Return-Temperature Reduction at District Heating Systems: Focus on End-User Sites
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Background
1.2. Problem Statement
1.3. Significance
1.4. Literature Review
1.5. Aim, Objective, and Scope
1.6. Review Approach
2. Thematic Review and Analysis
2.1. Building Energy Performance
2.2. Room Heating Devices
2.2.1. Radiators
Radiator Dimensions
Radiator Efficiency
‘Add-On Fans’ and Ventilation Radiators
Operation Parameters
2.2.2. Forced Convection Room Heating Units
2.2.3. Floor Heating
2.2.4. Panel Heating
2.3. Thermostatic Radiator Valve
2.3.1. Performance
- In the first apartment, set at 25 °C, the return temperature varied between 26.6 °C and 28 °C, peaking briefly at 29 °C.
- In the second apartment, set at 26 °C, the return temperature ranged from 28 °C to 31 °C, peaking briefly at 32 °C.
2.3.2. Temperature Set-Back
2.3.3. User Awareness and Behaviour
2.3.4. Faults
- An oversized valve (with an equal percentage characteristic) increases the average return temperature by 0.6 °C, assuming proper hydraulic balancing.
- With hydraulic imbalance, the return-temperature increase is 1 °C.
- A valve with a linear characteristic causes a return-temperature increase of 2.5 to 4 °C compared to one with an equal percentage characteristic, depending on hydraulic balancing.
- An oversized linear characteristic valve, combined with hydraulic imbalance, results in a 2 °C return-temperature increase, totalling 6 °C when accounting for controller gain.
2.4. Substation
2.4.1. Hydraulic Interface
- The return temperature on the primary side of the heat exchanger is typically higher than on the secondary side due to the ‘temperature approach’ phenomenon. This can be mitigated by using cross-flow plate heat exchangers or by oversizing the heat exchangers to allow more cooling on both sides [76]. Direct connections reduce this temperature loss and lower the DH operation temperature. In Danish DH systems, direct connections are increasingly preferred for their effectiveness and simplicity [14].
- Faulty substations often lead to excessive return temperatures. Direct connections, with their simpler design and fewer components, are less prone to faults and do not suffer from issues like fouling at heat exchangers [14,115]. Fouling has been reported as 0.048 K/kWth for space heating plate heat exchangers in Belgrade, Serbia [116].
- Trüschel [12] states that factors affecting return temperature include changes in the indoor heating system flow and increased primary DH flow due to reduced heat transfer in heat exchangers. These factors can result in higher return temperatures at the DH side (see Section 6.7 of this reference [12]).
- Instantaneous heat exchanger: Provides hot water on demand through a dedicated heat exchanger.
- Heat storage tank: Utilizes a smaller heat exchanger and a storage tank that charges during off-peak times.
2.4.2. Substation Performance
- Establish performance metrics for UK substations.
- Identify underperforming units and provide performance benchmarks.
- Offer a testing framework for manufacturers to adapt products to UK conditions.
- Assess the impact of factors such as temperature settings on substation performance.
2.4.3. Substation Control
2.4.4. Temperature Maintenance
- Continuous recirculation of hot water from the building circuit back to the substation via a dedicated pipeline, adjusted to compensate for heat loss.
- Electric heat tracing in the domestic hot water circuit, eliminating the need for a recirculation line.
- Installation of in-line water heaters near hot water faucets.
- Designing multi-storey substations with local in-building networks, allowing each apartment to have its own flat substation for space heating and hot water, with thermostatic bypasses required to prevent cooling of the heat carrier medium.
- With a recirculation pipeline and a storage tank, the building substation return temperature is 28 °C with a supply temperature of 65 °C.
- For a system where each flat station produces domestic hot water locally and includes thermostatic bypasses, the return temperature is 24 °C with a supply temperature of 65 °C.
- Using a heat pump without storage and a recirculation pipeline, the return temperature is 20 °C with a supply temperature of 50 °C.
- When supplying heat to flat stations with comfort bathrooms instead of thermostatic bypasses, the return temperature is 23 °C with a supply temperature of 50 °C.
- Central domestic hot water production with electric heat tracing systems yields a return temperature of 19 °C.
- For flat stations with micro storage tanks and booster heaters, the return temperature is 16 °C.
2.4.5. Substation Faults
- A malfunctioning substation resulted in a summer average return temperature of 43.6 °C, compared to 29 °C for the best-performing substation with a storage tank.
