The present invention relates to district energy systems which are converting energy and delivering energy services (e.g. heating, hot water, cooling and electricity) to buildings at various locations, using renewable energy sources, as well as waste heat, and making use of synergies between buildings.
District energy systems produce steam, hot water or chilled water at a central plant and then pipe that water out to buildings in the district for space heating, domestic hot water heating and air conditioning. Individual buildings don't need their own boilers or furnaces, chillers or air conditioners. A district energy system does that work for them.
One object of the present invention is to offer a valuable alternative to existing district energy systems.
Another object is to reduce the space required to implement the pipes in the ground or in underground channels.
Another object is to solve the safety issues linked with possible leakage problems when implementing water pipes in underground channels including electrical or telecommunication wires.
Another object is to enhance the energetic and exergetic efficiencies of district energy systems.
Another object is make use of the latent heat of the transfer medium instead of the specific heat.
Another object is to have a CO2 “reservoir” from which CO2 can be extracted (fire extinction) or stored (fuel cell).
The above objects are solved in accordance with the invention by a district energy system characterized by the use of CO2 as energy transfer medium.
Preferred embodiments of the invention are defined in the claims.
The present invention offers several advantages, in particular:
The invention will be better understood below with a detailed description illustrated by a FIGURE which schematically represents a district heating/cooling energy system according to the invention.
The network comprises two main pipes: one main pipe containing liquid CO2 (upper pipe in the FIGURE) and one main pipe containing gaseous CO2 (bottom pipe in the FIGURE). Both pipes are preferably at a similar pressure, advantageously however with a slightly higher pressure in the liquid pipe to avoid the need of a pump when liquid is evaporated for air-conditioning and the vapor directly fed back to the gaseous line. One preferred pressure level is a pressure corresponding to a saturation temperature of CO2 of 18° C. Lower temperatures, of 15° C. or 16° for instance, may be chosen.
At the district heating/cooling plant the pipes are connected to a heat-exchanger working either as evaporator in heating mode (winter) or as condenser in cooling mode (summer). A set of valves at the central plant couple the evaporator with an expansion valve and a compressor in the heating mode and the condenser with a pump in the cooling mode. When dealing with a district located near a lake, a river, or a waste water treatment facility, the available water can serve as heat source (heating mode) or heat sink (cooling mode). However, any other heat source such as solar energy, geothermal energy, seasonal heat storage, waste incineration . . . could also be used, directly in the heating mode, or over an absorption chiller in the cooling mode. To compensate pressure losses in the pipes and avoid parasitic boiling, intermediate small circulation pumps may be implemented along the network.
Unlike conventional district heating/cooling systems having dedicated supply and return pipes, with the system described here the direction of the flow in the pipes depends on the ratio of the heating (and/or hot water) and cooling (and/or freezing) requirements. If the total heating (and/or hot water) requirements in the district exceed the total cooling (and/or freezing) requirements, the gaseous pipe is the supply pipe and the liquid pipe the return pipe. In this case, the CO2 is evaporated at the central plant and pumped to the customers. On the other hand, if the total cooling (and/or freezing) requirements in the district exceed the total heating (and/or hot water) requirements, the liquid pipe becomes the supply pipe and the gaseous pipe the return pipe. In this case, the CO2 is condensed at the central plant before being pumped to the customers.
At the user's location, following processes can take place: heating, hot water preparation, air-conditioning and refrigeration. Besides, assuming that another heat source is available at some location along the network (heat from a chemical industry for instance), the CO2 network can operate as a heat sink for an ORC. In case geothermal collectors are available or possible (under green areas for example), gaseous CO2 can be generated in winter by means of a heat pump, and CO2 liquefaction could take place in summer, when the air-conditioning requirements are predominant. Finally, if unglazed solar roofs are installed, CO2 could be circulated through the solar panels in winter for instance, if the sun is shining, in order to generate additional gaseous CO2 to meet the heating and hot water requirements. In summer, at night, CO2 can be liquefied if the atmospheric temperature is below 18° C. In order to compare this CO2 system with the conventional district energy systems operating with water, the heating, hot water and cooling processes are explained below. The “liquid” and “gas” pipes in the FIGURE always refer to the pipes connecting the end user with the heating/cooling plant.
