Innovative Fabric Integrated Thermal Storage Systems and Applications

Ahmed Elsayed, A. Shea, N. Kelly, J. Allison
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Abstract

— In northern European climates, domestic space heating and hot water represents a significant proportion of total primary total primary energy use and meeting these demands from a national electricity grid network supplied by renewable energy sources provides an opportunity for a significant reduction in EU CO 2 emissions. However, in order to adapt to the intermittent nature of renewable energy generation and to avoid co-incident peak electricity usage from consumers that may exceed current capacity, the demand for heat must be decoupled from its generation. Storage of heat within the fabric of dwellings for use some hours, or days, later provides a route to complete decoupling of demand from supply and facilitates the greatly increased use of renewable energy generation into a local or national electricity network. The integration of thermal energy storage into the building fabric for retrieval at a later time requires much evaluation of the many competing thermal, physical, and practical considerations such as the profile and magnitude of heat demand, the duration of storage, charging and discharging rate, storage media, space allocation, etc. In this paper, the authors report investigations of thermal storage in building fabric using concrete material and present an evaluation of several factors that impact upon performance including heating pipe layout, heating fluid flow velocity, storage geometry, thermo-physical material properties, and also present an investigation of alternative storage materials and alternative heat transfer fluids. Reducing the heating pipe spacing from 200 mm to 100 mm enhances the stored energy by 25% and high-performance Vacuum Insulation results in heat loss flux of less than 3 W/m 2 , compared to 22 W/m 2 for the more conventional EPS insulation. Dense concrete achieved the greatest storage capacity, relative to medium and light-weight alternatives, although a material thickness of 100 mm required more than 5 hours to charge fully. Layers of 25 mm and 50 mm thickness can be charged in 2 hours, or less, facilitating a fast response that could, aggregated across multiple dwellings, provide significant and valuable reduction in demand from grid-generated electricity in expected periods of high demand and potentially eliminate the need for additional new generating capacity from conventional sources such as gas, coal, or nuclear.
创新织物集成蓄热系统和应用
-在北欧气候中,家庭供暖和热水占一次总能源使用的很大一部分,通过可再生能源供应的国家电网满足这些需求,为欧盟二氧化碳排放的显著减少提供了机会。然而,为了适应可再生能源发电的间歇性,并避免消费者可能超过当前容量的高峰用电,对热的需求必须与发电脱钩。在住宅结构中储存热量,供几个小时或几天后使用,提供了一种完全将需求与供应分离的途径,并促进了可再生能源发电在当地或国家电网中的大量使用。将热能存储集成到建筑结构中以供以后检索,需要对许多相互竞争的热、物理和实际考虑因素进行大量评估,例如热需求的剖面和大小、存储的持续时间、充放电速率、存储介质、空间分配等。在本文中,作者报告了用混凝土材料的建筑织物的蓄热研究,并提出了影响性能的几个因素,包括热管布局,加热流体流速,储存几何形状,热物理材料性能的评估,并提出了替代存储材料和替代传热流体的研究。将加热管间距从200毫米减少到100毫米,可使储存的能量增加25%,高性能真空绝热的热损失通量小于3 W/m 2,而传统的EPS绝热则为22 W/m 2。相对于中型和轻型替代品,致密混凝土实现了最大的存储容量,尽管100毫米厚度的材料需要5个多小时才能充满电。25毫米和50毫米厚度的层可以在2小时或更短的时间内充电,促进快速响应,可以聚集在多个住宅中,在预期的高需求期间显著减少对电网发电的需求,并有可能消除对传统能源(如天然气、煤炭或核能)的额外新发电能力的需求。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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