4.8 Article

Hospital-oriented quad-generation (HOQG)-A combined cooling, heating, power and gas (CCHPG) system

Journal

APPLIED ENERGY
Volume 300, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.apenergy.2021.117382

Keywords

Hospital-oriented quad-generation (HOQG); Superconducting power system; Cryogenic fluid of energy fuel and medical gas; COVID-19 pandemic; Combined cooling; heating; power and gas (CCHPG)

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51807128]

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This study introduces a hospital-oriented quad-generation (HOQG) concept for the combined cooling, heating, power, and gas needs of hospitals. By utilizing local renewable energy sources, high temperature superconducting power cables, and superconducting magnetic energy storage, a variety of clean energy sources are generated and supplied to hospitals.
Along with the global spread of the COVID-19 pandemic, a number of hospitals are operating in the over-loaded state, which results in the ever-increasing requirements of cooling, heating, power, and medical gas supplies. This paper investigates a novel concept of hospital-oriented quad-generation (HOQG) to produce a combined cooling, heating, power and gas (CCHPG) system. Local renewable energy source (RES), high temperature superconducting (HTS) power cable and superconducting magnetic energy storage (SMES) device are used as the low-carbon electricity producer, carrier and regulator, respectively. Compared to the conventional copper cable and electrochemical battery, HTS terminal power units have superior advantages of high-efficiency power delivery and high-quality power compensation. To accommodate the surplus electricity from local RESs and guarantee emergency supply for the targeted hospital buildings, three cryogenic fluids of liquefied methane gas, liquefied oxygen and liquefied nitrogen are used as back-ups for both energy fuel and medical gas. By adopting a series of cascade energy utilization and thermally-activated energy conversion facilities, multiple clean energies of cooling, heating and power are produced to supply medical devices, and multiple medical gases of oxygen, nitrogen and carbon dioxide are delivered to hospitals for patient treatments. Compared to conventional diesel oil and compressed gas back-ups, these three cryogenic liquids have advantages of high-capacity, high-security storage and low-pollution utilization. Another possible benefit can be the low-temperature environment of these medical gases offers vaccines an appropriate delivering pathway against the COVID-19 pandemic. Therefore, the proposed HOQG can be expected to fulfill the demand of energy conservation and emission reduction simultaneously during the normal operation, as well as the demand of sustainable energy and medical gas supply under severe conditions such as natural and man-made disasters.

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