Integrating district cooling systems in Locally Integrated Energy Sectors through Total Site Heat Integration

Between 20% and 50% of world energy consumption is lost as waste heat through energy conversion and transportation in manufacturing processes. Within industrial clusters and Locally Integrated Energy Systems (LIES), waste heat recovery for the purpose of heating and power generation has been well es...

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Main Authors: Liew, P. Y., Walmsley, T. G., Wan Alwi, S. R., Abdul Manan, Z., Kleme\x9A, J. J., Varbanov, P. S.
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Published: Elsevier Ltd 2016
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/71518/
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84969964575&doi=10.1016%2fj.apenergy.2016.05.078&partnerID=40&md5=3df081d0865875e7846b9bbb1f795400
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spelling my.utm.715182017-11-14T06:47:24Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/71518/ Integrating district cooling systems in Locally Integrated Energy Sectors through Total Site Heat Integration Liew, P. Y. Walmsley, T. G. Wan Alwi, S. R. Abdul Manan, Z. Kleme\x9A, J. J. Varbanov, P. S. T Technology (General) Between 20% and 50% of world energy consumption is lost as waste heat through energy conversion and transportation in manufacturing processes. Within industrial clusters and Locally Integrated Energy Systems (LIES), waste heat recovery for the purpose of heating and power generation has been well established via schemes such as process streams Heat Integration, cogeneration system, district heating integration, boiler feed water preheating and Organic Rankine Cycle. Waste heat can also be used to generate cooling energy via technologies such as the absorption chiller. During the summer season and in tropical countries, space cooling in buildings typically consumes up to 50% of the total energy consumption. Further recovery of waste heat to generate cooling can result in huge energy savings and emission reduction. This paper presents a new Total Site Energy Integration concept that integrates not only heat and power, but also cooling. The waste heat technology considered for cooling generation are Absorption Chiller (AC) and Electric Compression Chiller (EC). As there is actually an economic trade-off between amounts of chilled water generated, cooling water and power consumed, the new framework has been proposed to guide users in selecting the most economical waste heat-to-cooling technology for Industrial Clusters and LIES. For the presented case study, the lowest-cost solution used a waste-heat driven AC supplying 4.0 MW of Chilled Water (ChW) and a supplementary EC supplying the remaining 1.0 MW. The electricity demand of the integrated system is loaded by 1.3 MWe through this ChW generation system configuration, while the cooling tower load is increased by 3.3 MW. The ChW is expected to be generated at USD 115.10/kW y compared to USD 270.9/kW y for generating ChW by a conventional EC system without waste heat recovery. Elsevier Ltd 2016 Article PeerReviewed Liew, P. Y. and Walmsley, T. G. and Wan Alwi, S. R. and Abdul Manan, Z. and Kleme\x9A, J. J. and Varbanov, P. S. (2016) Integrating district cooling systems in Locally Integrated Energy Sectors through Total Site Heat Integration. Applied Energy, 184 . pp. 1350-1363. ISSN 0306-2619 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84969964575&doi=10.1016%2fj.apenergy.2016.05.078&partnerID=40&md5=3df081d0865875e7846b9bbb1f795400
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
topic T Technology (General)
spellingShingle T Technology (General)
Liew, P. Y.
Walmsley, T. G.
Wan Alwi, S. R.
Abdul Manan, Z.
Kleme\x9A, J. J.
Varbanov, P. S.
Integrating district cooling systems in Locally Integrated Energy Sectors through Total Site Heat Integration
description Between 20% and 50% of world energy consumption is lost as waste heat through energy conversion and transportation in manufacturing processes. Within industrial clusters and Locally Integrated Energy Systems (LIES), waste heat recovery for the purpose of heating and power generation has been well established via schemes such as process streams Heat Integration, cogeneration system, district heating integration, boiler feed water preheating and Organic Rankine Cycle. Waste heat can also be used to generate cooling energy via technologies such as the absorption chiller. During the summer season and in tropical countries, space cooling in buildings typically consumes up to 50% of the total energy consumption. Further recovery of waste heat to generate cooling can result in huge energy savings and emission reduction. This paper presents a new Total Site Energy Integration concept that integrates not only heat and power, but also cooling. The waste heat technology considered for cooling generation are Absorption Chiller (AC) and Electric Compression Chiller (EC). As there is actually an economic trade-off between amounts of chilled water generated, cooling water and power consumed, the new framework has been proposed to guide users in selecting the most economical waste heat-to-cooling technology for Industrial Clusters and LIES. For the presented case study, the lowest-cost solution used a waste-heat driven AC supplying 4.0 MW of Chilled Water (ChW) and a supplementary EC supplying the remaining 1.0 MW. The electricity demand of the integrated system is loaded by 1.3 MWe through this ChW generation system configuration, while the cooling tower load is increased by 3.3 MW. The ChW is expected to be generated at USD 115.10/kW y compared to USD 270.9/kW y for generating ChW by a conventional EC system without waste heat recovery.
format Article
author Liew, P. Y.
Walmsley, T. G.
Wan Alwi, S. R.
Abdul Manan, Z.
Kleme\x9A, J. J.
Varbanov, P. S.
author_facet Liew, P. Y.
Walmsley, T. G.
Wan Alwi, S. R.
Abdul Manan, Z.
Kleme\x9A, J. J.
Varbanov, P. S.
author_sort Liew, P. Y.
title Integrating district cooling systems in Locally Integrated Energy Sectors through Total Site Heat Integration
title_short Integrating district cooling systems in Locally Integrated Energy Sectors through Total Site Heat Integration
title_full Integrating district cooling systems in Locally Integrated Energy Sectors through Total Site Heat Integration
title_fullStr Integrating district cooling systems in Locally Integrated Energy Sectors through Total Site Heat Integration
title_full_unstemmed Integrating district cooling systems in Locally Integrated Energy Sectors through Total Site Heat Integration
title_sort integrating district cooling systems in locally integrated energy sectors through total site heat integration
publisher Elsevier Ltd
publishDate 2016
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/71518/
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84969964575&doi=10.1016%2fj.apenergy.2016.05.078&partnerID=40&md5=3df081d0865875e7846b9bbb1f795400
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score 13.160551