Development of an Operational Planning Tool for Geothermal Plants With Heat and Power Production

2020 ◽  
Vol 142 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthäus Irl ◽  
Jerry Lambert ◽  
Christoph Wieland ◽  
Hartmut Spliethoff

Abstract A short-term operational planning tool for geothermal plants with heat and power production connected to large district heating systems is developed. The software tool contains, among other features, a heat demand forecasting model for district heating systems. Two options, such as linear regression and artificial neural networks, are compared. As the result shows, artificial neural networks with the Bayesian Regularization Backpropagation Algorithm have a high generalization capability and are suitable to forecast the heat demand of large district heating systems with high accuracy. Data from a district heating system with about 70-MW load supplied by a geothermal plant in the south of Munich (Germany) are used for comparison and assessment of all methods. After developing a suitable heat forecast, the heat and power production site is modeled by using mixed-integer linear programming. Mixed-integer linear programming has proven to be a suitable method to model the operation of geothermal plants with heat and power production as well as to solve the planning optimization problem. As the results show, the short-term operational planning tool can optimize the operation of single components as well as of the overall geothermal plant with regard to various objective functions. The tool maximizes the revenues from the sold heat and electricity minus the costs for the boiler fuel and the heat purchased from a connected adjacent geothermal plant. A retro perspective operation investigation has proven that the profitability of the considered geothermal plant could be significantly increased by using the developed software.

2020 ◽  
Vol 24 (6 Part A) ◽  
pp. 3673-3684
Author(s):  
Borna Doracic ◽  
Marino Grozdek ◽  
Tomislav Puksec ◽  
Neven Duic

District heating systems already play an important role in increasing the sustainability of the heating sector and decreasing its environmental impact. However, a high share of these systems is old and inefficient and therefore needs to change towards the 4th generation district heating, which will incorporate various energy sources, including renewables and excess heat of different origins. Especially excess heat from industrial and service sector facilities is an interesting source since its potential has already been proven to be highly significant, with some researches showing that it could cover the heat demand of the entire residential and service sector in Europe. However, most analyses of its utilisation in district heating are not done on the hourly level, therefore not taking into account the variability of its availability. For that reason, the main goal of this work was to analyse the integration of industrial excess heat into the district heating system consisting of different configurations, including the zero fuel cost technologies like solar thermal. Furthermore, cogeneration units were a part of every simulated configuration, providing the link to the power sector. Excess heat was shown to decrease the operation of peak load boiler and cogeneration, that way decreasing the costs and environmental effect of the system. However, since its hourly availability differs from the heat demand, thermal storage needs to be implemented in order to increase the utilisation of this source. The analysis was performed on the hourly level in the energyPRO software


2021 ◽  
Vol 246 ◽  
pp. 09003
Author(s):  
Haoran Li ◽  
Juan Hou ◽  
Yuemin Ding ◽  
Natasa Nord

Peak load has significant impacts on the economic and environmental performance of district heating systems. Future sustainable district heating systems will integrate thermal storages and renewables to shave their peak heat demand from traditional heat sources. This article analysed the techno-economic potential of implementing thermal storage for peak load shaving, especially for the district heating systems with waste heat recovery. A campus district heating system in Norway was chosen as the case study. The system takes advantage of the waste heat from the campus data centre. Currently, about 20% of the heating bill is paid for the peak load, and a mismatch between the available waste heat and heat demand was detected. The results showed that introducing water tank thermal storage brought significant effects on peak load shaving and waste heat recovery. Those effects saved up to 112 000 EUR heating bills annually, and the heating bill paid for the peak load could be reduced by 15%. Meanwhile, with the optimal sizing and operation, the payback period of the water tank could be decreased to 13 years. Findings from this study might help the heat users to evaluate the economic feasibility of introducing thermal storage.


Energy ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 82 ◽  
pp. 697-704 ◽  
Author(s):  
Milan Protić ◽  
Shahaboddin Shamshirband ◽  
Mohammad Hossein Anisi ◽  
Dalibor Petković ◽  
Dragan Mitić ◽  
...  

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