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Article

Multi-Criteria Evaluation of Distributed Energy System Based on Order Relation-Anti-Entropy Weight Method

1
Institute of Engineering Management, North China Electric Power University, Beijing 102206, China
2
Department of Power Engineering, North China Electric Power University, Baoding 071003, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Energies 2021, 14(1), 246; https://doi.org/10.3390/en14010246
Submission received: 4 November 2020 / Revised: 15 December 2020 / Accepted: 2 January 2021 / Published: 5 January 2021

Abstract

:
Distributed Energy System (DES), a comprehensive energy utilization system distributed on user side, has been recognized as a promising energy utilization method that can improve energy efficiency, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and achieve sustainable development. However, the DES is usually driven by various energy sources, and it is a complex issue to decide the composition of the system. To improve the incompleteness of a single subjective or objective assessment. So, it is urgent to find a comprehensive and efficient decision-making method for different systems. This paper states a total of 23 indicators in 4 criterion group: technology, economy, environment, and society. Based on the combination of the order relation analysis method (G1) and the anti-entropy weighting method (a-EWM), a comprehensive evaluation model, order relation-anti-entropy weight model (G1-aEWM), of distributed energy is established. This comprehensive evaluation model is used to analyze a hospital in Henan and find the final solution for the distributed energy system of the hospital. The empirical analysis results verify the rationality of the comprehensive evaluation model and provide an evaluation basis for the establishment of distributed energy systems in the future.

1. Introduction

At present, China is the largest energy consumer in the world with its primary energy consumption still dominated by coal and oil, reaching more than 80.8% [1,2]. The extensive use of fossil fuels has brought about a series of problems such as massive carbon dioxide emissions, environmental degradation, melting glaciers, and frequent occurrence of extreme weather events [3,4,5]. China is in the midst of a quest to replace fossil fuels with clean, sustainable energy sources. However, the efficiency of renewable energy conversion is low and the continuous and stable supply cannot be achieved [6,7,8,9]. As a result, the Chinese government has enacted new policies and supports energy system transformations. Distributed energy system, as an important means to improve the utilization rate of renewable energy sources, has become a highlight of the reform [9]. Nowadays, regional energy planning is a fundamental urban construction plan in China [10].
The distributed energy system can be a clean and low-carbon way of energy utilization, which can realize the nearby consumption of renewable energy, guarantee energy supply, and improve the urban living environment [11,12,13]. With the maturity of technology, policy support, and continuous innovation of business models, China has also witnessed a period of steady growth.
The initial application of distributed energy technologies in China was represented by district heating and cogeneration in the northern part of the country. Nowadays, various renewable energy technologies, waste heat utilization technologies, and distributed triple supply technologies of natural gas are being used in many regions; especially in recent years, there has been an increasing focus on low-carbon heating methods, including combined heat and power (CHP) technology, heat pumps, solar heating, biomass boilers, and hydrogen boilers. The application of district cooling and heating systems in urban high-density building complexes has also developed rapidly; the projects currently completed or under construction in China include the district cooling project of Nanjing Zhonglou Development Zone, the district cooling system of Xiangtan City Center, the district cooling project of Guangzhou University City, and the water source heat pump cooling and heating system of Dalian Xinghai Bay [14,15]. However, in the practice of some distributed energy systems, the performance is not as good as expected. The evaluation methods of energy system programs are controversial because of the complexity of the evaluation objects themselves and the differences in objectives. Therefore, how to conduct a reasonable and comprehensive evaluation of the system is the focus and difficulty of the current research.
Since the evaluation of the distributed energy system should be comprehensively considered in terms of social, technological, economic, and environmental benefits, the assessment index system is a multi-level index set [16]. In this way, decision makers can take into account the impact of all aspects to make sound decisions based on their priorities. Multi-criteria integrated evaluation approach has been widely used to solve energy-related problems. Chatzimouratidis et al. [17] adopted the analytical hierarchy process (AHP) and evaluated ten types of power plants using renewable energy, nuclear energy, and fossil fuels from three aspects: technology, economy, and sustainability. Jing et al. [18] comprehensively analyzed the feasibility of solid oxide fuel cell based combined cooling heating and power (SOFC-CCHP) applications for public buildings in terms of technology, economy, and environment by combining the grey relational analysis (GRA) method and the information entropy principle. Li et al. [19] evaluated the comprehensive performance of cogeneration systems under different operating conditions using the weighting method and the fuzzy optimum selection method from the perspectives of energy analysis, economic operation, and environmental impact. In order to assess the readiness of a country for sustainable energy transition, Neofytou et al. [20] used the analytic hierarchy process (AHP) and the preference ranking organization method for enrichment of evaluations (PROMETHEE) to conduct an integrated evaluation based on political, economic, technological, and social criteria. Kun et al. [21] constructed a multi-criteria integrated assessment model by combining the optimal weighting method and the grey incidence method, and an optimized CCHP system was evaluated on the basis of this assessment method. The result indicated that the optimized CCHP system was the best solution. The analytic hierarchy process (AHP) included in the above studies determines the weights according to the opinions of experts, and there is a consistency test problem in the determination of subjective weights. The entropy information method is determined based on objective data, but there are problems such as excessive sensitivity of the indicators and fluctuation of the weight values [22,23,24]. In this paper, some improvements are made to the weighting method.
In this paper, a distributed energy system evaluation model with a total of 23 indicators is constructed based on 4 criteria of technology, economy, environmental, and society protection, and the energy system is evaluated by a combination of the sequential analysis method which is to determine the importance of each criterion through expert stratification to obtain subjective weight and the anti-entropy weighting method that is to calculate the anti-entropy value of each index and obtain the objective weight corresponding to the index according to the anti-entropy value. The sequential analysis method improves the analytic hierarchy process for the selection of subjective weights, which can overcome the shortcomings of AHP that requires complex consistency verification. The anti-entropy weighting method is an objective weighting method that improves the entropy-weighting method, which effectively improves the uncertainty of indicators and reduces the contrast of weights. This comprehensive evaluation method considers both objective and subjective weights, and it not only adopts experts’ analysis on the importance of each index, but also makes use of the internal information contained in the objective raw data itself, which can make the evaluation results more rational and accurate. Finally, it is applied in the planning of a hospital’s distributed energy system and select the appropriate option, which can provide a reference for the construction of distributed energy systems in the future.

