Review of Polygeneration Schemes with Solar Cooling Technologies and Potential Industrial Applications
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Historical Evolution of Cooling Equipment and Main Solar Cooling Technologies
3. Polygeneration Schemes Integrated with Solar Cooling Technologies
3.1. Cooling Heat/Electricity Generation (CH/E)
3.2. Cooling, Heat and Electricity Generation (CHG)
3.3. Cooling, Heat, Electricity Generation and Desalinization (CHGD)
4. Discussion of Potential Applications of Solar Cooling Technologies
4.1. Costs of Polygeneration Integrated Cooling Systems
4.2. Potential Applications of Cooling Systems in the Industry
5. Conclusions
- Alternative solar cooling technologies have energy limitations due to their low COP and limiting their overall efficiency. However, the hybridization of cooling devices to reduce heat transfer losses allows the COP to be maximized. In this sense, STR and TEC devices combined with conventional refrigeration equipment and facades must be evaluated to determine their viability.
- PV-VCC or PV-HPR configurations outperform typical SC-TES systems and thermal cooling equipment schemes due to the economic viability and SPB of fewer than 10 years. The reason is that conventional refrigeration equipment is preserved, and excess electricity production is used by other equipment connected to the electrical network. However, the economic viability of photovoltaic systems must be evaluated considering simultaneous heat and cold thermal loads to determine the sizing limits of PVR systems in industrial applications.
- The literature presented confirms that the viability of alternative equipment depends on its adaptation to polygeneration schemes that allow CE and CH to be supplied. The schemes evaluated for simultaneous production of electricity and cold have managed to reduce up to 64.7% of primary energy. However, the operating and investment costs of the system remain high. Therefore, they require CO2 taxes to achieve a financial balance with an SPB of fewer than 20 years.
- The CHG polygeneration schemes designed to meet the demand of the ORC generator and the absorption chiller allow reaching solar fractions of up to 84% with an SPB of fewer than 13 years. The reason is that DHW and heating are obtained from the residual heat of the ORC subsystem.
- The CHGD schemes have been evaluated based on their exergetic performance but, the systems must be studied and adapted to meet energy demand conditions in the industrial and residential sectors. In this sense, district refrigeration systems can be convenient scenarios to assess the viability of the system. On the other hand, the mining industry sector is conditioned to reduce its environmental footprint in extraction processes. In the same way methods for evaluating the economic benefits of reducing CO2 have been extensively detailed; assessing the positive ecological impact of CHGD systems in the mining industry is pertinent.
- In Industries with processes that have different demand levels for cooling, a consensus has not been established regarding heat integration schemes that improve the technical and economic performance of cooling systems powered by thermal energy. In this sense, solar cooling has been partially evaluated for industrial applications, obtaining favorable results in small-scale agriculture and for the wine sector. However, it is necessary to deepen the technological limits and cooling times required by the precooling and crystallization processes in the food industry.
- The solar system made up of collector fields and thermal storage is responsible for the largest share of the investment expenses, which can be as high as 70%. Meanwhile, alternative refrigeration equipment can reach up to 30% of the initial investment cost. The costs of solar thermal and photovoltaic technologies tend to be updated based on IEA publications, while storage costs are estimated using different methodologies. However, the potential for using thermal refrigeration equipment reported in the literature is based on local prices that, in some cases, are more than eight years old. In this sense, to obtain results with less economic uncertainty, a cost update of thermal cooling equipment is necessary.
