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research article

District heating and cooling energy network using CO2 as a heat and mass transfer fluid

Henchoz, Samuel  
•
Favrat, Daniel  
•
Girardin, Luc  
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April 20, 2018
Heat Pumping Technologies MAGAZINE

The 5th generation compact district heating and cooling networks in a temperature range of 10 to 16 °C have a great potential for energy savings by providing a heat source for decentralized heating heat pumps, a cold source for air-conditioning and a heat sink for refrigeration or cogeneration units. The energy balance of the network is achieved by a central plant equipped with a heating heat pump in winter operation and a heat dissipator in summer operation. They typically facilitate the synergy between users and allow the concept of a city without chimneys or cooling towers in the various buildings. One such concept is based on using the latent heat of the transfer fluid (CO2), with one saturated CO2 vapor pipe and one saturated CO2 liquid pipe. Studies show that up to 80 % of the final energy can be saved in urban areas, at a cost that is lower than the conventional technologies.

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Type
research article
Author(s)
Henchoz, Samuel  
Favrat, Daniel  
Girardin, Luc  
Maréchal, François  
Date Issued

2018-04-20

Published in
Heat Pumping Technologies MAGAZINE
Volume

36

Issue

1/2018

Start page

19

End page

21

Subjects

CO2 network

•

District heating network

•

5th generation compact district heating

•

Heat pump

•

Renewable energy

•

Low carbon cities

•

Photovoltaics

•

SCCER-FURIES

•

Urban energy system

•

urban_system

URL

Online article

https://issuu.com/hptmagazine/docs/hpt_magazine_no_1__2018_digitaledit?e=24860023/60394063
Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
SCI-STI-FM  
LENI  
Available on Infoscience
July 22, 2019
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/159296
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