2. Multiple-Criteria Evaluation Approach based on G1-aEWM

The evaluation of Distributed Energy System (DES) is dominated by diverse criteria, it is of most importance to select criteria. Technology, economy, environment and society are the four criteria, including several sub-criteria, which the studies focus on. The selected sub-criteria are shown in Figure 1. It can be re-selected as the actual conditions considered.
(1)
Technical criterion (C1)
This criterion is staple for evaluating DES, indicating the utilization, performance coefficient, safety, technical difficulty, etc.
(2)
Economical criterion (C2)
Economic criterion is the pivotal index for the system evaluation. Including various cost, live cycle, incremental cost payback period, etc.
(3)
Environmental criterion (C3)
Generally, it is used to evaluate the environmental pollution level, and it has been increasingly taken seriously, considering the importance of the environmental protection. The index usually involves dusty, CO2, SO2, NO2 emissions, and noise.
(4)
Social criterion (C4)
For this item, it aims to the influences of DES on society. Policy condition, economic development and resource available are primarily considered.
Generally, there is a multiple correlation among the criteria which are divided into three tiers. For example, the advanced technology basically with higher utilization and lower emission, but the investment may increase substantially. It means that there is a positive correlation between C1 and C2, a negative correlation between C1 and C3. The superior maintainability represents better value of maintenance convenience (C14) and service live criterion (C33), however, with worse value of footprint criterion (C143) and emission criterion (C21) and vice versa. Therefore, it is difficult to make the decision without an appropriate method.

