also proven to be an excellent way to integrate various renewable energy sources (RES) into the energy system. In Estonia, biomass covers most of the heat demand, but carbon-intensive fuels are still used to cover peaks and lows. Heat pumps can be a good solution for rural areas, as there is usually plenty of land available for heat pump facilities. In addition, heat pumps require low-grade heat sources such as ambient air, groundwater, lakes, rivers, sea, sewage water, and industrial waste heat. One of the downsides of heat pumps is the need for large investments compared to boilers fired by natural gas and biomass, and electric boilers. This study examines the impact of heat pump use on consumer prices for district heating in rural district heating networks in Estonia.


2021 ◽  
Vol 288 ◽  
pp. 01069
Author(s):  
Omar Abdulhadi Mustafa Almohammed ◽  
Farida Mizkhatovna Philippova ◽  
Fouad Ibrahim Alhajj Hassan ◽  
Nail Farilovich Timerbaev ◽  
Anatoliy Anatolyevich Fomin

The heat pumps system is one of the most remarkable system that is widely used around the world, their capacity is different according to necessity. The energy consumption in those systems will limit their effectiveness. This study will try to prove the positive reactance of the new changes (the additional heat exchanger) on the heat pump work, where the power consumption will reduce about (13-17%). The study includes the experimental results of the laboratory model, which has been manufactured in the laboratories of the technical college of Mosul/Northern technical university-Iraq. The model consists of the heat pump that was improved by using the additional heat exchanger, its duty is to heat the refrigerant before entering the compressor, by using solar energy. The results of this work prove the positive effect of the additional heat exchanger, on the coefficient of performance of the heat pump, in both modes of heating and cooling. The conclusions are useful to the industries that deal with heat pumps.


Proceedings ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 51 (1) ◽  
pp. 11
Author(s):  
Agata Witkowska ◽  
Dorota Anna Krawczyk

In recent years, modern and energy-saving solutions, such as heat pumps or solar collectors, have enjoyed great popularity in the heating and cooling sector, which is conditioned by political and environmental factors. The aim of this paper was to analyze the advisability of the employment of renewable energy sources, such as a heat pump, for heating and cooling in single-family buildings in Poland and Spain. Based on the calculations made for a traditional house, located in two cities with different climatic conditions—Wroclaw and Cordoba, the heat losses and gains were determined. On that basis, the heating and cooling demand for these locations were calculated and next—taking into account the obtained results—reversible air–water heat pumps were selected. In addition, the investment expenditures for purchase and assembly of the heat pumps were estimated, as well as the operating costs of the installation. After a deep analysis, it was found that the total cost of using an air-source heat pump, is almost 44% lower for Cordoba, than for Wroclaw.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (0) ◽  
pp. 1-6
Author(s):  
Artur Rogoža ◽  
Giedrius Šiupšinskas ◽  
Juozas Bielskus

The installation of heat pumps in district heating (DH) systems is one of the most promising technologies to increase the efficiency of heat supply by using renewable energy sources and reducing heat carrier temperatures in the networks. The possibilities of installing heat pumps in DH systems are very wide, but most often the main purpose of their application is to increase the temperature of the supplied heat carrier at the heat substations of individual consumers or their groups. This paper describes a study that analyzed the possibilities of integrating an individual heat pump at a heat substation in a building to reduce the temperature of the heat carrier in the return line. The results of the study revealed the dependences of the reduction of the heat demand of the building from the DH network, the power of the heat pump, the coefficient of performance (COP), and the reduction of the return temperature.


2019 ◽  
Vol 113 ◽  
pp. 03011
Author(s):  
Stefano Barberis ◽  
Paola Robello ◽  
Diego Rattazzi ◽  
Massimo Rivarolo ◽  
Daria Bellotti ◽  
...  

The present research study aims at analysing technical and economic feasible solutions for heat pumps integration in energy districts for polygeneration purpose and particularly to store excess of electricity via Power-to-heat schemes considering that, from previous researchers’ works, thermal storage has been identified as the most remunerative and easy to handle storage technology to maximise self-consumption in polygeneration grids. This technology is already developed and currently employed for conditioning of residential, commercial and industrial buildings. However, studies regarding the analysis of heat pumps’ integration in energy districts for distributed generation are still limited. The potential advantages of its employment in this context are fuel savings, a lower emission level and the possibility to couple it with local renewable energy sources (i.e. solar panels, wind turbines) and traditional generators (i.e. engines, micro gas turbines) in order to increase flexibility in operational terms. In this paper, a performance analysis of the poly-generation energy district installed at the University of Genoa Campus, located in Savona, is analysed throughout a whole year: the model is implemented using a dedicated software tool, developed by Thermochemical Power Group. Different solutions for the integration of the heat pump, including size optimization, are investigated, considering the real data related to the University of Genoa Campus: the final aim of the analysis is to determinate the best operational strategy, minimizing variable costs (i.e. fuel) and evaluating the economic feasibility of heat pump installation in the energy district. This work has been also redacted as a preliminary analysis for solar-coupled HP integration (from a optimized management point of view) to be performed in the demonstration campaign of H2020 ENVISION Project*, where both RINA Consulting and University of Genova collaborate.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (5) ◽  
pp. 1383
Author(s):  
Abolfazl Rezaei ◽  
Bahador Samadzadegan ◽  
Hadise Rasoulian ◽  
Saeed Ranjbar ◽  
Soroush Samareh Abolhassani ◽  
...  