- Finally, the economic viability of the systems is subject to balance in the size of the solar field with the savings of primary energy. In this sense, optimization studies focus on the system’s sizing based on the TMY. However, the industrial trend is in a transition towards a dynamic diagnosis of refrigeration systems. In other words, operation of the system is based on the dynamic prediction of thermal loads to automate energy dispatch strategies and detect cooling system faults. In this sense, it is reasonable to propose forecasting methods that will allow the adaption of alternative refrigeration equipment powered by solar energy.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Ref. | Technology | COP | Work Flow | Scope | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
[111] | ADS-PH | 0.371 | 0.293 | 85 | 14 | Zeolite 13X/CaCl12 | The 13X zeolite/CaCl2 pair work reduces the COP of the equipment but increases the specific cooling power by 30% compared to the silica gel. |
[112] | ADS-PH | NA | 0.139 | 100 | 26 | Nano-activated carbon/methanol | Adding carbon nanoparticles (NMAC) to activated carbon increased the adsorption capacity by 33%. |
[113] | ADS-PH | NA | 0.329 | 110 | 5 | Silica gel/water, ethanol, NH3 | The adsorbents with the best technoeconomic performance and the minor environmental damage for air conditioning and cold storage applications are AC, ACF and SiO2. |
[114] | ADS-PH | 1–2 | 0.24 | 53,1–75,3 | 16 | Zeolite 13X/CaC12 | Using the electrostatic coating method with 13X zeolite/CaCl2 coated adsorbents and adding a preheat phase, the cooling capacity improves by 92.5%. |
[115] | ADS-PH | 0.8 | 0.63 | 94.85 | 9.85 | Silica gel/water | A device was designed to operate continuously during night and day by adapting three adsorption/desorption beds that are activated depending on the energy available in the generator. |
[116] | AD-PH | NA | 0.47 | 80 | - | Zeolite/Water | A method was developed to estimate the performance of an ADS composed of multiple modules by a full-scale analysis of one tube containing multiple tubes with hundreds of fins. |
[117] | ADS-PH | NA | 0.14 | 92.35 | - | Activated carbon/methanol | A numerical model was developed that can be adapted with another type of adsorbate to evaluate the performance of a tubular adsorption system with solar energy. |
[118] | ADS-CH | 0.15 | 0.15 | 105 | - | CaCl2/AC-Ammonia | A prototype ice maker was evaluated for producing 50 kg of ice in summer. The system can operate without valve control, in a simple combination with the storage tank. The prototype could be viable for industrial or residential applications. |
[119] | ADS-CH | 1.4 | 0.33 | 70 | 10 | NaBr/EG-NH3 | An adsorption chiller was designed that uses a compound made of sodium bromide impregnated in expanded graphite as a sorbent and ammonia as a coolant. |
[120] | ADS-CH | 0.656 kW/kg | 0.5 | 110 | 0 | SrC12—expanded graphite composite | The strontium chloride (SrCl2)/NH3 working pair was evaluated, impregnating the expanded graphite SrCl2 to determine the thermodynamic equilibrium properties with different concentrations and fitting a kinetic model employing a small-scale experimental prototype |
[121] | ADS-PCM | C: 47W & H: 47 | 0.42 | NA | NA | LiCl | The performance of a chiller prototype for cooling and heating applications that integrates ADS equipment with vacuum tubes and phase change material is evaluated. |
