Non Steady Analytical Models for Energy Pile Testing and Design

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Title
Non Steady Analytical Models for Energy Pile Testing and Design

CoPED ID
d7f406a8-e67c-45f8-bddd-03629053f85c

Status
Closed


Value
£498,845

Start Date
Dec. 1, 2016

End Date
Sept. 14, 2019

Description

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Europe's building stock is increasing in floor area by approximately 1% per annum. This represents an additional operational energy demand of over 4.5 million tonnes of oil equivalent, year on year. Of that energy requirement up to three quarters is related to space heating (or cooling), representing about half of total energy usage in Europe and North America. Ground source heat pumps, which can reduce the net consumption of energy for space heating by approximately 75%, can therefore play a significant and timely role in tackling the energy and carbon emissions challenge.
Despite the urgent need to curb the increasing energy requirements of new buildings, the market for ground source heat pump systems faces a number of barriers to expansion. While some of the barriers are related to regulation, investment cost intensity remains an important factor. Consequently, research and development must focus on increasing energy efficiency and reducing capital costs. One route to reducing investment capital costs is through the combined use of building foundations for the heat exchanger component of the system, thereby avoiding the need for construction of special purpose heat exchangers such as boreholes. This has the potential to both reduce capital expenditure and deliver increased energy per drilled metre of the heat exchanger.

Piles are the most common type of deep foundation. These are typically constructed by augering a hole which is infilled with concrete and steel reinforcement. Energy pile is the term used for a foundation pile which is equipped with heat transfer pipes to act as the heat exchanger part of a ground source heat pump system. Energy piles were first trialled in Austria in 1984, but thermal analysis and design methods have lagged substantially behind the practical application. Recent breakthroughs have shown the importance of the concrete part of the pile in storing thermal energy on a short term basis. This is significant because fluctuating operational energy demand means that a thermal steady state in the piles is rarely achieved. Despite this, most routine design approaches still characterise energy pile in terms of a steady state thermal resistance parameter. This means that any storage of energy in the concrete is neglected and the energy capacity of the system is routinely underestimated. Indeed, the steady state assumption has been shown to underestimate the potential energy saving available from energy piles by around 20%.

This proposal outlines planned work which will develop new non-steady models for use with the thermal analysis of energy piles. The work will also include application of these models to in situ thermal response tests which are used to determine the thermal characteristics of the soil surrounding the pile. Hence the new models will contribute to both improved soil parameter selection and less conservative design approaches.

This work is novel because there are currently no analytical models that appropriately simulate the transient behaviour of energy piles. By the introduction of appropriate non steady models this work will lead to improved and less conservative assessment of energy available from energy piles and hence increase their uptake in practice. This work is pressing because the alternative of using inappropriate steady state models will result in the under-prediction of ground source heat pump system performance and thereby inhibit uptake of this key renewable heat technology.


More Information

Potential Impact:
The proposed research project has the potential to impact a wide spectrum of the civil engineering and construction industries as well as government providers of buildings and infrastructure and hence the public at large. By providing less conservative and more reliable approaches to heat exchanger analysis and design the research will encourage uptake of ground energy systems, especially those installed in foundations. The research will therefore also contribute to reducing carbon dioxide emissions. In detail the beneficiaries of the research will be:

- Foundation and building services designers, who will have access to better guidance regarding available heating and cooling energy over the design life of their structures.

- Building, groundworks and geothermal contractors, who will benefit economically as there is an increasing demand for ground energy systems. Reliable design will strengthen this important and growing business stream.

- Building and infrastructure providers and maintainers. Confident use of ground energy systems will reduce whole life costs of buildings for private and public clients, provide compliance with local and national planning requirements (such as the Part L building regulations including the "Merton Rule" provision for 20% renewables) and improve the image of development in the context of a changing climate.

- Society as a whole, which will benefit from the provision of reliable renewable heat energy while reducing annual carbon dioxide emissions from the built environment. Greater use of renewable heat will also contribute to reducing energy bills in the long term.

- Government, which has made legally binding and technically challenging commitments for the reduction of carbon dioxide emissions and the increase in the contribution of renewable energy to the overall energy budget in the UK and EU.

Potential beneficiaries will have access to the results of the research through a thorough programme of dissemination that will span the UK civil engineering industry as well as the international ground energy community.

Fleur Loveridge PI_PER
Nicholas Woodman RESEARCH_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Energy consumption (energy technology)
  2. Heating systems
  3. Ground heat
  4. Heat pumps
  5. Heating (spaces)
  6. Energy efficiency
  7. Piles
  8. Construction
  9. Buildings
  10. Heat energy
  11. Geothermal energy
  12. Heat transfer
  13. Energy economy
  14. Energy policy

Extracted key phrases
  1. Non Steady Analytical Models
  2. Reliable renewable heat energy
  3. Energy Pile Testing
  4. Ground energy system
  5. Energy pile
  6. International ground energy community
  7. Additional operational energy demand
  8. Ground source heat pump system performance
  9. Potential energy saving available
  10. Thermal energy
  11. Renewable energy
  12. Total energy usage
  13. Energy requirement
  14. Energy available
  15. Overall energy budget

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations