Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7045959 Applied Thermal Engineering 2018 33 Pages PDF
Abstract
In the present work, a compound cool thermal storage system, which combines chilled water thermal storage and ice thermal storage, has been investigated, and mathematical models for both the chiller capacity selection and the design day operating cost of the compound system are established under optimized control strategy. In comparison to a single chilled water thermal storage system, the chilled water storage percentage (α) of a single chilled water thermal storage system, and the ice storage volume ratio (Rvol) of the compound system are introduced to discuss their impacts on the economic feasibility of the compound system. The results indicated that the designed day operating cost of the compound system was significantly reduced with the increase in Rvol, while the value of α was kept constant. However, the total initial investment of the compound system increased with the increase in Rvol. Afterwards, the static payback time was adopted to characterize the trade-off between the increased total initial investment and the decreased total operating cost of the compound system. It was found that, for a value of α of 10%, the most favorable value of Rvol for the compound system ranged between 0.1 and 0.5. Furthermore, when α was 20%, the most favorable value of Rvol for the compound system was less than 0.1. The results also showed that these optimized conditions for the compound system were economically feasible for practical purposes.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
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