Ph. D. Thesis.Integrated municipal or district energy systems are one facet of the effort to support
sustainable energy systems that work towards reducing anthropogenic climate change
emissions. Current energy systems — including electricity, heat, and cooling — operate mostly independently, under the control of domain-distinct industries and regulatory
bodies. Operating these separate systems in a cooperative or integrated manner promises
improvements in efficiency, the ability of networks to absorb renewable energy sources
and storage, emissions reductions and community-based benefits.
The nature of district energy systems is that they cannot easily be modified or built
upon without severe disruption to the communities they serve, so assessments of their
behaviour and performance caused by potential changes must be modelled. This thesis
investigates what methods can model integrated energy systems and develops a bond
graph-based approach to constructing a fully-integrated system model. Although energy
based methods for integrated energy system modelling exist, this thesis demonstrates that
exergy can form the basis of integrated energy system models. Exergy being a measure
of the usefulness of energy allows the equivalence of energy domains in a single model
form, permitting development of a genuine, physically-founded integrated energy system
model.
An integrated model of a residential district supplied by heat and electrical networks,
based on a real UK urban area, is demonstrated in OpenModelica using the developed
modelling approach. The concept of an exergy storage device is introduced to provide
a mechanism for mediating energy flows between the networks. The model is used to
evaluate the performance of the test network, using trial cases to investigate how transferring exergy between energy domains through the mediating storage affects the overall
system energy and exergy efficiencies. Operational regimes that transfer energy from the
electrical to the thermal sub-system using the mediating storage are found to improve the
exergy efficiency of the system.Newcastle University, Siemen
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