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Abstract
Network temperatures in district heating systems are important operational factors for obtaining efficient performance. A low network return temperature allows for the recovery of low-grade heat from assets such as condensing boilers, waste incineration, geothermal sources and industrial waste heat. Fluctuations in heating and cooling demands affect the return temperatures of the building substations and in the network. This variability impacts the economic viability and environmental sustainability of the entire system. This paper presents a nonlinear optimization strategy to maintain sufficient energy flows in the network's primary and secondary circuits to achieve low return temperatures from all substations in the network. The defined optimization strategy incorporates the thermodynamic model of the substation and building heating system as opposed to traditional weather-based supply temperature adjustments. The estimated heat demands and tariffs, CO2 penalties are inputs used by the optimizer to find the optimal solution. The total operational expenditure for electricity and gas consumption shows an 18% reduction with 8% reduction in emissions and 6% efficiency improvement when compared with the measured weather-based approach. The developed strategy will aid the network operators in the economic dispatch of heat generation while ensuring the user's thermal comfort.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 114241 |
Pages (from-to) | 1-17 |
Number of pages | 17 |
Journal | Energy and Buildings |
Volume | 313 |
Issue number | 114241 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 15 Jun 2024 |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:This project was supported by funding from VLAIO & FLUX50 in Belgium (ICON project OPTIMESH, Collaboration Agreement - OPTIMESH (HBC.2021.0395)) and the SRP60 project of the VUB. The authors extend their gratitude to the VUB thermal network team for generously sharing data and providing invaluable assistance throughout the research process.
Funding Information:
This project was supported by funding from VLAIO & FLUX50 in Belgium ( ICON project OPTIMESH ). The authors extend their gratitude to the VUB thermal network team for generously sharing data and providing invaluable assistance throughout the research process.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elsevier B.V.
Keywords
- District heating
- indirect substation
- optimization
- network simulation
- heat demands
- estimation
- CO2 emissions
- energy costs
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VLAFLX7: ICON Project OPTIMESH
Bram, S., Messagie, M., Nowe, A., Berghmans, F. & Heuninckx, S.
1/04/22 → 30/09/25
Project: Applied
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SRP60: SRP-Groeifinanciering: A system identification framework for multi-fidelity modelling
De Troyer, T., Runacres, M., Blondeau, J., Bram, S., Bellemans, A. & Contino, F.
1/03/19 → 29/02/24
Project: Fundamental