Modelling and Analysis of Plate Heat Exchangers for Flexible District Heating Systems

Seamless integration of district heating (DH) and power systems implies their flexible operation, which extends their typical operational boundaries and, thus, affects performance of key components, such as plate heat exchangers (PHXs). Despite that the heat transfer in a PHX is regulated by mass fl...

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Main Author: Serafym Chyhryn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-10-01
Series:Energies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/12/21/4141
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spelling doaj-6095c1ad828346c790e0071c80b7d28e2020-11-25T01:35:03ZengMDPI AGEnergies1996-10732019-10-011221414110.3390/en12214141en12214141Modelling and Analysis of Plate Heat Exchangers for Flexible District Heating SystemsSerafym Chyhryn0Department of Electrical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark, 2800 Lyngby, DenmarkSeamless integration of district heating (DH) and power systems implies their flexible operation, which extends their typical operational boundaries and, thus, affects performance of key components, such as plate heat exchangers (PHXs). Despite that the heat transfer in a PHX is regulated by mass flows, flexible operation and demand variations cause shifts in temperature levels, which affects the system operation and must be efficiently accounted for. In this paper, an overall heat transfer coefficient (OHTC) model with direct relation to temperature is proposed. The model is based on a linear approximation of thermophysical components of the forced convection coefficient (FCC). On one hand, it allows to account for temperature variations as compared to mass flow-based models, thus, improving accuracy. On the other hand, it does not involve iterative lookup of thermophysical properties and requires fewer inputs, hence, reducing computational effort. The proposed linear model is experimentally verified on a laboratory PHX against estimated correlations for FCC. A practical estimation procedure is proposed based on component data. Additionally, binding the correlation to one of varying parameters shows reduction in the heat transfer error. Finally, operational optimization test cases for a basic DH system demonstrate better performance of the proposed models as compared to those previously used.https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/12/21/4141heat exchangerforced convectionfilm coefficientheat transferwater propertiesintegrated energy systemoperational optimization
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Serafym Chyhryn
spellingShingle Serafym Chyhryn
Modelling and Analysis of Plate Heat Exchangers for Flexible District Heating Systems
Energies
heat exchanger
forced convection
film coefficient
heat transfer
water properties
integrated energy system
operational optimization
author_facet Serafym Chyhryn
author_sort Serafym Chyhryn
title Modelling and Analysis of Plate Heat Exchangers for Flexible District Heating Systems
title_short Modelling and Analysis of Plate Heat Exchangers for Flexible District Heating Systems
title_full Modelling and Analysis of Plate Heat Exchangers for Flexible District Heating Systems
title_fullStr Modelling and Analysis of Plate Heat Exchangers for Flexible District Heating Systems
title_full_unstemmed Modelling and Analysis of Plate Heat Exchangers for Flexible District Heating Systems
title_sort modelling and analysis of plate heat exchangers for flexible district heating systems
publisher MDPI AG
series Energies
issn 1996-1073
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Seamless integration of district heating (DH) and power systems implies their flexible operation, which extends their typical operational boundaries and, thus, affects performance of key components, such as plate heat exchangers (PHXs). Despite that the heat transfer in a PHX is regulated by mass flows, flexible operation and demand variations cause shifts in temperature levels, which affects the system operation and must be efficiently accounted for. In this paper, an overall heat transfer coefficient (OHTC) model with direct relation to temperature is proposed. The model is based on a linear approximation of thermophysical components of the forced convection coefficient (FCC). On one hand, it allows to account for temperature variations as compared to mass flow-based models, thus, improving accuracy. On the other hand, it does not involve iterative lookup of thermophysical properties and requires fewer inputs, hence, reducing computational effort. The proposed linear model is experimentally verified on a laboratory PHX against estimated correlations for FCC. A practical estimation procedure is proposed based on component data. Additionally, binding the correlation to one of varying parameters shows reduction in the heat transfer error. Finally, operational optimization test cases for a basic DH system demonstrate better performance of the proposed models as compared to those previously used.
topic heat exchanger
forced convection
film coefficient
heat transfer
water properties
integrated energy system
operational optimization
url https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/12/21/4141
work_keys_str_mv AT serafymchyhryn modellingandanalysisofplateheatexchangersforflexibledistrictheatingsystems
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