[122] | ABS-SE | 3.2 | 0.53 | 180 | 13 | NH3 | A compact ABS (NH3) equipment was designed with mass exchangers and monolithic microscale exchange for space conditioning. |
[123] | ABS-SE | NA | 0.61 | - | - | NH3 | The generator was redesigned by changing the heat exchanger for a column of a bundle of tubes that allows a distributed heat transfer to improve waste and low-quality heat utilization. |
[124] | GAX Split ABS | 39.8 | 0.55–0.95 | 160 | −30 | NH3 | A heat recovery configuration of an ABS-GAX split was developed for unified operation for space heating, air conditioning, and refrigeration applications. |
[125] | ABS-DL | 2.5 | 0.3 | 7 | NH3 | A double lift cycle is experimentally evaluated under different operating conditions that modify the COP, including generator temperature, fan speed, and evaporator temperature. | |
[126] | ABS Semi-Gax | 2.20–2.33 | 0.455–0.428 | 7 | NH3 | The COP can be optimized by adjusting the intermediate pressure through the split ratio at each air temperature. | |
[127] | ABS GAX-DL | 1.88 | 0.25 | −5 | NH3 | The design of a double lift ABS device with two self-adjusting pumps was evaluated to operate with evaporation temperatures below 0 ° C. | |
[128] | ABS GAX-DL | 39.2 | 0.308 | −30 | NH3 | The maximum internal heat recovery of an ABS-DL coupled to mass is evaluated by the pinch method. | |
[129] | ABS Semi-Gax | NA | 0.494 | 90 | 5 | NH3 | Five air absorption refrigeration prototypes were evaluated to determine design parameters based on the risk of crystallization. |
[130] | EJE-ABS | 10 | 0.95 | 185–215 | 7 | LiBr | ABS-EJC works with two heat sources at different temperatures; a 20% increase in COP was achieved compared to ABS-SE. |
[131] | EJE-ABS | 100 | 1.65 | 246.4 | 12.5 | LiBr | An EYC-ABS system integrated with parabolic trough collectors was evaluated and it was determined that the performance reached an increase of up to 60.78% compared to conventional ABS. |
[132] | SE-DE | 91–134 | 0.88 | 105–150 | 8.4–7 | LiBr | The hybridization allows increasing the COP from 0.79 to 1.09 with inlet temperatures lower than 155 °C. |
SEH | EH | F | I1 | I2 | UR | PGU | HVAC | I3 | Production | P | S | E | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
PTC | BM | HP | S2–S3–S4 | ABS | c | (DHW-HE)-SC | • | • | [107] | ||||
ETC | G | HP | S2–S3–S4 | ABS | c | (DHW-HE)-SC | • | [108] | |||||
ETC | G | HP | S2–S3–S4 | ABS | WCH | c | (DHW-HE)-SC | • | [108] | ||||
ETC | G | HP | S2–S3 | ABS | WCH | b | HE-SC | • | [109] | ||||
ETC | G | HP | S2–S3 | ABS | b | HE-SC | • | [109] | |||||
PV | TE | a–b | SC-PW | • | [166,167] | ||||||||
PTC | S1 | ABS | ORC | a–b | SC-PW | • | • | [168] | |||||
G | HP | S2 | ADS | ORC | a–b | SC-PW | • | • | [169] | ||||
G | HP HR | S1 | ADS | ORC | a–b | SC-PW | • | • | [169] | ||||
ETC | S1 | ABS | ORC | a–b | SC-PW | • | • | [170] | |||||
ETC | G | HT | S2–S3 | ABS | b | HE-SC | • | [171] | |||||
PV | AWHP | HX | S1 | TE | b–d | (DHW-HE)-SC | • | • | [172] | ||||
CPC | EH | S1–S3 | ABS | VCC | c | (DHW-HE)-SC | • | [172] | |||||
ETC | S3–S4 | ABS | EHP | a–c | (DHW-HE)-SC | • | • | [173] | |||||
ETC | BM | HP HX | S3–S5 | ABS | WCH | b | DHW-SC | • | [174,175,176] | ||||
ETC | BM | HT HX | S2–S4 | ABS | b–d | HE-SC | • | [176] | |||||
ETC PV | G | HT HP | S1–S3 | ABS | STR | VCC | a–c,d | SC-PW | • | • | [177] | ||
ETC | AWHP | G | S2 | ABS | c | DHW-SC | • | [178] |
SEH | F | I1 | I2 | UR | PUG | HVAC | I3 | Production | P | S | E | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
