Abstract

Data centres produce waste heat, which can be utilized in district heating systems. However, the mismatch between data centres’ heat supply and district heating systems’ heat demands limits its utilization. Further, high peak loads increase the operation cost of district heating systems. This study aimed to solve these problems by introducing thermal energy storages. A water tank and a borehole thermal energy storage system were selected as the short-term and long-term thermal energy storage, respectively. Energy, economic, and environmental indicators were introduced to evaluate different solutions. The case study was a campus district heating system in Norway. Results showed that the water tank could shave the peak load by 31% and save the annual energy cost by 5%. The payback period was lower than 15 years when the storage efficiency remained higher than 80%. However, it had no obvious benefits in terms of mismatch relieving and CO2 emissions reduction. In contrast, the borehole thermal energy storage increased the waste heat utilization rate to 96% and reduced the annual CO2 emissions by 8%. However, the payback period was more than 17 years. These results provide guidelines for the retrofit of district heating systems, where data centres’ waste heat is available.

Highlights

  • The fundamental idea of district heating (DH) is to utilise local resources that would otherwise be wasted to satisfy local heat demand [1]

  • This section first presents the model validation, evaluates the three thermal energy storage (TES) scenarios based on energy, economic, and environmental analyses

  • The system performance was evaluated in terms of energy, economic, and environmental indicators

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Summary

Introduction

The fundamental idea of district heating (DH) is to utilise local resources that would otherwise be wasted to satisfy local heat demand [1]. Suitable resources include waste incineration, geothermal energy, solar thermal energy, and waste heat [2e8]. Waste heat plays an important role in current DH systems. In the countries of the European Union, about 72% of the heat supply comes from waste heat [9]. The current DH systems are facing a transformation to the fourth generation DH, which will decrease temperature levels dramatically. The decrease in temperature will bring huge potential for waste heat utilization in DH systems [10e14]

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