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Optimisation of solar thermally driven building cooling and heating system / ENOCK EBBAH

Swansea University Author: ENOCK EBBAH

Abstract

Buildings account for about 30% of global final energy and 28% of total energy sector emissions. Applying solar heat for cooling could reach 1.5 EJ per year, accounting for nearly 17% of energy use for cooling in 2050. Almost half the worldwide building energy demand is for space and water heating....

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Published: Swansea University, Wales, UK 2024
Institution: Swansea University
Degree level: Doctoral
Degree name: EngD
Supervisor: Jewell, E. and Elvins, J.
URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa68365
first_indexed 2024-11-28T19:47:25Z
last_indexed 2024-11-28T19:47:25Z
id cronfa68365
recordtype RisThesis
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spelling 2024-11-28T12:25:58.1672758 v2 68365 2024-11-28 Optimisation of solar thermally driven building cooling and heating system 2b3bfc8719d2226ee01b82f8bfcd0117 ENOCK EBBAH ENOCK EBBAH true false 2024-11-28 Buildings account for about 30% of global final energy and 28% of total energy sector emissions. Applying solar heat for cooling could reach 1.5 EJ per year, accounting for nearly 17% of energy use for cooling in 2050. Almost half the worldwide building energy demand is for space and water heating. Solar thermally driven diffusion absorption cooling and heating systems present the opportunity to sustainably meet the growing building cooling and heating energy demand. This research describes how improving a building's thermal envelope design and adopting solar heat capture technology can reduce a building's heating and cooling energy demand. TRNSYS simulation software has been used to determine the cooling and heating demand of a thermally efficient (TE) building in four climatically varying locations in India, Tunisia, Russia, and the UK. The building design criteria varied, including the thermal characteristics of the building envelope material and the use of a solar heat capture device fitted to a diffusion absorption cooling system. The results show that the TE building has less combined heating and cooling loads than that constructed using local building regulations for the four climatic locations, except in India, where insulative properties lead to a requirement for additional cooling. A solar-driven diffusion absorption cooling system, modelled with the EES modelling tool and compared with experimental data, could reduce the TE building cooling energy consumption by 70% for India and Tunisia climatic locations and TE building heat energy demand by up to 28% for Russia and the UK climatic zones. The economic analysis demonstrates that while energetically compelling, local fuel costs mean the energy and CO2 impacts are not immediately translated to short-term financial benefits. The solar collector and storage design indicates that the mass flow rate, collector area, and buffer tank volume influence the cooling engine’s generator temperature. Also, the solar collector achieves the optimum 190-205 °C temperatures with up to 10 kg/hr mass flow rates. Using a small buffer store of 2 litres/ m2 of solar collector area, the solar fraction was between 40-65 %. On the other hand, a cold energy storage design, with tank sizes between 120-500 litres, provides adequate cooling energy throughout the year, with a latent heat medium (eutectic water-salt solution) storing more than three times the energy and less heat loss than sensible heat storage (ethylene glycol and water mixture). The discounted payback times for Tunis, New Delhi, Volgograd, and Swansea are 12.7, 6.8, 0.8, and 2.1 years, respectively, compared with residential air source heat pumps, reported to have paybacks between 3 – 15 years. E-Thesis Swansea University, Wales, UK diffusion absorption cooling, TRNSYS, solar cooling and heating, XCPC solar collector, solar design, thermal energy storage, cold thermal energy storage. 10 11 2024 2024-11-10 A selection of content is redacted or is partially redacted from this thesis to protect sensitive and personal information. COLLEGE NANME COLLEGE CODE Swansea University Jewell, E. and Elvins, J. Doctoral EngD Solar Polar Ltd, M2A, Swansea University, Coated, WEFO Solar Polar Ltd, M2A, Swansea University, Coated, WEFO 2024-11-28T12:25:58.1672758 2024-11-28T11:22:38.3154305 Faculty of Science and Engineering School of Engineering and Applied Sciences - Materials Science and Engineering ENOCK EBBAH 1
title Optimisation of solar thermally driven building cooling and heating system
spellingShingle Optimisation of solar thermally driven building cooling and heating system
ENOCK EBBAH
title_short Optimisation of solar thermally driven building cooling and heating system
title_full Optimisation of solar thermally driven building cooling and heating system
title_fullStr Optimisation of solar thermally driven building cooling and heating system
title_full_unstemmed Optimisation of solar thermally driven building cooling and heating system
title_sort Optimisation of solar thermally driven building cooling and heating system
author_id_str_mv 2b3bfc8719d2226ee01b82f8bfcd0117
author_id_fullname_str_mv 2b3bfc8719d2226ee01b82f8bfcd0117_***_ENOCK EBBAH
author ENOCK EBBAH
author2 ENOCK EBBAH
format E-Thesis
publishDate 2024
institution Swansea University
college_str Faculty of Science and Engineering
hierarchytype
hierarchy_top_id facultyofscienceandengineering
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Science and Engineering
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofscienceandengineering
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Science and Engineering
department_str School of Engineering and Applied Sciences - Materials Science and Engineering{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Science and Engineering{{{_:::_}}}School of Engineering and Applied Sciences - Materials Science and Engineering
document_store_str 0
active_str 0
description Buildings account for about 30% of global final energy and 28% of total energy sector emissions. Applying solar heat for cooling could reach 1.5 EJ per year, accounting for nearly 17% of energy use for cooling in 2050. Almost half the worldwide building energy demand is for space and water heating. Solar thermally driven diffusion absorption cooling and heating systems present the opportunity to sustainably meet the growing building cooling and heating energy demand. This research describes how improving a building's thermal envelope design and adopting solar heat capture technology can reduce a building's heating and cooling energy demand. TRNSYS simulation software has been used to determine the cooling and heating demand of a thermally efficient (TE) building in four climatically varying locations in India, Tunisia, Russia, and the UK. The building design criteria varied, including the thermal characteristics of the building envelope material and the use of a solar heat capture device fitted to a diffusion absorption cooling system. The results show that the TE building has less combined heating and cooling loads than that constructed using local building regulations for the four climatic locations, except in India, where insulative properties lead to a requirement for additional cooling. A solar-driven diffusion absorption cooling system, modelled with the EES modelling tool and compared with experimental data, could reduce the TE building cooling energy consumption by 70% for India and Tunisia climatic locations and TE building heat energy demand by up to 28% for Russia and the UK climatic zones. The economic analysis demonstrates that while energetically compelling, local fuel costs mean the energy and CO2 impacts are not immediately translated to short-term financial benefits. The solar collector and storage design indicates that the mass flow rate, collector area, and buffer tank volume influence the cooling engine’s generator temperature. Also, the solar collector achieves the optimum 190-205 °C temperatures with up to 10 kg/hr mass flow rates. Using a small buffer store of 2 litres/ m2 of solar collector area, the solar fraction was between 40-65 %. On the other hand, a cold energy storage design, with tank sizes between 120-500 litres, provides adequate cooling energy throughout the year, with a latent heat medium (eutectic water-salt solution) storing more than three times the energy and less heat loss than sensible heat storage (ethylene glycol and water mixture). The discounted payback times for Tunis, New Delhi, Volgograd, and Swansea are 12.7, 6.8, 0.8, and 2.1 years, respectively, compared with residential air source heat pumps, reported to have paybacks between 3 – 15 years.
published_date 2024-11-10T05:41:10Z
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score 11.3749895