Thermocline thermal energy storage optimisation combining exergy and life cycle assessment
Résumé
Thermocline thermal energy storage is one of the most promising solutions for recovering waste heat in industrial plants. This paper aims to optimise the shape of a thermal energy storage to minimise its environmental impacts and maximise its exergy efficiency. The reference storage is an existing industrial high-temperature air/ceramic packed-bed heat storage called EcoStock®. The physical model used to determine the performances of the tank is a one dimensional model with two equations: one for the heat transfer fluid and one for the filler material. The environmental impacts are analysed using a life cycle assessment through four selected indicators: cumulative energy demand, global warming potential, abiotic depletion potential and particulate matter. To solve this multi-criteria problem, a particle swarm optimisation algorithm was applied with several exergy and environmental weighting factors. A Pareto set is obtained, bounded by the single exergy or environmental optimisations. Favouring exergy efficiency reduces the volume of the tank. However, environmental footprint of the tank is increased: the indicators of cumulative energy demand and abiotic depletion potential are considerably higher. The shape of the tank evolves with the exergy weight, from a square shape (environmental optimisation) to a tapered shape (exergy optimisation).
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