3. G1-Anti-Entropy Weight Method Evaluation Model

An effective DES evaluation model can make a comprehensive and reasonable evaluation of DES, helping the decision maker to opt the best proposal by the score of decision function D.
D = f ( R , W ) , ( R = S E A )
where R is information collection consists of S , E and A , S is the options collection, E shows the criteria of options, A contains the information of expert comments. W is the weight collection calculated by G1-AEWM.
Based on the criteria of each option, the criteria matrix is expressed as follows:
S = { s 1 , s 2 , , s m }
X = { x 1 , x 2 , , x n }
E = [ a 11 a 12 a 1 n a 21 a 22 a 2 n a m 1 a m 2 a m n ]
where m is the number of the options, n is the number of criteria, and a i j represent the j criterion of option s i .
The evaluation method consists three steps. The framework of this method is shown in Figure 2. Firstly, determine the subjective and objective weights. Secondly, calculate the comprehensive weight. Finally, use the comprehensive evaluation function to obtain the comprehensive evaluation value of each program, and obtain the best option.
In Figure 2, the subjective and objective weight are determined by G1 method and AEWM, respectively.
(1)
Calculate the subjective order relationship
Ranking the criteria in order of the importance lessened by l experts hierarchically, as the most important indicator chose from X is x 1 and the least important criterion is x r . The order relationship is x 1 x 2 x r , and there are tiers of criteria. The order relationship index matrix of tier is constructed as follows:
E j = [ a 11 a 12 a 1 r a 21 a 22 a 2 r a l 1 a l 2 a l r ]
Setting R i j k as the relative importance of adjacent index that from evaluation tier j of expert i .
R i j k = ω i j ( k 1 ) s ω i j k s ( k = r , r 1 , , 2 , i = 1 , 2 , 3 , l )
where ω i j k s and ω i j ( k 1 ) s is the subjective criterion weight of x i j k and x i j ( k 1 ) .
The value range of R i j k is 1.0–1.8, as shown in Table 1, and ω i j k s takes the value 1.0 when k equals r . For a special case that k = 1 r R i j k > 1.8 , it means that the cumulate importance exceeds the extremely importance situation, to avoid this counterintuitive situation, ensure j = 1 r R i k j 1.8 , a ratio factor is proposed, and set the corrected relative importance R i k j as follows:
p = 1.8 k = 1 r R i j k r 1 ,
R i j k = R i j k p ,
The weight is calculated as follows:
ω i j r s = ( 1 + l = 2 r k = l r R i j k ) 1
ω i j ( k 1 ) s = R i j k ω i j k s ( k = r , r 1 , , 2 )
Set ω t s as the weighted arithmetic mean of the subjective weight evaluated by experts for each criterium and calculate as follows. So the subjective weight set is Y = { ω 1 s , ω 2 s , , ω n s } .
ω i t s = j z ω i j k s
ω t s = 1 l ω i t s
(2)
Evaluation criteria normalization
The criteria are divided into two categories, positive correlated criteria and negative correlated criteria. The positive are the criteria that the larger the value, the better the property, and the negative are the opposite. To avoid the impact of different units and magnitudes, normalize matrix E to B = [ b i j ] m × n .
b i j = { a i j min ( a i ) max ( a i ) min ( a i )   ( i ) max ( a i ) a i j max ( a i ) min ( a i )   ( i i )
where ( i ) applies to positive correlated criteria, ( i i ) to the negative correlated criteria.
(3)
Calculate the objective weight
Calculate the entropy and anti-entropy of the criteria by different methods as follows:
{ h t 1 = i = 1 m p i j ln ( 1 p i j ) ( 1 ) h t 2 = i = 1 m ( 1 p i j ) ln p i j ( 2 ) h t 3 = 1 ln m i = 1 m p i j ln p i j ( 3 )
where p i j = b i j i = 1 m b i j , and when p i j = 0 , set h t = 0 .
The objective weight is calculated as follows:
ω t o = 1 h t n i = 1 n h t
(4)
Calculate the comprehensive weight
ω t = ω t s ω t o t = 1 n ω t s ω t o
The comprehensive weight matrix is as D = [ ω 1   ω 2     ω n ] T . Set the normalized comprehensive weight decision matrix Z = B · D = [ b i j ] m × n [ ω i j ] n × 1 = [ e 1   e 2     e m ] T , the evaluation result of each option is as D ( s i ) = f ( S i , E , A , W ) = e i , and the best proposal can be obtained at e i = e max .

4. Appraisal Analysis of DES

A practical case of a hospital in Xinxiang is evaluated in this section. The energy service area includes three main buildings, with a construction area of 190,000 m 2 . The design electric load is 8706.8 kW, there are four months heating demand which designed load is 9235 kW, five months cooling demand with a design load of 12,698 kW. The annual hot water load is 1200 kW.
The five DES schemes, as shown in Table 2, proposed by considering the available energy resource around the hospital in early stage, are evaluated and compared using G1-AEWM.
In order to compare the practicability of G1-AEWM, the criteria shown in Figure 1 are selected to evaluate the different schemes. For the criterion C322, it is divided into two index as summer (C3221) and winter (C3222), taking into account seasonal difference. For criteria C14, C22, C23, and C4, these indexes are qualitative indexes, valued according to the characteristics of the scheme. The original data of various indicators are given in the Appendix A due to space limitations. The feature of all indexes are shown in Table 3, for convenience, use x1 to x23 to indicate each criteria.
The date in Table 3 are obtained from the date of the hospital above-mentioned in the attachment. The order relations are scored by five experts as shown in Table 4, which using 1 to 4 to represent the criterion of each criteria tier, as for first tier, 1 represents C1, 4 represents C4, and so on. the order of the number in Table 4 represents the order of the importance of the corresponding criteria. According to the order of criteria in Table 4, the ratio of importance between the two criteria is shown in Table 5, as E of p1 in first tier represents the relationship between 3 and 2 in the first tier of p1 in Table 4. In view of the fact that the sub-criteria of C13 and C322 are of same importance respectively, they are not being scored.
Firstly, calculating the subjective weight. It is verified that k = 1 r R 1 1 k = 2.184 > 1.8 , and for C1 tier k = 1 r R 2 2 k = 1.859 > 1.8 , it is necessary to correct the relative importance of these two tiers by Equations (7) and (8). The correct factors are calculated as 0.938 and 0.989. Figure 3 displays the subjective weight ratio. It is obvious that the criteria and x21 should be carefully considered as the ratios are the largest two.
Secondly, calculating the objective weight. In Figure 4. The normalized criteria, calculated by Equation (13), are distributed in concentric circles with a radius coordinates of 0-1, the radius represent the superiority of the index, the father away from the center, the more superior of the index, it means the larger the area enclosed by 23 criteria of a scheme, the better of the scheme in the preselected schemes, and vice versa, and the schemes S3 and S5 correspond to a larger area enclosed by the criteria.
The objective weight is calculated in different methods shown in Equation (14). As shown in Figure 5, there is quite difference between the weight ratios, as the ratio of is quite even, the others are scattered. The difference between the three methods is mainly in the proportions of the four criteria ×4, ×10, ×18 and ×20. This situation is due to the fact that the standardized values of the four indicators have relatively small values during standardization.
Then the comprehensive weight can be obtained by Equation (16), as shown in Figure 6, the distribution of weight values are roughly the same, but the distribution of w t 1 is relatively uniform. In addition, the distribution of w t 3 obtained by the entropy weight method shown as (3) in Equation (14) is scattered, which is caused by its high sensitivity. Although not reflected in this paper, this feature is likely to cause distortion of the result.
Figure 7 illustrates the evaluative score of each scheme based on different methods, the scoring value is just a comparison value without any actual meaning. From the figures, it is obvious that the evaluation score trends of different schemes, evaluated by various methods, tend to be consistent, as S5 > S3 > S4 > S2 > S1. The index with a relatively high proportion of comprehensive weights in S5 has a higher normalized value. Therefore, the evaluation scores of C1–C4 in the scheme are comparatively high and average, this is consistent with the largest graphic area enclosed by its various indicators after standardization, which also means that after comprehensively considering various factors, S5 is the best one among the five options.
From Figure 7 calculated by G1-anti-entropy method and Figure 7c calculated by G1-entropy method, comparing the result value of the same criterion of different schemes and the result value of different criterion of the same scheme, the latter has more fluctuations. This is caused by the sensitivity of the entropy weight method, but there is no distortion in this paper.
For technology priority, the order of scoring value of different methods are the same as S3 > S5 > S4 > S1 > S2. So from technical analysis, S3 is the optimal because of its high renewable energy.
For environmental priority, the scoring values showing stepwise differences are ranked as S3 > S5 > S4 > S2 > S1. For S3, which consumes less electricity to satisfy the community cooling, heating and electric loads, and the pollutant emissions including dusty, SO2, and NOX are greatly reduced, and the heat exchange device is laid underground to coordinate with the overall environment and of the community for a better landscaping effect, furthermore the noise pollution is also small. So S3 should be preferred from environmental benefits are significant.
For economic priority, there are difference between the orders of various schemes. It was sorted as S4 > S5 > S1 > S3 > S2 for method 1 and method 2, and the order of S1 and S5 are interchanged for method 3. However scheme S4 is still the optimal as the economy considered first, because of the lower initial investment and shorter payback period.
For social priority, the sequence is S5 > S2 > S3 > S4 > S1 according to the evaluation scores. S5 has obvious preponderances over other schemes in terms of government policy support and promote economic development. So it is premier choose S1 when considering social conditions.
Figure 8 shows the results of evaluating different schemes using subjective and objective methods. Compared with Figure 7, when the subjective and objective analysis of the schemes are used separately, the scoring results show that S3 scores the highest, S5 comes in second place, and the ranking of other schemes remains unchanged, but the proportion of each index is quite different.
Comparing subjective and objective evaluation methods, it can be found that the subjective evaluation method has a relatively higher proportion of economic and environmental criteria than the objective evaluation method, while the technical and environmental criteria are relatively low. This also shows that a single evaluation method has certain limitations. So the G1-Aewn is more comprehensive and explanatory.

