Fifth-Generation District Heating and Cooling Networks Based on Shallow Geothermal Energy: A review and Possible Solutions for Mediterranean Europe
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
- Scopus database.
- Web-Of-Science database.
- Proceedings of the European Geothermal Conference.
- Publication Office of the European Union (web portal).
- EUR-Lex Europe (web portal).
- Free web search engines.
- Growing demand for cooling due to climate change, especially in the South [1].
3. Review of Synergies between SGE and DHC Networks
3.1. Specific SGE Solutions Applied to Urban Environments
3.2. Modern DHC Installations: 5GDHC Networks
- Change from centralized generation to distributed generation. This feature favors an easier extension of the network, although at a higher investment cost per connection point.
- Almost null heat losses due to transport in cost-effective pipe circuits. Since the water/brine temperature is that of the surrounding ground, thermal losses become a minor concern. Therefore, the use of pre-insulated pipes can be avoided, contributing to an important cost reduction. As a counterpart, heat transport by water/brine at ambient temperature implies generally much lower gap between supply and return temperature, thus requiring higher water/brine flows in larger-diameter pipes if compared to high-temperature networks.
- Buildings conceived either as providers or consumers (prosumers) of heat. Apart from purchasing heat from a network for heating purposes, the same building can now be a supplier by selling the heat rejected when a cooling demand takes place. Monitoring and smart metering are indispensable, analogously as in the case of prosumer electricity, since heat flow requires bidirectional meters in 5GDHC networks, so customers can benefit from purchasing heat or selling it at the right time during the day.
- There is no longer a centralized source of energy, but a new figure known as the “Balancing Unit” (BU) [88,95] which acts as a subsidiary heat provider/absorber of a bidirectional network since, in 5GDHC networks, the priority heat sources and sinks correspond to the buildings themselves. Four generic scenarios can be defined for the BU:
- Ideal Scenario: H&C loads are compensated between buildings simultaneously, so the heat supplied and rejected in the network cancel each other out.
- Quasi-ideal Scenario A: H&C loads are compensated, although they do not take place simultaneously.
- Quasi-ideal Scenario B: H&C loads are not compensated, although they take place simultaneously.
- Realistic scenario: H&C loads are not compensated between buildings and do not take place simultaneously.
- Two pipes are enough. 5GDHC networks are bidirectional, which means that heat can flow into and out from buildings. An important distinction is made between “directed” and “non-directed” medium flow. In directed networks, a central pump station is used to always circulate water/brine in the same direction. The supply line comes from the BU at an ambient temperature, either for heating or cooling purposes, and the return line goes towards the BU. In directed networks, even 1-pipe scheme is possible (and simpler) if all buildings are topologically connected in series [96]. Under this configuration, the return temperature of a building becomes the supply temperature of the next one. However, for this configuration to be advantageous, the H&C demands need to be well balanced between adjacent buildings, and the extension of the grid is not as simple as in the previous case, where building would be connected in parallel. In non-directed networks, each station has its own, decentralized pump station. A warm pipe (15–25 °C) and a cool (5–15 °C) pipe act as the supply and return channels of heating demand substations, while for cooling demand it is just the opposite (see Figure 3). The direction of the heat exchanging fluid with respect to the BU is determined by the balance between H&C demand at each moment.
- No restriction in building typology. Although highly efficient buildings are preferable nowadays under any circumstance, 5GDHC networks do not impose constrains on the type of building for its connection to them. Different degrees of thermal insulation or different emitter technologies (low or high temperature radiators, radiant floor, fan coils, etc.) can be addressed with tailored HP solutions. Therefore, in the same network, most modern and efficient buildings can coexist along with historical buildings or tertiary buildings of any type or age, with all of them requiring water supply temperatures ranging from 40 °C to 90 °C [97].
- In 5GDHC networks, electricity is inextricably linked to heat. Unlike traditional DH networks, where steam or water is the true energy vector by itself, in 5GDHC networks, ambient-temperature water/brine can be an energy vector only if combined with electrically driven HPs. Therefore, parallel concerns about renewable and decentralized electricity generation are indispensable in designing and planning efficient 5GDHC networks.
- Increased operation complexity. For the operation of bidirectional networks, supply temperature or hydraulic pressure setpoints are not useful anymore. The temperatures of the warm and cool ring can oscillate according to the admissible range of HP performance and the BU (e.g., a BHE field). The actual temperature must be determined by an optimization function. This function considers the balance between H&C demands and a chosen optimization parameter (minimum operational cost, minimum emissions, or maximum HP efficiency, for instance). On the side of hydraulic pressure control, directed networks can be operated as traditional networks. In non-directed networks, the volumetric flow and its direction are mostly determined by the set of decentralized circulation pumps.