PVT CPVT | G | HP HX | S1–S2–S3–S4 | ADS ABS | WCH | c–f | (DHW-HEP-HE-SC-PW) | • | • | [180] | ||
G | HX | S2 | ABS | STR | b–f | (HE-SC-PW) | • | • | [181,182] | |||
ETC PV | HT | S2–S3 | ABS | VCC | c–f | (DHW-HE-SC-PW) | • | • | [183] | |||
ETC PV | G | HT | S2–S3 | ABS | VCC | c–f | (DHW-HE-SC-SP) | • | • | [183] | ||
PV | RHP | c–f | (DHW-HE-SC-PW-SP) | • | • | [183] | ||||||
ETC PV | G-BM | HP HX | S3–S4 | ABS | ORC | b–f | (DHW-SC-PW) | • | • | [184] | ||
ETC | GT | HT HP | S3-S4 | ABS | ORC | b–f | (DHW-SC-PW) | • | • | • | [185] | |
DC PVT | G | HR | S2-S3 | ABS | ORC | RHP | b-e-f | (HE-SC-PW) | • | • | [186] | |
DC | GPS-BM | HR | S1–S2–S6 | ABS | ICE | b–f | (DHW-HE-SC-PW) | • | • | [187] | ||
PVT PV | G | HT HR | S1–S2–S3 | ABS | ORC | a–f | (DHW-HE-SC-PW-SP) | • | • | [188] |
SEH | F | I1 | I2 | UR | PUG | I3 | Generation | P | S | E | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
DC | HR | S1 | ABS | ORC | b | (DW-SC-PW) | • | • | [189,190] | ||
DC | G | HT HX HR | S2,S3 | ABS | ORC | b | (DW-HE-SC-PW) | • | • | • | [191,192] |
ETC | HX HR | S3 | ADS | ORC | b–d | (DW-SC) | • | • | [193,194] |
Ref. | Sche. | App. | City | Space [m2] | Cooling Tech. | Solar Tech. | Area [m2] | Total Cost [k€] | Key Indicators | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
[108] | CH/E | Office Building | Naples | 1600 | ABS-SE | - | ETC | 230 | 470.28 | : 0.27 PES: 0.444 SPB: 31.3 yr SF: 0.876 |
1600 | ABS-SE | - | ETC | 100 | 656.56 | : 0.263 PES: 0.408 SPB: 32.3 yr SF: 0.885 | ||||
6400 | ABS-SE | - | ETC | 230 | 442.79 | : 0.268 PES: 0.424 SPB: 25.2 yr SF: 0.882 | ||||
[109] | CH/E | Hotel | Sydney | 11,624 | ABS-SE | 1023 | PTC | 3.134 | 589.96 | : 0.7 PES: 0.60 ER: 138 tCO₂/yr; SPB: 58.444 yr SF: 0.63 |
[109] | CH/E | Hotel | Sydney | 11,624 | ABS-DE | 1163 | PTC | 3.278 | 611.83 | : 1.31 PES: 0.65 ER: 153.85 tCO₂/yr SPB: 52.017 yr SF: 0.74 |
[109] | CH/E | Hotel | Sydney | 11,624 | ABS-TE | 1163 | PTC | 3.426.2 | 640.54 | : 1.62 PES: 0.69 ER: 166.43 tCO₂/yr; SPB: 63.82 yr SF: 0.72 |
[107] | CH/E | School cooling | Marseille | - | ABS-DE | 250 | PTC | 800 | - | PES: 0.956SPB: 13.7 yrSF: 0.966 |
[109] | CH/E | Office | Sydney | 11,624 | ABS-SE | 1023 | PTC | 1.986 | 454.60 | : 0.68 PES: 0.39 ER: 72.64tCO₂/yr SPB: 63.14 yr SF: 0.69 |
11,624 | ABS-DE | 1163 | PTC | 1.885 | 471.69 | : 1.31PES: 0.31_ER: 81.58tCO₂/yrSPB: 58.17 yrSF: 0.76 | ||||
11,624 | ABS-TE | 1163 | PTC | 1.912 | 485.36 | : 1.61 PES: 0.37 SF: 0.75 ER: 97.80 tCO₂/yr SPB: 71.19 | ||||
[160] | CH/E | District cooling | Qatar | - | ABS | 12,000 | FPC | 5.342.2 | 1.746.96 | - |
[170] | CH/E | Soil cooling (Alstroemeria) | Kuala Lumpur | - | ABS-SE | 3.5 | ETC | 22 | 12.44 | ER: 4.5 tCO2 Annual Savings: 977.57 € SPB: 14.2 yr |
[170] | CH/E | Soil cooling (Alstroemeria) | Kuala Lumpur | - | ABS-SE | 7 | ETC | 44 | 19.13 | ER: 32 tCO₂ Annual Savings: 1880.11 € SPB: 10.8 |
[172] | CH/E | Heating and cooling space | Abu Dhabi, Kjakarta, Amman, Milan, New York | 1246 | RHP | 160 | CPC | 500 | 165.53 | LCOE: 0.122 €/kWh |
1246 | RHP | 160 | PV | 497 | 211.37 | LCOE: 0.0939 €/kWh | ||||
1246 | VCC | 160 | - | - | 170.17 | LCOE: 0.0921 €/kWh | ||||
1246 | RHP | 160 | - | - | 120.49 | LCOE: 0.1029 €/kWh | ||||
1246 | RHP | 160 | - | - | 487.92 | LCOE: 0.0994 €/kWh | ||||
1246 | VCC+ ABS | 160 | CPC | 500 | 274.45 | LCOE: 0.0784 €/kWh | ||||
1246 | RHP | 160 | PV | 297.23 | LCOE: 0.0355 €/kWh | |||||
