Detail publikace

Operational optimisation of integrated solar combined cooling, heating, and power systems in buildings considering demand response and carbon trading

Pan, T (Pan, Ting) Oclon, P (Oclon, Pawel) He, LH (He, Linhuan) Cisek, P (Cisek, Piotr) Nowak-Oclon, M (Nowak-Oclon, Marzena) [2] Van Fan, Y (Van Fan, Yee) [4] Wang, BH (Wang, Bohong) Molnár, P (Molnar, Peter) Tóth, A (Toth, Arpad) Varbanov, PS (Varbanov, Petar Sabev)

Anglický název

Operational optimisation of integrated solar combined cooling, heating, and power systems in buildings considering demand response and carbon trading

Typ

článek v časopise ve Web of Science, Jimp

Jazyk

en

Originální abstrakt

The Solar Combined Cooling, Heat, and Power (S-CCHP) system offers a promising solution to the energy crisis and environmental concerns. Its operation optimisation is essential due to intermittent solar irradiation. However, previous studies have concentrated on the "electricity -heating" subsystem and economic costs, with less emphasis on the integrated system's broader benefits and environmental impact. This study introduces an operational optimisation approach across "electricity -heating -cooling -gas" subsystems based on the design extension of the Residential Building Heating and Electricity Production (RESHeat) system. Specifically, the approach optimises operation from both the demand and supply sides, incorporating the demand response (DR) and Ladder Carbon Trading (LCT) on the demonstration in Limanowa, Poland, to balance economic and environmental impacts. The results show that the optimised electricity is reduced by 0.71 % per day while heating and cooling demands rise by 0.57% and 0.91%. PV/T panels provide 87.11% of electricity, with excess sold back to the grid in summer. DR combined with LCT in the extension design contributed to cutting costs by 16.15 % and CO 2 by 57.79% compared with the initial design, underscoring the efficacy of collaborative operational in enhancing both economic and environmental performance.

Anglický abstrakt

The Solar Combined Cooling, Heat, and Power (S-CCHP) system offers a promising solution to the energy crisis and environmental concerns. Its operation optimisation is essential due to intermittent solar irradiation. However, previous studies have concentrated on the "electricity -heating" subsystem and economic costs, with less emphasis on the integrated system's broader benefits and environmental impact. This study introduces an operational optimisation approach across "electricity -heating -cooling -gas" subsystems based on the design extension of the Residential Building Heating and Electricity Production (RESHeat) system. Specifically, the approach optimises operation from both the demand and supply sides, incorporating the demand response (DR) and Ladder Carbon Trading (LCT) on the demonstration in Limanowa, Poland, to balance economic and environmental impacts. The results show that the optimised electricity is reduced by 0.71 % per day while heating and cooling demands rise by 0.57% and 0.91%. PV/T panels provide 87.11% of electricity, with excess sold back to the grid in summer. DR combined with LCT in the extension design contributed to cutting costs by 16.15 % and CO 2 by 57.79% compared with the initial design, underscoring the efficacy of collaborative operational in enhancing both economic and environmental performance.

Klíčová slova anglicky

Solar CCHP; Optimisation; Demand response; Carbon trading; Buildings

Vydáno

14.07.2024

Nakladatel

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD

Místo

OXFORD

ISSN

0196-8904

Ročník

315

Číslo

315

Strany od–do

118737–118737

Počet stran

18

BIBTEX


@article{BUT196912,
  author="Ting {Pan} and Petar Sabev {Varbanov} and Yee Van {Fan},
  title="Operational optimisation of integrated solar combined cooling, heating, and power systems in buildings considering demand response and carbon trading",
  year="2024",
  volume="315",
  number="315",
  month="July",
  pages="118737--118737",
  publisher="PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD",
  address="OXFORD",
  issn="0196-8904"
}