5. Conclusions

In this paper, an evaluation system, G1-anti-entropy weight comprehensive evaluation system, based on 23 indicators in 4 criterion levels of technology, environment, economy and society is introduced. Through the example analysis, the following conclusions are drawn:
(a)
This method, combined by G1 method and anti-entropy weight method, presents a modified mean for integrated evaluation of DES schemes. It simplifies the AHP calculation process to avoid intricate consistency checks and overcome the defect of entropy weight method that is too sensitive to cause indicator failure. Therefore, it could be helpful to the establishment of energy system evaluation policy.
(b)
Multi-criteria evaluation makes it possible for deciders to select the optimal results despite the various criteria are proposed synchronously, which makes it more competitive than other methods.
(c)
The comprehensive weight method considers the subjectivity of decision making and the objectivity of system parameters. This can avoid the differences in subjective evaluation from impacting on the evaluation results.
(d)
The multi-energy complementary system with N-CCHP unit and GSHP unit is the optimal through the analysis. It is recommended that investment decision makers and related designers choose this scheme first.
Although the G1-anti-weight method has some advantages in the evaluation, there are some limitations which can be optimized, such as the changes in criteria with development. It is convinced that the method is still effective in evaluation as improvement considered.

Author Contributions

Data curation, W.W., X.H. and Q.Z.; Formal analysis, W.W., H.L., X.H. and Q.Z.; Funding acquisition, X.H. and S.T.; Investigation, W.W., H.L., X.H. and S.T.; Methodology, W.W.; Project administration, H.L.; Resources, H.L.; Software, S.T.; Visualization, Q.Z. and S.T.; Writing—original draft, Q.Z.; Writing—review & editing, Q.Z. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This study was supported by the national natural science foundation of China (Grant No. 71171081) and the natural science foundation of Beijing (Grant No. 9162014), the authors thank for supporting.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

All data are given in the paper. Separately there is no other data.

