4.7 Article

A new ground-coupled heat pump system integrated with a multi-mode air-source heat compensator to eliminate thermal imbalance in cold regions

Journal

ENERGY AND BUILDINGS
Volume 107, Issue -, Pages 103-112

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.enbuild.2015.08.006

Keywords

Ground-coupled heat pump; Soil thermal imbalance; Air source; Cold region; Multi-mode

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of China [51176084]
  2. National 12th Five-Year Science and Technology Support Project of China [2011BAJ03B09]

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A ground-coupled heat pump (GCHP) is a clean and energy-saving approach to providing air conditioning and domestic hot water. For buildings with a dominant heating load, more heat is extracted from the soil and thermal imbalance becomes a crucial problem, in turn reducing efficiency and impeding the wide application of GCHP. Due to the disadvantages of the existing solutions, a multi-mode air-source heat compensator (AHC) integrated with a GCHP system to make a hybrid AHC-GCHP system is proposed in this paper. The principles and operating strategy of AHC-GCHP are illustrated in detail and its performance is simulated in the transient system simulation tool TRNSYS. AHC can not only compensate heat into the ground but also supply heat for space heating and domestic hot water in different modes through full use of the energy in the air with the average coefficient of performance (COP) ranging from 4.49 to 15.09. The AHC-GCHP system effectively keeps the soil thermal balance, and saves 23.86% energy compared with a traditional boiler + split air conditioner system, and costs less than half as much as a hybrid GCHP assisted with solar collector system. Consequently, the AHC-GCHP system is a potentially efficient and economic approach for buildings in cold regions. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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