Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6764081 Renewable Energy 2018 13 Pages PDF
Abstract
In ground source heat pump (GSHP) systems, large imbalances between cooling and heating loads cause a rise or decline in ground temperature because of thermal interference between multiple ground heat exchangers (GHEs). To evaluate annual changes in ground temperature, we applied a variable temperature penalty, which was simply obtained using measured data without computer simulation. First, we examined measured data for 3 years after completion of a hybrid GSHP system that had 70 borehole-type GHEs, combined with an air source heat pump unit. In the hybrid system, the GSHP showed high efficiency (coefficient of performance > 5.0) throughout the year and had a variable contribution between years with regard to cooling/heating output and time of operation. The amount of heat rejected to the ground by cooling reached ∼4.8 times that of heat extracted from the ground by heating after 3 years of operation. This imbalance produced ground temperature increases of ∼3 °C in an internal borehole. The variable temperature penalty reproduced the measured temperature increase, suggesting that the index is appropriate for assessing long-term ground temperature changes in the operation phase. This simple index allows operational improvement onsite and will aid the sustainable operation of GSHP systems in cooling-dominant regions.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
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