Acknowledgments

Not applicable.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A

Scheme 1: Traditional system.
Table A1. Traditional system main equipment.
Table A1. Traditional system main equipment.
NumberEquipmentParameterAmountRemark
1Electric refrigeration unitColling capacity 3863 kWCooling power 688 kE4
2Gas vacuum boilerHeating capacity 5000 kWBoiler efficiency 88%2
3Domestic hot water boiler2 t1
4Diesel generators200 kW1spare
5Other supporting energy equipmentPump, tower, water treatment and etc.
Scheme 2: Natural gas combined cooling, heating, and power system.
Table A2. Natural gas combined cooling, heating, and power system main equipment.
Table A2. Natural gas combined cooling, heating, and power system main equipment.
NumberEquipmentParameterAmountRemark
1Gas internal combustion generator setRated power generation 2004 kWPower generation efficiency 44.8%5
2Steam direct combustion unitCooling capacity 2908 kWHeating capacity 2254 kW5
3Other supporting energy equipmentPump, tower, water treatment and etc.
Scheme 3: Ground source heat pump system.
Table A3. Ground source heat pump system main equipment.
Table A3. Ground source heat pump system main equipment.
NumberEquipmentParameterAmountRemark
1Ground source heat pump unitCooling capacity 1396 kWCooling power 260 kW10
Heating capacity 1089 kWHeating power 287.1 kW
2Diesel generators200 kW1spare
3Other supporting energy equipmentPump, tower, water treatment and etc.
Scheme 4: Solar air source heat pump system.
Table A4. Solar air source heat pump system main equipment.
Table A4. Solar air source heat pump system main equipment.
NumberEquipmentParameterAmountRemark
1Full heat recovery series air-cooled heat pump unitCooling capacity 811 kWCooling power 285 kW17
Heating capacity 851 kWHeating power 297 kW
2Solar collectorLayout and top of the floor
3Diesel generators200 kW1spare
4Other supporting energy equipmentPump, tower, water treatment and etc.
Scheme 5: Multi-energy complementary system main equipment.
Table A5. Multi-energy complementary system main equipment.
Table A5. Multi-energy complementary system main equipment.
NumberEquipmentParameterAmountRemark
1Gas internal combustion generator unitRated power generation 2004 kWPower generation efficiency 44.8%2
2Gas direct combustion unitCooling capacity 2908 kWHeating capacity 2254 kW2
3Ground source heat pump unitCooling capacity 1396 kWCooling power 260 kW6
Heating capacity 1089 kWHeating power 287.1 kW
4Other supporting energy equipmentPump, tower, water treatment and etc.
Table A6. Main equipment price.
Table A6. Main equipment price.
EquipmentPrice (10 Thousand CNY/Unit)
Electric refrigeration unit584
Gas vacuum boiler35
Gas internal combustion generator unit1720
Steam direct combustion unit770
Ground source heat pump unit42.72
Full heat recovery series air-cooled heat pump unit60
Gas steam boiler15
Domestic hot water boiler25
Diesel generators8
Table A7. Electricity price of Xinxiang City, Henan Province.
Table A7. Electricity price of Xinxiang City, Henan Province.
Electricity Price (CNY/Kwh)
PeakFlat SectionTrough
8:00–12:00, 18:00–22:0000:00–8:0012:00–18:00, 22:00–24:00
0.920.600.32
Table A8. Gas price of Xinxiang City, Henan Province.
Table A8. Gas price of Xinxiang City, Henan Province.
Natural Gas Price (CNY/m3)
Non-HeatingHeating Season
2.783.20
Table A9. Equipment service life.
Table A9. Equipment service life.
EquipmentService Life (Year)
Gas internal combustion generator unit30
Boiler15
Electric air conditioner20
CCHP device25
Ground source heat pump unit30
Underground pipe system50
Air source heat pump unit25
Solar collector20
Heat exchanger30
System pipe network30
Table A10. Pollutant emission factor.
Table A10. Pollutant emission factor.
PollutantsUnitDustyCO2SO2NOx
Coal-fired power generationg/kWh0.57100093143.32
gasg/Nm30.6219401.244.96

