Application of heat recovery to long tunnels

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Application of heat recovery to long tunnels J Thompson, M Gilbey, M Legg WSP | Parsons Brinckerhoff in the UK

Transcript of Application of heat recovery to long tunnels

Page 1: Application of heat recovery to long tunnels

Application of heat recovery to long tunnels

J Thompson, M Gilbey, M LeggWSP | Parsons Brinckerhoff in the UK

Page 2: Application of heat recovery to long tunnels

Agenda• Case study• Heat recovery methods

– Heat recovery pipes– Geothermal tunnel liners

• Stakeholder analysis• Heat storage• Conclusions

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Case study• 13 km uni-directional rail tunnel• Air temperature ranges 25C (winter) to 35C (summer)• Potential for recovery of waste heat

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Tunnel cooling pipes• Bare pipes in tunnel bore• Possible to retrofit• Well understood, proven in

service• Potentially limited service life• Precedent includes;

o Channel tunnel• Fins may be used to increase

effective area

Tunnel Airflow Hairpin cooling pipe circuit

Tunnel Airflow

Ventilation shaft

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Geothermal tunnel liners• Polyethylene pipes cast into

segmental tunnel liner

• Not normally practicable to retrofit

• Longer service life

• Larger active area for heat exchange

• Limited analytical data available

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Geothermal tunnel liners• 2D Finite Element model built

• Parametric study data fitted to curve to calculate surface heat transfer

• Corrections made for inactive perimeter and longitudinal spacing

h= convective HTC (w/m2K)ΔT = Temperature difference between air and pipe (°C)

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Stakeholder analysis• Heat maps supplied by local

authority• 500m radius from shaft location

• Heat demand• Peak during winter• Potentially large daily variations

• Heat supply• Peak during summer• Lesser daily variation

• Low grade heat – additional “top up” heating likely required

• Assumed gas fired condensing boiler

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Heat storage• Heat storage may be beneficial to

“smear” daily supply profile• Heat wasted on high grade side

therefore poor financial case• Slight improvements for short pipe

lengths

• Low grade storage considered impracticable

• Lag in heat supply• Requires large storage space• Capital cost of equipment• Environmental risk of water storage

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Comparison with geothermal liner• Similar heat recovery can be achieved in

shorter tunnel section• Tunnel pipes – 1,525m• Embedded liner – 915m

• Higher return temperature of water• Reduced water flow rate• Improved efficacy of heat pump• Recued need for top up heat

• Order of magnitude capital costs• Tunnel pipes - £450,000• Embedded liner - £1,100,000

• Does not account for replacement of tunnel pipes in service

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Conclusions• Potential for significant level of heat recovery from tunnels• Large mismatch between heat supply and heat demand• Financial case contingent on identifying nearby stakeholders

– Users of low grade heat preferential– Poor financial case if displacing gas– Users may value renewable energy as a heat source

• Heat recovery pipes– Attractive based on initial capital cost– In-service replacement of pipes erodes financial case

• Embedded liner– Considerably more expensive– Potentially longer service life (similar whole life cost)– Higher system efficacy, reduced requirement for top up heat

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Questions?