Combined cooling, heating, and power (CCHP) technology represents a widely adopted and promising approach for achieving high energy efficiency. However, the conventional operational mode of electricity determined by heating often leads to poor partial load efficiency, strong heat-electricity coupling, and inflexible regulation in the gas turbine system. This paper proposes a novel CCHP system coupling the gas turbine and constant-pressure compressed air energy storage. Thermodynamic and economic models are built to evaluate the four schemes of the coupled system based on the simple cycle or regenerative cycle gas turbine with a 10 MW power output, respectively. The results show that different coupling methods offer advantages in various aspects. The coupled scheme employing the simple cycle gas turbine and the ejector demonstrates the highest primary energy ratio of 68.94 %. Meanwhile, the coupled scheme using the regenerative cycle gas turbine and expander exhibits superior economic performance, with the fuel cost output rate and system profit reaching 1.426 and $734.43, respectively. Integrating constant-pressure compressed air energy storage effectively widens the heat-electricity ratio adjustment range of the gas turbine CCHP system. Among them, the coupled scheme employing the regenerative cycle gas turbine and ejector achieves the highest relative variation rate of the heat-electricity ratio, reaching 13.68 %.
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