1. Heating and Hot Water (Open CO2 Heat Pump)
In the heating mode, the gaseous CO2 is compressed according to the specific needs (temperature level) of the building. It then passes through the heat-exchanger where it releases its energy to the building heating network, before being circulated through an expansion turbine (if any mechanical energy can be recovered), an expansion valve and a separator. The liquid phase is sent to the liquid CO2 pipe. The gaseous phase is directly recirculated to the compressor. If the heating requirements decrease, thus diminishing the needs for CO2 in the gaseous phase, the gaseous CO2 can be circulated directly from the separator back to the gaseous CO2 pipe. This mode is specially advantageous for the hot water preparation.
2. Heating and Hot Water with a Closed Loop Heat Pump
A conventional heat pump can be used as superposed cycle in particular when the heating temperature glide is small and disadvantageous for a supercritical CO2 cycle.
3. Air Conditioning
In the air conditioning mode, liquid CO2 is circulated from the liquid pipe, via the heat-exchanger where it is evaporated with the heat coming from the building, to the gaseous pipe. Due to the slight over-pressure in the liquid pipe compared to the gaseous pipe, no pump is required in the cooling mode.
4. Refrigeration
In the refrigeration mode, liquid CO2 is circulated over an expansion valve to the heat-exchanger where it serves as heat-sink to the refrigeration network of the building (for industrial refrigeration for instance). The expansion valve can be regulated so as to meet the exact refrigeration temperature required by the building. After the heat-exchanger, the CO2 is compressed and sent back to the gaseous line.
5. Electricity Generation
If a heat-source with a high enough temperature is available somewhere along the CO2 network, the network can operate as a heat-sink for an ORC (conventional or supercritical) and thereby generate some electricity.
6. Geothermy
In cities and districts with big green parks, geothermal probes can be dug into the soil. In winter, geothermal heat could be used to evaporate liquid CO2 using a heat-pump, and therefore help providing the required CO2 for heating and hot water purposes. On the other hand, in summer, gaseous CO2 can be liquified (mainly in the nighttime) in order to have enough liquid CO2 for the air-conditioning during the day. Geothermal energy can also be gained by means of geothermal structures implemented in the foundations of large multi-storey car parks.
7. Unglazed Solar Collectors
Unglazed solar collectors mounted on the roof of buildings can help generate gaseous CO2. During the nighttime, especially in summer, if the atmospheric temperature is below 18° C., the existing heat-exchanger can be used to liquefy gaseous CO2 for the daytime air-conditioning.
8. Fire Extinction
The CO2 contained in the network can be used for fire extinction purposes if needed.
9. CO2 Collection
The network can be used to collect and transport CO2 from fuel cell or other decentralized cogeneration units.
10. Combination
The operating modes described above can also be combined. For instance the heating and air-conditioning modes can be combined at the customer's place. When both heating and air-conditioning are required in the same building, this system directly transfers the energy from the evaporator (air-conditioning) to the heat-exchanger (heating and/or hot water) or vice-versa via the CO2. When one of the two energy requirements exceeds the other, the CO2 that cannot be reused internally at the customer's place is circulated via the heating/cooling plant.
In the heating mode, the gaseous CO2 is compressed according to the specific needs (temperature level) of the building, as described above (point 1). After having passed through the heat-exchanger, expansion turbine, expansion valve and separator, the liquid can be circulated directly to the evaporator together with any additional liquid CO2 from the pipe of the network, if cooling is required in the building. The vapor on the other hand either flows back to the compressor, or, if the heating (and/or hot water) requirements decrease, to the gaseous pipe. Likewise, the CO2 evaporated in the evaporator (cooling mode) can be circulated to the compressor for heating (and/or hot water) requirements, via a separator to insure the vapor quality, or back to the gaseous pipe.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2008/050573 | 2/16/2008 | WO | 00 | 9/10/2009 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60890501 | Feb 2007 | US |