Techno-economic and environmental performances of heating systems for single-family code-compliant and passive houses

In this study the implications of different energy efficiency requirements and heating solutions for versions of a single-family house in southern Sweden is explored. Final energy use, primary energy use, climate impacts and lifecycle cost of heat supply are analyzed for the building versions design...

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Main Author: Dodoo Ambrose
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2019-01-01
Series:E3S Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2019/37/e3sconf_clima2019_03039.pdf
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spelling doaj-5abe71f5a3854282bc382fbc9132dec72021-02-02T06:27:56ZengEDP SciencesE3S Web of Conferences2267-12422019-01-011110303910.1051/e3sconf/201911103039e3sconf_clima2019_03039Techno-economic and environmental performances of heating systems for single-family code-compliant and passive housesDodoo Ambrose0Department of Building Technology, Linnaeus UniversityIn this study the implications of different energy efficiency requirements and heating solutions for versions of a single-family house in southern Sweden is explored. Final energy use, primary energy use, climate impacts and lifecycle cost of heat supply are analyzed for the building versions designed to meet the current Swedish BBR 2015 building code and heated with district heating or exhaust air heat pump. A case where the building is designed to the Swedish passive house criteria and heated with exhaust air heat pump is also analyzed. The district heating is assumed to be supplied from combined heat and power plants using bio-based fuels. For the heat pump solutions, cases are analyzed where the electricity supply is from coal-fired condensing power plant or fossil gas combined cycle power plant as baseline scenario, and from a combination of improved fossil power plants and non-fossil power plants as long-term scenario. The analysis considers the entire energy chain from natural resources to the final energy services. The results show that the BBR heat pump heated building use the most primary energy compared to the other two alternatives. Lifecycle cost is reduced by about 7-12% when district heating is used instead of heat pump for a BBR code-compliant building. This study shows the importance of lifecycle and system-wide perspectives in analyzing the resource efficiency and climate impacts as well as economic viabilities of heating solutions for houses.https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2019/37/e3sconf_clima2019_03039.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dodoo Ambrose
spellingShingle Dodoo Ambrose
Techno-economic and environmental performances of heating systems for single-family code-compliant and passive houses
E3S Web of Conferences
author_facet Dodoo Ambrose
author_sort Dodoo Ambrose
title Techno-economic and environmental performances of heating systems for single-family code-compliant and passive houses
title_short Techno-economic and environmental performances of heating systems for single-family code-compliant and passive houses
title_full Techno-economic and environmental performances of heating systems for single-family code-compliant and passive houses
title_fullStr Techno-economic and environmental performances of heating systems for single-family code-compliant and passive houses
title_full_unstemmed Techno-economic and environmental performances of heating systems for single-family code-compliant and passive houses
title_sort techno-economic and environmental performances of heating systems for single-family code-compliant and passive houses
publisher EDP Sciences
series E3S Web of Conferences
issn 2267-1242
publishDate 2019-01-01
description In this study the implications of different energy efficiency requirements and heating solutions for versions of a single-family house in southern Sweden is explored. Final energy use, primary energy use, climate impacts and lifecycle cost of heat supply are analyzed for the building versions designed to meet the current Swedish BBR 2015 building code and heated with district heating or exhaust air heat pump. A case where the building is designed to the Swedish passive house criteria and heated with exhaust air heat pump is also analyzed. The district heating is assumed to be supplied from combined heat and power plants using bio-based fuels. For the heat pump solutions, cases are analyzed where the electricity supply is from coal-fired condensing power plant or fossil gas combined cycle power plant as baseline scenario, and from a combination of improved fossil power plants and non-fossil power plants as long-term scenario. The analysis considers the entire energy chain from natural resources to the final energy services. The results show that the BBR heat pump heated building use the most primary energy compared to the other two alternatives. Lifecycle cost is reduced by about 7-12% when district heating is used instead of heat pump for a BBR code-compliant building. This study shows the importance of lifecycle and system-wide perspectives in analyzing the resource efficiency and climate impacts as well as economic viabilities of heating solutions for houses.
url https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2019/37/e3sconf_clima2019_03039.pdf
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