Abstract
High temperature cascade heat pump with two separate refrigerants is a crucial system for decarbonizing industrial heating through electrification. The selection of optimal working refrigerants and temperature lifts relies on not only the thermodynamic analysis outputs such as coefficient of performance but also economic and environmental analyses. In this study, a technical–economic-environmental investigation was conducted for the proposed high-temperature cascade heat pump employing water as the high-stage refrigerant and six low global warming potential refrigerants in the low stage. To facilitate a detailed economic-environmental analysis, precise equipment sizing was undertaken. A comprehensive heat transfer model was developed to size the falling film shell-and-tube cascade heat exchanger, and empirical correlations were employed to size the internal heat exchanger at various cascade temperature lifts. The cascade heat exchanger model is validated against experimental data with less than 5 % error. The distribution of refrigerant charged mass was illustrated using instantaneous density and temperature data. To consolidate all thermal, economic, and environmental sub-indicators into a single parameter, the coefficient of performance, volumetric heating capacity, total annual cost, and total equivalent warming impact were combined as (COP × VHC)/(TAC × TEWI). This proposed comprehensive indicator can be applied to high-temperature cascade heat pumps to identify the optimum working pair and conditions. The results highlighted that R718 + R1234ze(Z) and R718 + R600 were the best working refrigerant pairs, considering all energy, economic, and environmental criteria.
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