ASHRAE LO-09-004-2009 Simulation Model for Ground Loop Heat Exchangers《接地回路换热器仿真模型》.pdf
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1、2009 ASHRAE 45ABSTRACTA detailed borehole heat exchanger model is presented, cast as a TRNSYS component model, for use in ground source heat pump system simulations with optimization of system subcomponents. The proposed borehole heat exchanger model is based on non-dimensionalized short time step r
2、esponse factors, and includes a time-dependent borehole thermal resis-tance that is due to transient responses from the surrounding ground and short time-step thermal storage effects of the bore-hole grout and heat carrier fluid. These effects have been accounted for by developing a finite element m
3、odel of a bore-hole heat exchanger where the fully transient borehole thermal response is modeled and coupled to a short time step ground response factor model. Furthermore, each response factor function (g-function), describing the thermal response of a particular borehole field to a unit heat puls
4、e is developed to allow for varying borehole spacing-to-depth ratios so that borehole spacing is independent of the borehole depth. The model is developed with the specific objective use in optimi-zation problems for hybrid ground source heat pumps systems. A detailed model validation and sensitivit
5、y analyses are presented and discussed.INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUNDIn the United States, ground source heat pump systems that utilize vertical U-tube ground heat exchangers in closed loop configurations have, over the last decade, experienced market growth in space air-conditioning for residential, c
6、ommercial, and institutional buildings. The upward trend in market growth is relatively steady and similar advances are expected in European and Asian markets (Lund et al. 2005 and Energy Information Agency 2008). The market gains are primarily due to the fact that ground source heat pump systems of
7、fer significant advantages over their conventional alterna-tives with respect to energy savings due to higher coefficients of performance and associated improvements in system life cycle and operating costs, reduced greenhouse gas emissions, and improvements in building thermal load profiles. In the
8、 past, many such systems were designed and installed with a “seat-of-the-pants” approach, and system sizes were mostly justified based on the experience of the design engineers, resulting mostly in oversized designs. With the development of more accurate and reliable system design and simulation too
9、ls that have been available to field engineers and the engi-neering design community, confidence of building owners in ground source heat pump applications has been increased significantly. Today, ground source heat pump systems pres-ent a very viable choice in air-conditioning especially consid-eri
10、ng the rapidly rising cost of energy and the urgent need for reductions in building energy consumption and demand management. The proper design and simulation of GHP systems requires accurate assessment of the thermal phenomena in and around vertical ground loop heat exchangers as the sizing of GHP
11、systems is highly sensitive to the accurate evaluation of heat transfer between the heat transfer fluid inside high density polyethylene (HDPE) U-tube pipes in the borehole and the ground formation that surrounds them. A detailed discussion of the heat transfer phenomena in ground coupled heat pump
12、systems along with a comprehensive literature survey on currently available design and simulation models are provided by Chiasson (2007). In general, mathematical models describing heat trans-fer phenomena in vertical borehole heat exchangers can be Simulation Model for Ground Loop Heat ExchangersC.
13、 Yavuzturk, PhD A.D. Chiasson, PhD, PE, PEng J.E. Nydahl, PhDMember ASHRAE Associate Member ASHRAEA.D. Chiasson is an assistant professort in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of Dayton, Dayton, OH. C. Yavuzturk is an assistant professor in the Department of Mechanic
14、al Engineering, University of Hartford, West Hartford, CT. J.E. Nydahl is professor emeritus in the Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY.LO-09-004 2009, American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers, Inc. (www.ashrae.org). Published in
15、ASHRAE Transactions 2009, vol. 115, part 2. For personal use only. Additional reproduction, distribution, or transmission in either print or digital form is not permitted without ASHRAEs prior written permission.46 ASHRAE Transactionsclassified as either analytical, numerical, or thermal response fa
16、ctor. Several variations of two analytical models appear in the literature, and some have been incorporated into commercially- available design software (IGSHPA, 1988). These two models are known as Kelvins Line Source Model and the Cylinder Source Model. Some of the prominent models currently avail
17、able for design and simulation of ground source heat pump systems are briefly discussed below.Kelvins Line Source Model, described by Kelvin (1882), is a classic solution used to calculate the temperature distribu-tion around an imaginary line in a semi-infinite solid medium initially at a uniform t
18、emperature. A somewhat modified adap-tation of the Kelvins line source solution was given by Inger-soll and Plass (1948). A more appropriate analytical solution for modeling the heat transfer around a cylindrical borehole is the so-called Cylinder Source Model. This model was devel-oped by Carslaw a
19、nd Jaeger (1947), and then utilized by Inger-soll et al. (1954) to size buried heat exchangers. The ASHRAE (2003) procedure uses the cylinder source model as modified by Kavanaugh (1985) to determine the borehole heat exchanger length for commercial buildings. Bernier (2001) adopted the ASHRAE (2003
20、) method to perform hourly simu-lations of GHP systems. Berniers approach uses superposi-tion along with a loads aggregation scheme to account for hourly-varying heat transfer rates. Young (2004) employed an analytical model, referred to as the buried electrical cable model (Carslaw and Jaeger, 1947
21、), to evaluate the thermal capacitance effects of borehole elements on design borehole depths. Young (2004) replaces the electrical cable with the circulating fluid and the sheath with the grout, and draws anal-ogies from the elements of a buried electrical cable to a bore-hole, where the core is an
22、alogous to the circulating fluid and the sheath is analogous to the grout. Youngs resulting model was referred to as the Borehole Fluid Thermal Mass Model (BFTM model) and introduces a grout allocation factor (GAF) in order to improve accuracy of the BFTM model. Beier and Smith (2003) developed a so
23、lution to the one-dimensional (1-D) form of the heat diffusion equation using dimensionless groups. Their model accounts for thermal storage of the grout and circulating fluid. The U-tube is modeled using an equiv-alent diameter approach described by Gu and ONeal (1995). The 1-D heat conduction equa
24、tion is formulated for both the grout and soil. The boundary condition at the pipe wall is the heat flux due to the circulating fluid. At the grout/soil inter-face, the heat fluxes and temperatures are set equal. At infinite radius, the temperature is set at the undisturbed Earth temper-ature. The e
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