Sustainability Assessment of Community Scale Integrated Energy Systems: Conceptual Framework and Applications

abstract: One of the key infrastructures of any community or facility is the energy system which consists of utility power plants, distributed generation technologies, and building heating and cooling systems. In general, there are two dimensions to “sustainability” as it applies to an engineered sy...

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Other Authors: Moslehi, Salim (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.50521
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-505212018-10-02T03:01:07Z Sustainability Assessment of Community Scale Integrated Energy Systems: Conceptual Framework and Applications abstract: One of the key infrastructures of any community or facility is the energy system which consists of utility power plants, distributed generation technologies, and building heating and cooling systems. In general, there are two dimensions to “sustainability” as it applies to an engineered system. It needs to be designed, operated, and managed such that its environmental impacts and costs are minimal (energy efficient design and operation), and also be designed and configured in a way that it is resilient in confronting disruptions posed by natural, manmade, or random events. In this regard, development of quantitative sustainability metrics in support of decision-making relevant to design, future growth planning, and day-to-day operation of such systems would be of great value. In this study, a pragmatic performance-based sustainability assessment framework and quantitative indices are developed towards this end whereby sustainability goals and concepts can be translated and integrated into engineering practices. New quantitative sustainability indices are proposed to capture the energy system environmental impacts, economic performance, and resilience attributes, characterized by normalized environmental/health externalities, energy costs, and penalty costs respectively. A comprehensive Life Cycle Assessment is proposed which includes externalities due to emissions from different supply and demand-side energy systems specific to the regional power generation energy portfolio mix. An approach based on external costs, i.e. the monetized health and environmental impacts, was used to quantify adverse consequences associated with different energy system components. Further, this thesis also proposes a new performance-based method for characterizing and assessing resilience of multi-functional demand-side engineered systems. Through modeling of system response to potential internal and external failures during different operational temporal periods reflective of diurnal variation in loads and services, the proposed methodology quantifies resilience of the system based on imposed penalty costs to the system stakeholders due to undelivered or interrupted services and/or non-optimal system performance. A conceptual diagram called “Sustainability Compass” is also proposed which facilitates communicating the assessment results and allow better decision-analysis through illustration of different system attributes and trade-offs between different alternatives. The proposed methodologies have been illustrated using end-use monitored data for whole year operation of a university campus energy system. Dissertation/Thesis Moslehi, Salim (Author) Reddy, T. Agami (Advisor) Lackner, Klaus S (Committee member) Parrish, Kristen (Committee member) Pendyala, Ram M (Committee member) Phelan, Patrick (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Sustainability Energy Environmental economics Integrated Energy Systems Life Cycle Assessment Life Cycle Sustainability Assessment Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis Resilience Sustainability eng 177 pages Doctoral Dissertation Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering 2018 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.50521 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2018
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Sustainability
Energy
Environmental economics
Integrated Energy Systems
Life Cycle Assessment
Life Cycle Sustainability Assessment
Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis
Resilience
Sustainability
spellingShingle Sustainability
Energy
Environmental economics
Integrated Energy Systems
Life Cycle Assessment
Life Cycle Sustainability Assessment
Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis
Resilience
Sustainability
Sustainability Assessment of Community Scale Integrated Energy Systems: Conceptual Framework and Applications
description abstract: One of the key infrastructures of any community or facility is the energy system which consists of utility power plants, distributed generation technologies, and building heating and cooling systems. In general, there are two dimensions to “sustainability” as it applies to an engineered system. It needs to be designed, operated, and managed such that its environmental impacts and costs are minimal (energy efficient design and operation), and also be designed and configured in a way that it is resilient in confronting disruptions posed by natural, manmade, or random events. In this regard, development of quantitative sustainability metrics in support of decision-making relevant to design, future growth planning, and day-to-day operation of such systems would be of great value. In this study, a pragmatic performance-based sustainability assessment framework and quantitative indices are developed towards this end whereby sustainability goals and concepts can be translated and integrated into engineering practices. New quantitative sustainability indices are proposed to capture the energy system environmental impacts, economic performance, and resilience attributes, characterized by normalized environmental/health externalities, energy costs, and penalty costs respectively. A comprehensive Life Cycle Assessment is proposed which includes externalities due to emissions from different supply and demand-side energy systems specific to the regional power generation energy portfolio mix. An approach based on external costs, i.e. the monetized health and environmental impacts, was used to quantify adverse consequences associated with different energy system components. Further, this thesis also proposes a new performance-based method for characterizing and assessing resilience of multi-functional demand-side engineered systems. Through modeling of system response to potential internal and external failures during different operational temporal periods reflective of diurnal variation in loads and services, the proposed methodology quantifies resilience of the system based on imposed penalty costs to the system stakeholders due to undelivered or interrupted services and/or non-optimal system performance. A conceptual diagram called “Sustainability Compass” is also proposed which facilitates communicating the assessment results and allow better decision-analysis through illustration of different system attributes and trade-offs between different alternatives. The proposed methodologies have been illustrated using end-use monitored data for whole year operation of a university campus energy system. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering 2018
author2 Moslehi, Salim (Author)
author_facet Moslehi, Salim (Author)
title Sustainability Assessment of Community Scale Integrated Energy Systems: Conceptual Framework and Applications
title_short Sustainability Assessment of Community Scale Integrated Energy Systems: Conceptual Framework and Applications
title_full Sustainability Assessment of Community Scale Integrated Energy Systems: Conceptual Framework and Applications
title_fullStr Sustainability Assessment of Community Scale Integrated Energy Systems: Conceptual Framework and Applications
title_full_unstemmed Sustainability Assessment of Community Scale Integrated Energy Systems: Conceptual Framework and Applications
title_sort sustainability assessment of community scale integrated energy systems: conceptual framework and applications
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.50521
_version_ 1718757018699825152