Designing district-scale energy systems with renewable energy sources is still a challenge, as it involves modeling of multiple loads and many options to combine energy system components. In the current study, two different energy system scenarios for a district in Montreal/Canada are compared to choose the most cost-effective and energy-efficient energy system scenario for the studied area. In the first scenario, a decentral energy system comprised of ground-source heat pumps provides heating and cooling for each building, while, in the second scenario, a district heating and cooling system with a central heat pump is designed. Firstly, heating and cooling demand are calculated in a completely automated process using an Automatic Urban Building Energy Modeling System approach (AUBEM). Then, the Integrated Simulation Environment Language (INSEL) is used to prepare a model for the energy system. The proposed model provides heat pump capacity and the number of required heat pumps (HP), the number of photovoltaic (PV) panels, and AC electricity generation potential using PV. After designing the energy systems, the piping system, heat losses, and temperature distribution of the centralized scenario are calculated using a MATLAB code. Finally, two scenarios are assessed economically using the Levelized Cost of Energy (LCOE) method. The results show that the central scenario’s total HP electricity consumption is 17% lower than that of the decentral systems and requires less heat pump capacity than the decentral scenario. The LCOE of both scenarios varies from 0.04 to 0.07 CAD/kWh, which is cheaper than the electricity cost in Quebec (0.08 CAD/kWh). A comparison between both scenarios shows that the centralized energy system is cost-beneficial for all buildings and, after applying the discounts, the LCOE of this scenario decreases to 0.04 CAD/kWh.


2012 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 65
Author(s):  
Alhassan Salami Tijani ◽  
Nazri Mohammed ◽  
Werner Witt

Industrial heat pumps are heat-recovery systems that allow the temperature ofwaste-heat stream to be increased to a higher, more efficient temperature. Consequently, heat pumps can improve energy efficiency in industrial processes as well as energy savings when conventional passive-heat recovery is not possible. In this paper, possible ways of saving energy in the chemical industry are considered, the objective is to reduce the primary energy (such as coal) consumption of power plant. Particularly the thermodynamic analyses ofintegrating backpressure turbine ofa power plant with distillation units have been considered. Some practical examples such as conventional distillation unit and heat pump are used as a means of reducing primary energy consumption with tangible indications of energy savings. The heat pump distillation is operated via electrical power from the power plant. The exergy efficiency ofthe primary fuel is calculated for different operating range ofthe heat pump distillation. This is then compared with a conventional distillation unit that depends on saturated steam from a power plant as the source of energy. The results obtained show that heat pump distillation is an economic way to save energy if the temperaturedifference between the overhead and the bottom is small. Based on the result, the energy saved by the application of a heat pump distillation is improved compared to conventional distillation unit.


Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 954 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hanne Kauko ◽  
Daniel Rohde ◽  
Armin Hafner

District heating enables an economical use of energy sources that would otherwise be wasted to cover the heating demands of buildings in urban areas. For efficient utilization of local waste heat and renewable heat sources, low distribution temperatures are of crucial importance. This study evaluates a local heating network being planned for a new building area in Trondheim, Norway, with waste heat available from a nearby ice skating rink. Two alternative supply temperature levels have been evaluated with dynamic simulations: low temperature (40 °C), with direct utilization of waste heat and decentralized domestic hot water (DHW) production using heat pumps; and medium temperature (70 °C), applying a centralized heat pump to lift the temperature of the waste heat. The local network will be connected to the primary district heating network to cover the remaining heat demand. The simulation results show that with a medium temperature supply, the peak power demand is up to three times higher than with a low temperature supply. This results from the fact that the centralized heat pump lifts the temperature for the entire network, including space and DHW heating demands. With a low temperature supply, heat pumps are applied only for DHW production, which enables a low and even electricity demand. On the other hand, with a low temperature supply, the district heating demand is high in the wintertime, in particular if the waste heat temperature is low. The choice of a suitable supply temperature level for a local heating network is hence strongly dependent on the temperature of the available waste heat, but also on the costs and emissions related to the production of district heating and electricity in the different seasons.


Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 137
Author(s):  
Florian Schlosser ◽  
Heinrich Wiebe ◽  
Timothy G. Walmsley ◽  
Martin J. Atkins ◽  
Michael R. W. Walmsley ◽  
...  

Heat pumps are the key technology to decarbonise thermal processes by upgrading industrial surplus heat using renewable electricity. Existing insight-based integration methods refer to the idealised Grand Composite Curve requiring the full exploitation of heat recovery potential but leave the question of how to deal with technical or economic limitations unanswered. In this work, a novel Heat Pump Bridge Analysis (HPBA) is introduced for practically targeting technical and economic heat pump potential by applying Coefficient of Performance curves into the Modified Energy Transfer Diagram (METD). Removing cross-Pinch violations and operating heat exchangers at minimum approach temperatures by combined application of Bridge Analysis increases the heat recovery rate and reduce the temperature lift to be pumped at the same time. The insight-based METD allows the individual matching of heat surpluses and deficits of individual streams with the capabilities and performance of different market-available heat pump concepts. For an illustrative example, the presented modifications based on HPBA increase the economically viable share of the technical heat pump potential from 61% to 79%.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document