- Flexibility for different business models. In 5GDHC networks, old DH business models cannot apply anymore since electricity and heat are interlinked with prosumers, so new retail tariffs, investment costs, ownership, and operation schemes are necessary. As mentioned above, bidirectional metering of both electricity and heat is the most important technical prerequisite to establish any possible business model for 5GDHC networks. On one extreme, an external investor could own the network, the BU, and the set of decentralized HPs. Then, a one-time connection fee would be applied, a €/kWh price would be charged for consumption, and a different one would be charged for production. At the other extreme, a community of prosumers can associate to invest in a 5GDHC network, letting new prosumers connect to the grid by sharing its costs and ownership, and bearing the investment cost of their own HP. In between these two extremes, there are plentiful appealing choices. The following are some examples:
- ○
- When the BU is based on a UTES system, a private company that owns the whole infrastructure could charge only for the heating while offering cooling for free as a stimulus to recharge heat depletion.
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- The network and the BU can be owned by a private company, while an energy service company (ESCO) would own the set of building substations. The final clients would pay only for H&C at an agreed price which, in theory, should be lower than traditional alternatives (gas boilers + air conditioning), but still high enough for the ESCO to obtain a payback for its initial investment plus an additional profit.
- ○
- The network, the BU, and the substations could be all owned by separate entities. The network would pay to the BU owner, and the final prosumers would pay to the network owner. Under this scheme, the owner of the BU would pursue to maximize its use with compensated H&C loads on a seasonal basis. The network owner would seek, as its main business driver, to achieve a balance set of H&C demands on an hourly basis (reducing the need to use the BU). From the side of final prosumers, their main driver would be to compensate their own H&C demands instantly (reducing the need to use the network).
- Specific supply costs for H&C. It is defined as a yearly indicator, expressed in €/MWhth/year.
- Exergy efficiency. It is defined as the ratio between total useful exergy and the total exergy expenditures.
- System COP. This indicator is analogous to that of an individual HP, but it includes the influence of self-produced electricity by means of solar PV panels, denoting the expected close relationship between 5GDHC and renewable electricity generation:
- Specific CO2 emission. It is expressed as tones of CO2 equivalent divided by MWh of thermal energy (heating + cooling). Here, the emission corresponds to the primary energy used, so it depends on the CO2 factor of the power system mix.
3.2.1. Overview of Concept Definition
- Progressive decrease in the supply temperature of the heat carrying fluid (steam/water) in the network.
- Progressive increase in the efficiency of the system due to a decrease in thermal losses, both in the generation and distribution of the thermal energy.
- Progressive transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy sources as the primary energy consumed by the network.
3.2.2. The Synergistic Effect of SGE+5GDHC Networks
- Smart and synchronized operation of decentralized HPs permits a lower aggregated peak load in the network, so the total size of the GHEs can be minimized, allowing much lower installation costs, reduced land utilization, lower impact to the ground, and minimized thermal interferences [112].
- When integrated in new urbanizing plans, its implementation is the most efficient and cost-effective. However, in existing urban areas, this option might be the only one possible to exploit the SGE resource.
- As in the general case of 5GDHC defined previously, shared GHEs permit the uptake of new business and operation models.
3.3. Specific Stimulus Paths for SGE and 5GDHC
3.3.1. Economic Incentives
3.3.2. Local (Thermal) Energy Communities
3.3.3. Progress in the Learning Curve through Design and Modeling Tools
- Heat sources or heat plants. A main distinction is made between permanent heat plants (heat production continuously exceeds the network demand) and non-permanent heat plants (heat production fluctuates over time).
- Distribution networks. Usually, it is composed of two pipes (supply and return) for DH networks, or four pipes for DHC networks. Modeling can be based upon hydraulic or thermal balance. A primary circuit is established between the heat plants and the buildings, and a secondary circuit is established between the buildings and the heat transfer elements (radiators, radiant floor, fan coils, etc.). The topology of the network is mostly radial (or tree-type), where the heat plant is at the topological center or root from which the pipes branch out and connect to the buildings [141].
- End-users (consumers). End-users can also be understood as the thermal loads or demand profiles. For their modeling, basic deterministic methodologies are used, such as the degree-day method [142] and the bin method [143]. Specific building physical behavior modeling requires specific software tools, such as Energy Plus [144] or TRNSYS [145]. Alternatively, stochastic methodologies include regression models [146] and artificial neural networks [147].
