Energy, Environmental, and Economic Analyses of Geothermal Polygeneration System Using Dynamic Simulations

This paper presents a thermodynamic, economic, and environmental analysis of a renewable polygeneration system connected to a district heating and cooling network. The system, fed by geothermal energy, provides thermal energy for heating and cooling, and domestic hot water for a residential district...

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Main Authors: Francesca Ceglia, Adriano Macaluso, Elisa Marrasso, Carlo Roselli, Laura Vanoli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-09-01
Series:Energies
Subjects:
ORC
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/13/18/4603
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spelling doaj-01b7be5fbdcb4f7486c2695697cb5cd52020-11-25T03:31:19ZengMDPI AGEnergies1996-10732020-09-01134603460310.3390/en13184603Energy, Environmental, and Economic Analyses of Geothermal Polygeneration System Using Dynamic SimulationsFrancesca Ceglia0Adriano Macaluso1Elisa Marrasso2Carlo Roselli3Laura Vanoli4Department of Engineering, University of Sannio, 82100 Benevento, ItalyDepartment of Engineering, University of Naples Parthenope, 80143 Naples, ItalyDepartment of Engineering, University of Sannio, 82100 Benevento, ItalyDepartment of Engineering, University of Sannio, 82100 Benevento, ItalyDepartment of Engineering, University of Naples Parthenope, 80143 Naples, ItalyThis paper presents a thermodynamic, economic, and environmental analysis of a renewable polygeneration system connected to a district heating and cooling network. The system, fed by geothermal energy, provides thermal energy for heating and cooling, and domestic hot water for a residential district located in the metropolitan city of Naples (South of Italy). The produced electricity is partly used for auxiliaries of the thermal district and partly sold to the power grid. A calibration control strategy was implemented by considering manufacturer data matching the appropriate operating temperature levels in each component. The cooling and thermal demands of the connected users were calculated using suitable building dynamic simulation models. An energy network dedicated to heating and cooling loads was designed and simulated by considering the variable ground temperature throughout the year, as well as the accurate heat transfer coefficients and pressure losses of the network pipes. The results were based on a 1-year dynamic simulation and were analyzed on a daily, monthly, and yearly basis. The performance was evaluated by means of the main economic and environmental aspects. Two parametric analyses were performed by varying geothermal well depth, to consider the uncertainty in the geofluid temperature as a function of the depth, and by varying the time of operation of the district heating and cooling network. Additionally, the economic analysis was performed by considering two different scenarios with and without feed-in tariffs. Based on the assumptions made, the system is economically feasible only if feed-in tariffs are considered: the minimum Simple Pay Back period is 7.00 years, corresponding to a Discounted Pay Back period of 8.84 years, and the maximum Net Present Value is 6.11 M€, corresponding to a Profit Index of 77.9% and a maximum Internal Rate of Return of 13.0%. The system allows avoiding exploitation of 27.2 GWh of primary energy yearly, corresponding to 5.49∙10<sup>3</sup> tons of CO<sub>2</sub> avoided emissions. The increase of the time of the operation increases the economic profitability.https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/13/18/4603heating and cooling networkpolygeneration systemgeothermal energy communityORCgeothermal energyenergy district
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Francesca Ceglia
Adriano Macaluso
Elisa Marrasso
Carlo Roselli
Laura Vanoli
spellingShingle Francesca Ceglia
Adriano Macaluso
Elisa Marrasso
Carlo Roselli
Laura Vanoli
Energy, Environmental, and Economic Analyses of Geothermal Polygeneration System Using Dynamic Simulations
Energies
heating and cooling network
polygeneration system
geothermal energy community
ORC
geothermal energy
energy district
author_facet Francesca Ceglia
Adriano Macaluso
Elisa Marrasso
Carlo Roselli
Laura Vanoli
author_sort Francesca Ceglia
title Energy, Environmental, and Economic Analyses of Geothermal Polygeneration System Using Dynamic Simulations
title_short Energy, Environmental, and Economic Analyses of Geothermal Polygeneration System Using Dynamic Simulations
title_full Energy, Environmental, and Economic Analyses of Geothermal Polygeneration System Using Dynamic Simulations
title_fullStr Energy, Environmental, and Economic Analyses of Geothermal Polygeneration System Using Dynamic Simulations
title_full_unstemmed Energy, Environmental, and Economic Analyses of Geothermal Polygeneration System Using Dynamic Simulations
title_sort energy, environmental, and economic analyses of geothermal polygeneration system using dynamic simulations
publisher MDPI AG
series Energies
issn 1996-1073
publishDate 2020-09-01
description This paper presents a thermodynamic, economic, and environmental analysis of a renewable polygeneration system connected to a district heating and cooling network. The system, fed by geothermal energy, provides thermal energy for heating and cooling, and domestic hot water for a residential district located in the metropolitan city of Naples (South of Italy). The produced electricity is partly used for auxiliaries of the thermal district and partly sold to the power grid. A calibration control strategy was implemented by considering manufacturer data matching the appropriate operating temperature levels in each component. The cooling and thermal demands of the connected users were calculated using suitable building dynamic simulation models. An energy network dedicated to heating and cooling loads was designed and simulated by considering the variable ground temperature throughout the year, as well as the accurate heat transfer coefficients and pressure losses of the network pipes. The results were based on a 1-year dynamic simulation and were analyzed on a daily, monthly, and yearly basis. The performance was evaluated by means of the main economic and environmental aspects. Two parametric analyses were performed by varying geothermal well depth, to consider the uncertainty in the geofluid temperature as a function of the depth, and by varying the time of operation of the district heating and cooling network. Additionally, the economic analysis was performed by considering two different scenarios with and without feed-in tariffs. Based on the assumptions made, the system is economically feasible only if feed-in tariffs are considered: the minimum Simple Pay Back period is 7.00 years, corresponding to a Discounted Pay Back period of 8.84 years, and the maximum Net Present Value is 6.11 M€, corresponding to a Profit Index of 77.9% and a maximum Internal Rate of Return of 13.0%. The system allows avoiding exploitation of 27.2 GWh of primary energy yearly, corresponding to 5.49∙10<sup>3</sup> tons of CO<sub>2</sub> avoided emissions. The increase of the time of the operation increases the economic profitability.
topic heating and cooling network
polygeneration system
geothermal energy community
ORC
geothermal energy
energy district
url https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/13/18/4603
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