[173] | CH/E | School cooling | Naples | 2250 | ABS-SE | 300 | PTC | 200 | - | : 0.458 PES: 0.647 SPB: 19 yr SF: 0.462 |
Milan | 2250 | ABS-SE | 300 | PTC | 200 | - | : 0.433 PES: 0.524 SPB: 31.4 yr SF: 0.325 | |||
Trapani | 2250 | ABS-SE | 300 | PTC | 200 | - | : 0.461 PES: 0.614 SPB: 18.9 yr SF: 0.263 | |||
[174] | CH/E | Residential Building | Dubai | 400 | ABS-DE-Air cooled | 109.8 | PTC | 290.9 | 1381.1 | ER: 303.68tCO₂/yr SPB: 2.49 yr Energy savings: 519 MWh/yr |
400 | ABS-DE-Air cooled | 76 | PTC | 193.9 | 1025.3 | ER: 139.7 tCO₂/yr SPB: 4.75 yr Energy savings: 175.64 MWh/hr | ||||
400 | Air cooled | 366 | - | - | 713.3 | - | ||||
[175] | CH/E | Ecological Restaurant | Jinan | - | ABS-SE | - | PTC | 1538 | - | SF: 0.27 |
Loudi | - | ABS-SE | - | PTC | 1538 | - | SF: 0.25 | |||
Yinchuan | - | ABS-SE | - | PTC | 1538 | - | SF: 0.28 | |||
Lhasa | - | ABS-SE | - | PTC | 1538 | - | SF: 0.32 | |||
Hyderabad | - | ABS-SE | - | PTC | 1538 | - | SF: 0.24 | |||
[176] | CH/E | Wine industry | Curicó | - | ABS-SE | 200 | FPC | 250 | 329.99 | Annual Savings: 29758.62 €SPB: 10 |
- | ABS-SE | 200 | FPC | 500 | 379.11 | Annual Savings: 29991.24 €SPB: 12 | ||||
- | ABS-SE | 200 | FPC | 750 | 428.23 | Annual Savings: 30390.68 €SPB: 14 | ||||
- | ABS-SE | 200 | FPC | 1000 | 477.35 | Annual Savings: 30935.62 € SPB: 15 | ||||
[178] | CH/E | Space cooling building | Cagliari | 2460 | ABS-SE | 70 | ETC | 230 | 300 to 400 | : 0.84 to 0.87 |
[177] | CHG | Office Building | San Francisco Boston Miami | 46,320 | ABS-SE | 530 | - | - | 836.66 | - |
46,320 | ABS-SE | 700 | - | - | 788.99 | - | ||||
46,320 | ABS-SE | 830 | - | - | 1090.5 | - | ||||
[185] | CHG | Hotel Building | Changsha | - | ABS | - | - | - | - | Cost Savings: 31.59% |
[186] | CHG | Hotel Building | Ischia | - | ABS-SE | 30 | ETC | 25–80 | 91.24 | SPB: 7.6 : 0.592 |
[179] | CHG | Building | Cairo | 25,8129 | TEC-Cell Enthalpy Wheel | - | PVSP | - | 26.49 | Annual Savings: 2613.82 € |
Alexandria | 25,8129 | TEC-Cell Enthalpy Wheel | - | PVSP | - | 26.49 | Annual Savings: 3162.24 € | |||
Hurghada | 25,8129 | TEC-Cell Enthalpy Wheel | - | PVSP | - | 26.49 | Annual Savings: 2019.61 € | |||
[180] | CHG | Office Building | Berlin | - | ABS-ADS | 258.7 | CPVT | 2,069 | 1005.5 | Annual Savings: 1710.21 € SPB: 12.5 yr SF: 0.82 Energy savings: 1,839 MWh/yr |
Bordeaux | - | ABS-ADS | 237 | CPVT | 1896 | 822.06 | Annual Savings: 1979.26 €SPB: 10.3SF: 0.63Energy savings:2,126 MWh/yr | |||
Athens | - | ABS-ADS | 325.6 | CPVT | 2821 | 1875.9 | Annual Savings: 3778.85 € SPB: 16.7SF: 0.78 Energy savings: 4059 MWh/yr | |||
[188] | CHG | District cooling | Risch-Rotkreuz | 8,500 | AD-ABS | 1517.6 | PTC | 50–76 | 67.50 k€/yr | - |
N° | Equipment | Type | Cost Functions | Unit | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
F1 | ABS | DE (small size) | USD | [157] | |
F2 | ABS | DE (large size) | × | USD | [157] |
F3 | ABS | SE | AUD | [109] | |
F4 | ABS | DE | AUD | [109] | |
F5 | ABS | TE | AUD | [109] | |
F6 | ADS | High temperature | € | [180] | |
F7 | ADS | Low temperature | € | [180] | |
F8 | ABS | — | € | [180] | |
F9 | ADS | — | €/kW | [184] | |
F10 | ABS | SE | €/kW | [184] | |
F11 | ABS | DE | €/kW | [184] |
Ref. | Process | Product | Initial T [°C] | Final T [°C] | Cooling Time [min] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
[196] | Forced-air cooling | Cabbage, spinach | 23 | −1 | 1.13 | 188 |
[196] | High flow hydrocooling | Cabbage, spinach | 23 | −1 | 0.67 | 64 |