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Figure 1. Evaluation criteria of Distributed Energy System (DES).
Figure 1. Evaluation criteria of Distributed Energy System (DES).
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Figure 2. G1-AEWM Flow.
Figure 2. G1-AEWM Flow.
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Figure 3. The subjective weight ratio of the criteria.
Figure 3. The subjective weight ratio of the criteria.
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Figure 4. The normalization value of 5 DESs.
Figure 4. The normalization value of 5 DESs.
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Figure 5. The objective weight ratio of the criteria.
Figure 5. The objective weight ratio of the criteria.
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Figure 6. Comprehensive weight value of different methods.
Figure 6. Comprehensive weight value of different methods.
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Figure 7. Evaluate scores based on different methods.
Figure 7. Evaluate scores based on different methods.
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Figure 8. Evaluation scores based on G1 and aEWM
Figure 8. Evaluation scores based on G1 and aEWM
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Table 1. The value range of R i k j .
Table 1. The value range of R i k j .
Value Importance   of   Criteria   ω j ( k 1 ) s to   ω j k s
A (1.0)Equally importance
C (1.2)Slightly importance
E (1.4)Obviously importance
G (1.6)Quiet importance
I (1.8)Extremely importance
B (1.1), D (1.3), F (1.5), H (1.7)Corresponding to the adjacent situation
Table 2. Energy system composition.
Table 2. Energy system composition.
OptionSystemComponent
S1Traditional SystemElectric NetworkElectric Air ConditionerGas Boiler
S2Natural gas combined cooling, heating and power (N-CCHP) system Gas turbineWaste heat boilerLithium bromide unit
S3Ground source heat pump (GSHP) system Electric networkGround source heat pump unitGround source heat pump unit
S4Solar air source heat pump (S-ASHP) system Electric networkAir source heat pump unitSolar thermal device
S5Multi-energy complementary (MEC)systemN-CCHP unitGround source heat pump unit
Table 3. The feature of 5 DESs.
Table 3. The feature of 5 DESs.
CriteriaSymbolPertinenceUnitS1S2S3S4S5
C11x1positive-47.892.576.16281.5
C12x2positive-18.45.430.825.227
C131x3positive-5.61.365.42.83.7
C132x4positive-0.880.933.82.82.6
C141x5positive-9585759080
C142x6positive-9075859580
C143x7positive-8580957090
C144x8negative-9085756095
C211x9positive ton/year011,75636,313.219,491.128,946
C212x10positive ton/year0743.1276.2122.5416.3
C213x11positive ton/year096.1115.559.7109.7
C214x12positive ton/year025.419.19.521
C22x13negative-8590607075
C23x14positive -6070908075
C31x15negativemillion36.2162.8074.4142.7551.06
C321x16negativemillion77.6734.9452.3458.7847.12
C3221x17negativeRMB/m217.339.817.934.624.5
C3222x18negativeRMB/m250.247.520.828.228.8
C33x19positive year2030302530
C34x20negativeyear6.39.78.45.69.3
C41x21positive -5090858095
C42x22positive -9090707585
C43x23positive -7090908595
Table 4. Order relations scoring of criteria.
Table 4. Order relations scoring of criteria.
ExpertFirst TierC1 TierC14 TierC2 TierC21 TierC3 TierC32 TierC4 Tier
p13 > 2 > 1 > 41 > 2 > 3 > 43 > 1 > 2 > 41 > 2 > 31 > 2 > 3 > 42 > 1 > 3 > 41 > 2 > 31 > 2 > 3
p21 > 3 > 2 > 43 > 1 > 2 > 41 > 3 > 4 > 21 > 3 > 22 > 3 > 4 > 11 > 2 > 3 > 43 > 2 > 11 > 3 > 2
p33 > 4 > 1 > 23 > 2 > 1 > 43 > 1 > 4 > 21 > 2 > 33 > 2 > 1 > 41 > 2 > 4 > 33 > 2 > 11 > 2 > 3
p42 > 1 > 3 > 44 > 3 > 1 > 24 > 3 > 1 > 21 > 2 > 32 > 4 > 3 > 11 > 2 > 3 > 43 > 2 > 11 > 3 > 2
p53 > 1 > 2 > 43 > 4 > 1 > 23 > 1 > 2 > 41 > 3 > 23 > 2 > 1 > 42 > 1 > 3 > 41 > 2 > 31 > 2 > 3
Table 5. Relative importance of criteria.
Table 5. Relative importance of criteria.
ExpertFirst TierC1 TierC14 TierC2 TierC21 Tier C3 TierC32 TierC4 Tier
p1E-C-DA-C-ED-C-BF-BB-A-AB-D-BD-AD-A
p2C-C-BD-B-DC-B-AE-CA-A-AB-D-AA-CD-B
p3D-B-CE-A-CD-C-BD-BC-B-BC-C-BA-CB-B
p4B-C-DC-C-BC-B-BD-CB-B-AC-C-BA-DC-B
p5D-B-CC-D-BC-B-AE-CB-A-AC-B-BB-AB-A
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Wang, W.; Li, H.; Hou, X.; Zhang, Q.; Tian, S. Multi-Criteria Evaluation of Distributed Energy System Based on Order Relation-Anti-Entropy Weight Method. Energies 2021, 14, 246. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14010246

AMA Style

Wang W, Li H, Hou X, Zhang Q, Tian S. Multi-Criteria Evaluation of Distributed Energy System Based on Order Relation-Anti-Entropy Weight Method. Energies. 2021; 14(1):246. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14010246

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Wang, Wanyu, Haochen Li, Xueliang Hou, Qian Zhang, and Songfeng Tian. 2021. "Multi-Criteria Evaluation of Distributed Energy System Based on Order Relation-Anti-Entropy Weight Method" Energies 14, no. 1: 246. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14010246

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