Energy Conversion and Management: X (Apr 2024)

Comparison of different strategies for operating a solar-assisted ground-source CO2 heat pump system for space and water heating

  • Thor Alexis Sazon,
  • Qian Zhang,
  • Homam Nikpey

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22
p. 100604

Abstract

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This study quantifies and compares operational strategies as applied on a solar-assisted ground-source trans-critical CO2 heat pump (CO2 SAGSHP) system for simultaneous space and water heating, optimized on an hourly basis over the course of a week. Four (4) boundary conditions, representing spring, summer, autumn, and winter, were considered. To enable the use of a dynamic model for optimization simulations, the use of a previously developed surrogate Artificial Neural Network (ANN) model of a Modelica CO2 heat pump model was evaluated for use in this study. The simulation results from the system model that applies the surrogate ANN model demonstrated strong alignment with those generated by the full Modelica model, yielding low root mean square errors and mean absolute percentage errors. Furthermore, it accelerated the speed of results generation for a single forward run by 6–15 times, depending on the boundary conditions. It can be inferred from the results of the optimization runs that when warm climate conditions dominate, implementation of the on/off operation with thermal energy storage (TES) should be prioritized, given that it could potentially yield greater operational cost benefits (12% to 58 % cost reduction) compared to hourly discharge pressure optimization (0.5 to 1.5 % cost reduction). Conversely, when colder seasons are longer, optimizing the CO2 heat pump's discharge pressure becomes more practical (6.5 % to 6.9 % cost reduction) than on/off operation, particularly when only a small TES is installed (1.2 % to 2.6 % cost reduction). The optimization of the mass flow rate of the supply side working fluid of a CO2 SAGSHP system exhibited minimal benefit, except notably in the summer where it generated an even better cost reduction than controlling the discharge pressure. This shows the practicality of this strategy for conditions where relatively high solar irradiation and relatively low heat demand are concurrently expected. In general, weekly reductions in operational costs were more substantial when both the discharge pressure and the on/off operation of the CO2 heat pump were concurrently optimized, especially when using a larger TES tank. Hence, both should be applied if there are no practical or cost limitations that restrict their implementation. While previous studies on CO2 heat pumps primarily emphasized efficiency optimization via discharge pressure control, this study shows that comparable or greater operational cost reductions can also be achieved from other strategies, depending on the boundary conditions.

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