Abstract

District Heating Systems (DHS) have received renewed attention in relation to their environmental, economic, and health benefits. Research literature on DHS tends to focus separately, either on the thermo-hydrological modelling or building energy demand. Rarely are there combined simulation approaches that consider the interactions between the district heating system and the buildings they serve. There is a practical need for a coupled simulation model to inform operation and energy retrofit strategies, such as, building insulation, water leakage prevention, and achieving comfortable indoor air temperatures. In this study, a novel simulation model, BETHS, is developed to predict the time-varying energy performance and occupant thermal comfort of a cluster of buildings served by a DHS in the urban context. The simulation results are compared with field measurement data collected for a secondary network consisting of 12 buildings and 2788 m of pipeline network over a 10-day period, in Shenyang, Liaoning, China. Predicted water temperature and indoor air temperature showed reasonable agreements with measured data. Simulation results suggested an energy saving of 35% for improved building insulation, 32% for switching from coal to gas, 18% for reduced indoor temperature, 14% for water leakage prevention, and 67% if all are combined. The BETHS model can be a valuable extension to a building energy simulation framework, and support retrofit strategies and operational decisions for existing DHS networks.

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