Simulation analysis of an innovative micro-solar 2kWe Organic Rankine Cycle plant coupled with a multi-apartments building for domestic hot water supply

Author

Arteconi, Alessia

Del Zotto, Luca

Tascioni, Roberto

Mahkamov, Khamid

Underwood, Chris

Cabeza, Luisa F.

Gracia Cuesta, Alvaro de

Pili, Piero

Mintsa, André Charles

Bartolini, Carlo M.

Gimbernat, Toni

Botargues, Teresa

Halimic, Elvedin

Cioccolanti, Luca

Publication date

2019-03-19T08:47:36Z

2019-03-19T08:47:36Z

2019

2019-03-19T08:47:37Z



Abstract

Combined heat and power plants driven by renewable energy sources (RES) are becoming more and more popular, given the energy transition towards the integration of more renewable energy sources in the power generation mix. In this paper an innovative micro-solar 2kWe/18kWth Organic Rankine Cycle system, which is being developed by the consortium of several Universities and industrial organizations, with the funding from EU under the Innova MicroSolar project, is considered. In particular, its application to supply electricity and thermal energy for Domestic Hot Water (DHW) in a residential building is investigated by means of simulation analysis. Different Domestic Hot Water supply plant configurations are evaluated and the design parameters are varied in order to determine the best configuration to recover as much energy as possible from the ORC, while maintaining the final users' comfort. It was found out that with the considered plant around 67% of the Domestic Hot Water energy demand of 15 apartments can be satisfied with a water storage tank of 10'000 liters. However, in order to always guarantee the supply water temperature, a back-up boiler, which serves directly the final users when needed, is requested.


This study is a part of the Innova MicroSolar Project, funded in the framework of the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme (grant agreement No 723596).

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Renewable energy; Micro-combined heat; Power plant; Distributed energy system; DHW; Dynamic simulations

Publisher

Elsevier

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.egypro.2019.01.168

Energy Procedia, 2019, vol. 158, p. 2225-2230

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/H2020/723596/EU/Innova MicroSolar

Rights

cc-by-nc- nd (c) Alessia Arteconi et al., 2019

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

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