A Critical Review on the Use of Shallow Geothermal Energy Systems for Heating and Cooling Purposes
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. State of the Art and Technological Advancements
2.1. Rock Thermal Conductivity
2.2. Innovative Borehole Heat Exchanger Structures
2.3. Grouting Materials
2.4. Bore Heat Exchanger Collector
2.5. Heat Carrier Fluids
2.6. Underground Thermal Energy Storages (UTES)
3. Techno-Economic Analysis
4. Optimization and Modeling
5. Life Cycle Assessment
6. Conclusions
- (1)
- GSHP has one of the highest efficiencies among the other renewable energy systems with efficiency in ranges of 300–500%. By increasing the value of heat transfer in BHE, the efficiency of the GSHP system is increased. GSHPs have been shown to be both profitable and capable of reducing CO2 emissions by numerous researchers, who demonstrated that 26–50% energy reduction and 65–85% emission reduction is achievable when using GSHPs compared to combustion-based fossil fuel systems. In addition, GSHPs have the advantage of being used as a heating or cooling system, depending on the weather, with lower yearly operation and maintenance (O&M) costs compared to other traditional heating systems.
- (2)
- The thermal conductivity of the grout and collector has a significant impact on the borehole thermal resistance. Adding thermally enhanced materials such as graphite to grout or pipe materials improves their thermal properties and thus reduces the borehole thermal resistance. Laboratory investigations have shown the great potential for graphite, sand, and magnesium powder additives to increase the cement and bentonite conductivity to 1.5 to 5 Wm−1K−1. Despite the development of increasing the thermal conductivity of the grout and collector materials used in borehole completion, there is still a gap between the theoretical optimum and the commercially available products. Modeling has shown a continuous reduction in BHE’s thermal resistance, with the collector’s thermal conductivities up to 4–5 Wm−1K−1, while commercial collectors have thermal conductivities less than 1 Wm−1K−1. This is also the case for grout materials, which have a commercial product with a maximum thermal conductivity of 2.8 Wm−1K−1. Many researchers have shown the significant effect of using enhanced materials to reduce the borehole thermal resistance and increase the thermal exchange rate. However, investigations of BHEs’ design length have reduced and the economic benefits of using enhanced materials remain scarce.
- (3)
- BTES is the ideal alternative for seasonal cooling and heat energy storage due to the high thermal capacity of the ground. BTES can store surplus solar, and waste the thermal energy collected in the summer that can be used in the winter. BTES is a dispatchable renewable energy source, available everywhere, that can reduce the undesired effects of the intermittency of the other renewable energy sources. BTES should be designed so that its internal volume and external surface areas are maximized. Therefore, equidimensional cylindrical or cubic arrays of the BTES will perform best. For BTES systems, geological conditions are not crucial, unlike ATES systems, which depend heavily on the geology of the subsurface layers and the type of aquifer.
- (4)
- The high upfront cost of shallow geothermal energy systems creates financing obstacles for households. GSHPs without subsidy are more expensive heating solutions compared to fuel-based heating systems. To make GSHP compete with gas, it is necessary to create balanced taxation levels between electricity and gas. Increased prices or carbon taxation on fossil fuels will likely have a direct impact on GSHPs’ ability to compete against gas boilers. The cost-effectiveness of GSHP could be improved in the future through several driving factors, including market maturity, increased efficiency, access to cheap electricity, and subsidy programs.
- (5)
- Increasing the thermal properties of materials (grout, collector, and heat-carrier fluid) and implementing innovative configurations could improve BHE performance. The extra costs associated with using such materials must be justified by their reasonable effect on BHE efficiency. The optimal decision should therefore consider efficiency alongside the total costs.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Nomenclature
Abbreviation | Full Title |
ATES | Aquifer Thermal Energy Storage |
BHE | Borehole Heat Exchanger |
BTES | Boreholes Thermal Energy Storage |
Capex | Capital Expenditure |
CBA | Cost Benefits Analysis |
COP | Coefficient of Performance |
DHW | Domestic Hot Water |
GHG | Greenhouse Gas |
GSHP | Ground Source Heat Pump |
IEA | International Energy Agency |
IRR | Internal Rate of Return |
LCOE | Levelized Cost of Energy |
LCOH | Levelized Cost of Heat |
MOGA | Multi-Objective Genetic Algorithm |
MRE | Mean Relative Error |
NPV | Net Present Value |
Opex | Operating Expenditure |
O&M | Operation And Maintenance |
PBP | Payback Period |
PE | Polyethylene |
PP | Polypropylene |
PU | Polyurethane |
PVC | Polyvinylchloride |
UTES | Under Ground Thermal Energy Storage |
RBDO | Reliability-Based Design Optimization |
RMSE | Root Mean Squared Error |
TRT | Thermal Response Test |
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Pipe Materials | Thermal Conductivity, Wm−1K−1 | Temperature for Continued Operation, °C |
---|---|---|
HDPE-Nano HDPE-Talc | 0.55 0.72 | NA |
PE100/ PE100-RC | 0.42 | 40 |
PE-RT | 0.42 | 70 |
PE-X | 0.41 | 70 |
PA | 0.24 | 40 |
PB | 0.22 | 70 |
PU | 0.29 | 40 |
PVC | 0.12–0.25 | 27 |
PP | 0.1–0.22 | 63 |
Steel | 45 | 399 |
Copper | 395 | 205 |
Heat-Carrier Fluids | Thermal Conductivity, Wm−1K−1 | Freezing Point, C | Viscosity, cP | Toxicity, LD50 g/kg |