[196] | Low flow hydrocooling | Cabbage, spinach | 23 | −1 | 0.78 | 84 |
[196] | Air blast cooling | Cooked pork | 70 | 4 | - | 565 |
[196] | Water immersion cooling | Cooked pork | 70 | 4 | - | 855 |
[197] | Cooling on crystallization | Shortening production | 60 | 12 | - | 100 |
[197] | Cooling on crystallization | Shortening production | 60 | 12 | - | 100 |
Ref. | Country | Apply | Process | Cooling System | NC [kW] | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
[198] | England | Supermarket | Supermarket | Comfort Temp. | - | Air-cooled system | 125–400 |
[198] | England | Supermarket | Supermarket | Comfort Temp. | - | Water-cooled system | 130–180 |
[198] | England | Supermarket | Supermarket | Comfort Temp. | - | Hybrid system | 125–180 |
[199] | Italy | Winemaking | Barrel cellar | 15–16 | 2 | Air-cooled water chiller | 458 |
[199] | Italy | Winemaking | Wine Storage warehouses | 20–21 | 2 | Air-cooled water chiller | 458 |
[199] | Italy | Winemaking | Alcoholic fermentation | 18 | 2 | Air-cooled water chiller | 458 |
[199] | Italy | Winemaking | Malolactic fermentation | 17 | 2 | Air-cooled water chiller | 458 |
[199] | Italy | Winemaking | Cold (static) stabilization pre-filtration | −4 | −7 | Air-cooled water chiller with heat recovery | 466 |
[199] | Italy | Winemaking | Cold (static) stabilization cold new wine | 2 | −7 | Air-cooled water chiller with heat recovery | 466 |
[199] | Italy | Winemaking | Wine dynamic cooler | −4 | Air-cooled direct expansion cooler | 197.6 | |
[200] | China | Mine | Coal | <30 | 18 | Icy refrigeration | 6250 |
[200] | China | Mine | Coal | <30 | 18 | Icy cooling system | 12,000 |
[200] | China | Mine | Coal | <30 | 18 | Centralized refrigeration system on the surface | 10,000 |
[200] | China | Mine | Coal | <30 | 18 | Centralized refrigeration system underground | 6250 |
[201] | Australia | Mine | Coal | 22 | - | Cooled air stream | 4000 |
[202] | China | Mine | Coal | 30–32 | 7.03 | Ventilation and cooling system | 16,250 |
[203] | South Africa | Mine | Gold | <27.5 | Refrigeration plant | 3000 to 16,400 | |
[203] | South Africa | Mine | Gold | <27.5 | - | Variable speed drive (VSD) | 816 |
[204] | South Africa | Mine | Gold | <27.5 | 3–9 | Refrigeration plant | 39,000 |
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Villarruel-Jaramillo, A.; Pérez-García, M.; Cardemil, J.M.; Escobar, R.A. Review of Polygeneration Schemes with Solar Cooling Technologies and Potential Industrial Applications. Energies 2021, 14, 6450. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14206450
Villarruel-Jaramillo A, Pérez-García M, Cardemil JM, Escobar RA. Review of Polygeneration Schemes with Solar Cooling Technologies and Potential Industrial Applications. Energies. 2021; 14(20):6450. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14206450
Chicago/Turabian StyleVillarruel-Jaramillo, Andrés, Manuel Pérez-García, José M. Cardemil, and Rodrigo A. Escobar. 2021. "Review of Polygeneration Schemes with Solar Cooling Technologies and Potential Industrial Applications" Energies 14, no. 20: 6450. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14206450
APA StyleVillarruel-Jaramillo, A., Pérez-García, M., Cardemil, J. M., & Escobar, R. A. (2021). Review of Polygeneration Schemes with Solar Cooling Technologies and Potential Industrial Applications. Energies, 14(20), 6450. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14206450