4. Opportunities for SGE and 5GDHC Networks in Mediterranean Europe
4.1. Heating and Cooling Demands and Future Trends
4.2. Why SGE and 5GDHC Are Especially Attractive in Mediterranean Europe?
4.3. Contextual Issues Concerning the Heating and Cooling Sector in Mediterranean Europe
- Ground-Med (Advanced ground source heat pump systems for H&C in Mediterranean climate) EU project [177] demonstrated that a yearly SPF over five was feasible in Mediterranean climates. In this case, SPF would comprise global heat and cold production, taking into account the electrical power consumption of external and internal circulation pumps, i.e., SPF3.
- LEGEND (Low Enthalpy Geothermal Energy Demonstration cases for Energy Efficient Buildings in Adriatic area) EU project [24] was devoted to promoting the deployment of SGE-based solutions, contributing to enhancing building energy efficiency in the Adriatic sea area.
- FLEXYNETS (Fifth generation, Low temperature, high ExergY district heating and cooling NETworkS) EU project [27], mostly participated by Italy and Spain, is the first European project where decentralized HP networks for H&C were introduced as the future of DHC networks. A Microsoft Excel -based tool was generated for simplified design and sizing of such networks.
- RELaTED (REnewable Low TEmperature District) EU project [178] pursues a demonstration of the feasibility of using ultra-low-temperature (<45 °C) DHC networks for building complexes at a district scale in four European locations with “complementary operation environments”: Denmark, Estonia, Serbia, and Spain. The specific pilot project in Spain consisted of substituting an existing network powered by gas boilers (accounting for 650 kWth) with new RTTs based on renewable and waste heat sources [179].
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Ref. | Name | Language | IDE | GUI | 5GDHC | SGE | Sources | Network | End-Users |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
[148] | DiGriPy | Phyton | X | X | X | X | OK | X | |
[149] | DHNx | Phyton | X | X | X | X | OK | X | |
[150] | Modelica | Dymola | X | OK | X | OK | OK | ~ | |
[141] | Modelica | X | OK | X | ~ | OK | OK | ||
[151] | Matlab | Simulink | X | OK | ~ | X | OK | X | |
[109] | TEGSim | Matlab | X | OK | OK | ~ | OK | X | |
[152] | Octave | X | OK | ~ | OK | OK | X | ||
[153] | SIM-VICUS | C++ | X | OK | X | X | OK | OK | |
[154] | FLEXYNETS tool | - | Excel | ~ | OK | ~ | ~ | OK | ~ |
[155] | Fluidit HeatTM | Phyton | OK | ? | X | OK | OK | X | |
[156] | THERMOS tool | Clojure | OK | X | X | X | OK | OK | |
[157] | nPro | Phyton | OK | OK | X | OK | OK | OK |
3 | 3.5 | 4 | 4.5 | 5 | 5.5 | 6 | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
3 | 50.0 | 44.4 | 40.0 | |||||
3.5 | 62.5 | 55.6 | 50.0 | 45.5 | ||||
4 | 75.0 | 66.7 | 60.0 | 54.5 | 50.0 | |||
4.5 | 77.8 | 70.0 | 63.6 | 58.3 | 53.8 | |||
5 | 80.0 | 72.7 | 66.7 | 61.5 | 57.1 | |||
5.5 | 81.8 | 75.0 | 69.2 | 64.3 | ||||
6 | 83.3 | 76.9 | 71.4 |
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García-Céspedes, J.; Herms, I.; Arnó, G.; de Felipe, J.J. Fifth-Generation District Heating and Cooling Networks Based on Shallow Geothermal Energy: A review and Possible Solutions for Mediterranean Europe. Energies 2023, 16, 147. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16010147
García-Céspedes J, Herms I, Arnó G, de Felipe JJ. Fifth-Generation District Heating and Cooling Networks Based on Shallow Geothermal Energy: A review and Possible Solutions for Mediterranean Europe. Energies. 2023; 16(1):147. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16010147
Chicago/Turabian StyleGarcía-Céspedes, Jordi, Ignasi Herms, Georgina Arnó, and José Juan de Felipe. 2023. "Fifth-Generation District Heating and Cooling Networks Based on Shallow Geothermal Energy: A review and Possible Solutions for Mediterranean Europe" Energies 16, no. 1: 147. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16010147
APA StyleGarcía-Céspedes, J., Herms, I., Arnó, G., & de Felipe, J. J. (2023). Fifth-Generation District Heating and Cooling Networks Based on Shallow Geothermal Energy: A review and Possible Solutions for Mediterranean Europe. Energies, 16(1), 147. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16010147