---|---|---|---|---|
Water | 0.598 | 0 | 1 | |
CaCl2 20% | 0.572 | −17.2 | 4.8 | 1.94 |
CaCl2 12% | 0.588 | −7.2 | 2.4 | |
Ethyl alcohol 20 wt.% | 0.46 | −11 | 1.4 | 7.06 |
Ethyl alcohol 30 wt.% | 0.41 | −20 | 1.6 | |
Propylene glycol 25 wt.% | 0.48 | −10 | 3.7 | 20 |
Propylene glycol 33 wt.% | 0.44 | −17 | 6.8 | |
Ethylene glycol 25 wt.% | 0.49 | −12.2 | 1.4 | 4.7 |
Ethylene glycol 33 wt.% | 0.4 | −18 | 2.84 |
Source | Description | Economic Indicators | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|
Neves et al., 2020 (USA) [98] | Analyzed the energy savings by replacing an old electric air conditioning/gas furnace system by vertical BHE. | The operation and maintenance costs cannot be assumed due to a neutral component for the payback period calculation that may cause a deviation from the real value. CO2 emissions credits should be considered. Uncertainty analysis should be considered to minimize risks. | |
Hakkaki-Fard et al., 2015 [99] | Studied efficiency and life cycle cost analysis (LCC) for initial & 10-year operating costs and relative payback period of ASHP (air-source heat pump) and DX-GSHP (direct expansion ground-source heat pump). | IC: initial cost, PVectricity: energy consumed | CO2 emission credits should be considered. The results show that energy consumption of the DX-GSHP system could be reduced by 50%. |
Perkovi’c et al., 2021 (Croatia) [100] | Investigated the integration of a carbon-free photovoltaic electricity source and a shallow geothermal reservoir as a heat source and heat sink during the heating and cooling season. | Cd is total capital and operating cost | Reduction in CO2 emission has been estimated but it was not considered in financial analysis. The payback period calculation should be considered to identify system feasibility. |
Schreurs et al., 2021 (Austria) [101] | Identified the critical economic parameters on profitability and make policy recommendations. | NPV, BCR and IRR | Reduction in CO2 emissions has been estimated but was not included in financial analysis. Only used for ‘what-if scenario’ and comparison. Optimization for selected system should be considered. ASHP and GSHP combined with PV were profitable under current subsidy schemes. |
Durga et al., 2021(USA) [102] | Investigated the technical and economic feasibility of BTES. | NPV, IRR, PBP and LCOH | Annual emission saving was estimated but not considered in financial analysis. |
Perego et al., 2019 (Switzerland) [96] | Developed techno-economic maps for potential of shallow and closed-loop geothermal system. | Payback Period for BHE when replacing oil and natural gas heating systems. | More accurate mathematical modelling should be considered to minimize the error (23%) for generating m/kW map and to improve PBP. Emission savings against fossils fuel have been estimated but not considered in financial analysis. |
Source | Objective Function | Decision Variables | Tools Used | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|
Pu et al., 2017 [104] | Objective Function: Multi-objective.
|
| ANYSIS, Central composite design, Kriging and multi-objective genetic algorithm (MOGA). | Cost-based optimization was not included in the study. CO2 emissions credits should be considered. |
Farzanehkhameneh et al., (2020) [92] | Objective Function: Single objective.
|
| TRNSYS software and Genetic Algorithm. | Cost-based optimization was not included. CO2 emissions credits should be considered. |
Wang et al., (2020) [89] | Objective Function: Single objective.
|
| Data driven optimization used ANN, Detailed and DOE-2 techniques, which relates variables, energy consumption, and heating demand. | Cost-based optimization was not included. ANN and DOE-2 were in good agreement with the data. |
Sivasakthi--vel et al., 2014 [105] | Objective Function: Multi-objective.
|
| Taguchi optimization analysis and utility concept. | Utility concept combined with Taguchi are useful to predict COPs with high confidence level (95%). |
Zhao et al., 2021 (USA) [103] | Objective Function: Single objective.
|
| An analytical borehole and probabilistic uncertainties using reliability-based design optimization (RBDO). | CO2 emissions credits should be considered. |
GAMAGE et al., 2014 [108] | Objective Function: Number of boreholes. |
| EnergyPlus, cylindrical heat source solution and Monte Carlo simulation. | CO2 emissions credits should be considered. |
Ma and Xia (2017) [109] | Objective Function: Single objective.
|
| EnergyPlus and G-function was used for BHE. | Cost-based optimization was not included in the study. |
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Ahmed, A.A.; Assadi, M.; Kalantar, A.; Sliwa, T.; Sapińska-Śliwa, A. A Critical Review on the Use of Shallow Geothermal Energy Systems for Heating and Cooling Purposes. Energies 2022, 15, 4281. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15124281
Ahmed AA, Assadi M, Kalantar A, Sliwa T, Sapińska-Śliwa A. A Critical Review on the Use of Shallow Geothermal Energy Systems for Heating and Cooling Purposes. Energies. 2022; 15(12):4281. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15124281
Chicago/Turabian StyleAhmed, Abdelazim Abbas, Mohsen Assadi, Adib Kalantar, Tomasz Sliwa, and Aneta Sapińska-Śliwa. 2022. "A Critical Review on the Use of Shallow Geothermal Energy Systems for Heating and Cooling Purposes" Energies 15, no. 12: 4281. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15124281
APA StyleAhmed, A. A., Assadi, M., Kalantar, A., Sliwa, T., & Sapińska-Śliwa, A. (2022). A Critical Review on the Use of Shallow Geothermal Energy Systems for Heating and Cooling Purposes. Energies, 15(12), 4281. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15124281