Abstract

The objective of this paper is to describe an energy-based approach to visualize, identify, and monitor faults that may occur in a water-to-water transcritical CO 2 heat pump system. A representation using energy attributes allows the abstraction of all physical phenomena present during operation into a compact and easily interpretable form. The use of a linear graph representation, with heat pump components represented as nodes and energy interactions as links, is investigated. Node signature matrices are used to present the energy information in a compact mathematical form. The resulting node signature matrix is referred to as an attributed graph and is populated in such a way as to retain the structural information, i.e., where the attribute points to in the physical system. To generate the energy and exergy information for the compilation of the attributed graphs, a descriptive thermal–fluid model of the heat pump system is developed. The thermal–fluid model is based on the specifications of and validated to the actual behavioral characteristics of a physical transcritical CO 2 heat pump test facility. As a first step to graph-matching, cost matrices are generated to represent a characteristic residual between a normal system node signature matrix and a faulty system node signature matrix. The variation in the eigenvalues and eigenvectors of the characteristic cost matrices from normal conditions to a fault condition was used for fault characterization. Three faults, namely refrigerant leakage, compressor failure and gas cooler fouling, were considered. The paper only aims to introduce an approach, with the scope limited to illustration at one operating point and considers only three relatively large faults. The results of the proposed method show promise and warrant further work to evaluate its sensitivity and robustness for small faults.

Highlights

  • A heat pump system extracts heat from natural sources such as air, surface water or solar energy and use it in a thermodynamic cycle

  • This section investigates the use of eigenvectors and eigenvalues of the cost matrices generated by the method by Jouili and Tabbone [33] as a means to fault diagnosis on the heat pump system

  • For the results reported in the paper the case of 30% expansion valve (EV) orifice opening is taken as the normal conditions operating point with the system input parameters and key cycle parameters as summarized in Tables 2 and 3 respectively

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Summary

Introduction

A heat pump system extracts heat from natural sources such as air, surface water or solar energy and use it in a thermodynamic cycle. What distinguishes the considered CO2 heat pump in this paper from chillers and other heat pumps is the fact that it is a water-to-water system and produces both hot and cold water as useful products. According to Zogg [1], when considering the ecological and economic impact of refrigerating machines, air-conditioners, and heat pumps, the main issue is to maximize the efficiency to minimize energy consumption. This is motivated due to the global drive towards mitigating CO2 emissions.

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