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research article

Systematic Integration of Energy-Optimal Buildings With District Networks

Suciu, Raluca  
•
Stadler, Paul  
•
Kantor, Ivan  
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August 1, 2019
Energies

The residential sector accounts for a large share of worldwide energy consumption, yet is difficult to characterise, since consumption profiles depend on several factors from geographical location to individual building occupant behaviour. Given this difficulty, the fact that energy used in this sector is primarily derived from fossil fuels and the latest energy policies around the world (e.g., Europe 20-20-20), a method able to systematically integrate multi-energy networks and low carbon resources in urban systems is clearly required. This work proposes such a method, which uses process integration techniques and mixed integer linear programming to optimise energy systems at both the individual building and district levels. Parametric optimisation is applied as a systematic way to generate interesting solutions for all budgets (i.e., investment cost limits) and two approaches to temporal data treatment are evaluated: monthly average and hourly typical day resolution. The city center of Geneva is used as a first case study to compare the time resolutions and results highlight that implicit peak shaving occurs when data are reduced to monthly averages. Consequently, solutions reveal lower operating costs and higher self-sufficiency scenarios compared to using a finer resolution but with similar relative cost contributions. Therefore, monthly resolution is used for the second case study, the whole canton of Geneva, in the interest of reducing the data processing and computation time as a primary objective of the study is to discover the main cost contributors. The canton is used as a case study to analyse the penetration of low temperature, CO2-based, advanced fourth generation district energy networks with population density. The results reveal that only areas with a piping cost lower than 21.5 kEuro/100 m(ERA)(2) connect to the low-temperature network in the intermediate scenarios, while all areas must connect to achieve the minimum operating cost result. Parallel coordinates are employed to better visualise the key performance indicators at canton and commune level together with the breakdown of energy (electricity and natural gas) imports/exports and investment cost to highlight the main contributors.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.3390/en12152945
Web of Science ID

WOS:000482174800105

Author(s)
Suciu, Raluca  
Stadler, Paul  
Kantor, Ivan  
Girardin, Luc  
Marechal, Francois  
Date Issued

2019-08-01

Published in
Energies
Volume

12

Issue

15

Article Number

2945

Subjects

Energy & Fuels

•

optimal cities

•

energy autonomy

•

low-carbon resources

•

multi-energy networks

•

parametric optimisation

•

co2 networks

•

model-based optimization

•

life-cycle assessment

•

power

•

performance

•

consumption

•

design

•

scale

•

gas

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
SCI-STI-FM  
Available on Infoscience
September 8, 2019
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/160944
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