Abstract

Zero or plus energy office buildings must have very high building standards and require highly efficient energy supply systems due to space limitations for renewable installations. Conventional solar cooling systems use photovoltaic electricity or thermal energy to run either a compression-cooling machine or an absorption-cooling machine in order to produce cooling energy during daytime, while they use electricity from the grid for the nightly cooling energy demand. With a hybrid photovoltaic-thermal collector, electricity as well as thermal energy can be produced at the same time. These collectors can produce also cooling energy at nighttime by long-wave radiation exchange with the night sky and convection losses to the ambient air. Such a renewable trigeneration system offers new fields of applications. However, the technical, ecological and economical aspects of such systems are still largely unexplored.In this work, the potential of a PVT system to heat and cool office buildings in three different climate zones is investigated. In the investigated system, PVT collectors act as a heat source and heat sink for a reversible heat pump. Due to the reduced electricity consumption (from the grid) for heat rejection, the overall efficiency and economics improve compared to a conventional solar cooling system using a reversible air-to-water heat pump as heat and cold source.A parametric simulation study was carried out to evaluate the system design with different PVT surface areas and storage tank volumes to optimize the system for three different climate zones and for two different building standards. It is shown such a systems are technically feasible today. With a maximum utilization of PV electricity for heating, ventilation, air conditioning and other electricity demand such as lighting and plug loads, high solar fractions and primary energy savings can be achieved.Annual costs for such a system are comparable to conventional solar thermal and solar electrical cooling systems. Nevertheless, the economic feasibility strongly depends on country specific energy prices and energy policy. However, even in countries without compensation schemes for energy produced by renewables, this system can still be economically viable today. It could be shown, that a specific system dimensioning can be found at each of the investigated locations worldwide for a valuable economic and ecological operation of an office building with PVT technologies in different system designs.

Highlights

  • Meeting the national and global energy targets and limiting the global temperature rise of 1.5 °C requires a change in all sectors

  • This paper shows the applicability of photovoltaicthermal systems (PVT) collectors as a heat source and heat sink for a reversible heat pump

  • The results presented in this paper were obtained within the project PVT HeatCool

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Summary

Introduction

Meeting the national and global energy targets and limiting the global temperature rise of 1.5 °C requires a change in all sectors. An electrification of heating and cooling systems and a massive increase of renewable electricity production is required. The building sector can contribute to the global targets by transforming the buildings into nearly zero energy buildings. A nearly zero-energy building should be built with an energy efficient construction which results in very low energy consumption. Additional energy for building operation should be generated from renewable sources produced on-site or nearby. Space cooling and industrial refrigeration represent a significant

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