- Two malfunctioning substations, affected by excessive flow due to a faulty control valve, recorded a summer average return temperature of 40.3 °C. In contrast, the best-performing substation, which used an instantaneous heat exchanger without a storage tank, achieved a return temperature of 26 °C.
- Design errors include issues such as oversized valves, inadequate heat exchanger designs with short thermal lengths, and using parallel flow configurations in heat exchangers rather than the preferred counter-flow arrangements.
- Malfunction errors refer to problems like excessive fouling in heat exchangers beyond normal levels and failures in control units, valve motors, or measurement sensors.
- Set-point errors involve incorrect settings, such as high set-points in household hot water heaters and indoor heating systems.
- Operational errors pertain to issues with domestic hot water units and indoor heating systems that reduce overall substation performance.
- The excess-flow method involves measuring flow rates at each substation to identify deviations from a target return temperature. Substations are ranked based on excess flow levels, with those at the lower end of the list recommended for further investigation into high return temperatures.
- The target return temperature approach sets a benchmark return temperature for a DH network. Statistical analysis of return temperature data from comparable substations determines the benchmark. If establishing a reference value is problematic, thermodynamic modelling is suggested. Detailed descriptions of these methods are provided for the Cheongju and Skogas DH systems in Section 4 of the IEA study [10], with additional insights available in references [1,127,150,152].
2.4.6. Substation Cascading
- Serial connection: Two interface units are connected in series, with configurations including domestic hot water on top (the space heating unit is positioned after the domestic hot water unit) and space heating on top (the arrangement is reversed).
- 2-stage connection: This setup directs the return medium from both units to an additional heat exchanger that pre-heats the tap water before final heating.
- 3-stage connection: This configuration adds a pre-heating unit in series (domestic hot water unit, space heating unit, and pre-heater). The Swedish version includes a mixing bypass for the domestic hot water circuit, while the Russian version features a bypass line to direct DH supply water to the space-heating circuit when needed.
- In small offices and single-family houses, radiator return lines are connected in series to fan-coil space heating units.
- In multi-family buildings, the ‘two-stage connection’ is implemented.
2.4.7. Substation Heat Pump
2.4.8. Absorption Heat Exchanger
3. Discussion
3.1. Overview of Research Objectives
3.2. Building Energy Performance
3.3. Room Heating Devices
3.4. Thermostatic Radiator Valve
3.5. Substation
3.6. Key Findings
4. Conclusions
5. Future Directions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Appendix A.1. Heat Transfer Mechanisms
Appendix A.2. Connection Positions
Appendix A.3. Radiative Heat Transfer
Appendix A.4. Enclosure Effect
Appendix B
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Air Speed [m/s] | Return Temperature [°C] | Excess Heat Output Ratio [%] | |
---|---|---|---|
Convection | Convection and Radiation | ||
0 | 44.5 | -Ref- | -Ref- |
2 | 41.5 | 24% | 61% |
4 | 38.5 | 42% | 93% |
6 | 36.3 | 54% | 110% |
10 | 34.4 | 71% | 129% |
14 | 32.5 | 83% | 141% |
16 | 31.4 | 92% | 146% |
Technology | Advantages | Limitations | Applicable Conditions |
---|---|---|---|
Building Insulation |
|
|
|
‘Add-On Fans’ |
|
|
|
Ventilation Radiators |
|
|
|
Thermostatic Radiator Valves |
|
|
|
Programmable Thermostats |
|
|
|
Advanced Substation Control |
|
|
|
Substation Cascading |
|
|
|
Substation Heat Pump |
|
|
|
Absorption Heat Exchanger |
|
|
|
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Tol, H.İ.; Madessa, H.B. Return-Temperature Reduction at District Heating Systems: Focus on End-User Sites. Energies 2024, 17, 4901. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17194901
Tol Hİ, Madessa HB. Return-Temperature Reduction at District Heating Systems: Focus on End-User Sites. Energies. 2024; 17(19):4901. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17194901
Chicago/Turabian StyleTol, Hakan İbrahim, and Habtamu Bayera Madessa. 2024. "Return-Temperature Reduction at District Heating Systems: Focus on End-User Sites" Energies 17, no. 19: 4901. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17194901
APA StyleTol, H. İ., & Madessa, H. B. (2024). Return-Temperature Reduction at District Heating Systems: Focus on End-User Sites. Energies, 17(19), 4901. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17194901