THREE YEARS MONITORING OF A BOREHOLE THERMAL ENERGY STORE OF A UK OFFICE BUILDING

  • Witte H
  • Van Gelder A
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Abstract

In the autumn of 2000, the British Engineering Council awarded an Environmental Engineering award to the groundsource heatpump project at Commerce way, Croydon Surrey. This, one of the larger UK groundsource projects, is a speculative built industrial building of about 3,000 m2 with both offices andwarehouse facilities. The building, that is leased by Ascom Hassler Ltd. (a Swiss based IT company), is expected to have an annual cooling load of 100—125 MWh and a heating load of 90—100 MWh. Peak loads under hot summer conditions are anticipated to reach up to 130 kW. During the normal life span of a building (25 years) the surplus of heat rejection would lead to increasing ground temperatures. This results in a less efficient heat pump operation and may even result in insufficient capacity during cooling peak demands. As a solution a hybrid system, incorporating a dry-cooler, was developed. The principal idea is to use the dry-cooler to store cold in the wellfield during early spring, when the required summer peak load cool can be generated very efficiently and cheaply. The operation and efficiency of the wellfield, the installed heat pump system and dry-cooler is controlled and monitored under a Building Management System (BMS). The results of the first three years of operation of the system are presented. Using the monitoring data an evaluation of the original design will be made.

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Witte, H. J. L., & Van Gelder, A. J. (2007). THREE YEARS MONITORING OF A BOREHOLE THERMAL ENERGY STORE OF A UK OFFICE BUILDING. In Thermal Energy Storage for Sustainable Energy Consumption (pp. 205–219). Springer Netherlands. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5290-3_11

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