A Comparative study of district heating and cooling networks of 4th and 5th generation based on shallow geothermal energy: modelling and analysis using OpenModelica

Other authors

Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament de Màquines i Motors Tèrmics

Capdevila Paramio, Roser

García Céspedes, Jordi

Publication date

2025-09



Abstract

Southern-European cities face a simultaneous rise in cooling demand and a policy drive to decarbonise heating and cooling, in line with european climate commitments. In response, fourth-generation (4G) and fifth-generation (5G) district-heating-and-cooling networks have emerged as promising solutions, with 5G representing a more recent development. This thesis compares fourth- (4G) and fifth-generation (5G) district heating and cooling (DHC) networks that use shallow-geothermal energy as a seasonal sink/source and rooftop PV as auxiliary power. Both systems are modelled in OpenModelica (Buildings 10.0.0) under identical set points (65 ◦C for space-heating/domestic hot water, 7 ◦C for space-cooling) on a two-buildings testbed, with three demand scenarios and a one-year horizon. The neutral-temperature single-pipe 5G concept outperforms the four-pipe 4G layout: overall seasonal performance factors (heating + cooling) are 3.33–3.55–2.50 (5G) vs 2.50–2.68–2.00 (4G), yielding about 25% lower electricity use and operational CO2. Levelized Cost of Heat (LCOH) fall in the range 101–142 €/MWh for 5G versus 130–186 €/MWh for 4G. Regarding the thermal balance of the borefield, across demand scenarios, 5G exchanges less heat with the ground (extraction – 10–32%, injection – 17–28%). In the third case studying two demand profile of two single family buildings, an additional 4GDHC scenario with a central biomass-boiler booster and heat storage (obtained from surplus rooftop PV production) reduce electricity use and CO2 by 29% vs 4G (8% vs 5G) at a LCOH of 172.8€/MWh, providing an interesting alternative where a 5GDHC network is infeasible. The environmental assessment focuses on operational emissions (based on grid emission factor); embodied carbon is outside scope.

Document Type

Master thesis

Language

English

Publisher

Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya

Recommended citation

This citation was generated automatically.

Rights

Open Access

This item appears in the following Collection(s)