LAPSE:2023.4002
Published Article
LAPSE:2023.4002
Active Management of Heat Customers Towards Lower District Heating Return Water Temperature
Tommy Rosén, Louise Ödlund
February 22, 2023
Abstract
The traditional way of managing the supply and return water temperatures in a district heating system (DHS) is by controlling the supply water temperature. The return water temperature then becomes a passive result that reflects the overall energy efficiency of the DHS. A DHS with many poorly functioning district heating centrals will create a high return water temperature, and the energy efficiency of the DHS will be affected negatively in several ways (e.g., lower efficiency of the flue gas condenser, higher heat losses in pipes, and lower electricity production for a DHS with combined heat and power (CHP)). With a strategic introduction of low-grade heat customers, the return water temperature can be lowered and, to some extent, controlled. With the heat customers connected in parallel, which is the traditional setup, return water temperatures can only be lowered at the same rate as the heat customers are improved. The active management of some customers can lower the return water temperatures faster and, in the long run, lead to better controlled return water temperatures. Active management is defined here as an adjustment of a domestic heating system in order to improve DHS efficiency without affecting the heating service for the individual building. The opposite can be described as passive management, where heat customers are connected to the DHS in a standardized manner, without taking the overall DHS efficiency into consideration. The case study in this article shows possible efficiency gains for the examined DHS at around 7%. Looking at fuel use, there is a large reduction for oil, with 10−30% reduction depending on the case in question, while the reduction is shown to be largest for the case with the lowest return water temperature. The results also show that efficiency gains will increase electricity production by about 1−3%, and that greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions are reduced by 4−20%.
Keywords
district heating, low-grade district heating, return water temperature, system perspective
Suggested Citation
Rosén T, Ödlund L. Active Management of Heat Customers Towards Lower District Heating Return Water Temperature. (2023). LAPSE:2023.4002
Author Affiliations
Rosén T: Division of Energy Systems, Linköping University, SE-581 83 Linköping, Sweden
Ödlund L: Division of Energy Systems, Linköping University, SE-581 83 Linköping, Sweden
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Journal Name
Energies
Volume
12
Issue
10
Article Number
E1863
Year
2019
Publication Date
2019-05-16
ISSN
1996-1073
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Original Submission
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PII: en12101863, Publication Type: Journal Article
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LAPSE:2023.4002
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https://doi.org/10.3390/en12101863
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