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The reservoir network: A new network topology for district heating and cooling
Thermal district networks are effective solutions to substitute fossil fuels with renewable energy sources for heating and cooling. Moreover, thermal networking of buildings allows energy efficiency to be further increased. The waste heat from cooling can be reused for heating in thermal district systems. Because of bidirectional energy flows between prosumers, thermal networks require new hydraulic concepts. In this work, we present a novel network topology for simultaneous heating and cooling: the reservoir network. The reservoir network is robust in operation due to hydraulic decoupling of transfer stations, integrates heat sources and heat sinks at various temperature levels and is flexible in terms of network expansion. We used Modelica simulations to compare the new single-pipe reservoir network to a basecase double-pipe network, taking yearly demand profiles of different building types for heating and cooling. The electric energy consumed by the heat pumps and circulations pumps differs between the reservoir and base case networks by less than 1%. However, if the reservoir network is operated with constant instead of variable mass flow rate, the total electrical consumption can increase by 48% compared to the base case. As with any other network topology, the design and control of such networks is crucial to achieving energy efficient operation. Investment costs for piping and trenching depend on the district layout and dimensioning of the network. If a ring layout is applied in a district, the reservoir network with its single-pipe configuration is more economical than other topologies. For a linear layout, the piping costs are slightly higher for the reservoir network than for the base case because of larger pipe diameters
Boltzmann equation simulation for a trapped Fermi gas of atoms
The dynamics of an interacting Fermi gas of atoms at sufficiently high
temperatures can be efficiently studied via a numerical simulation of the
Boltzmann equation. In this work we describe in detail the setup we used
recently to study the oscillations of two spin-polarised fermionic clouds in a
trap. We focus here on the evaluation of interparticle interactions. We compare
different ways of choosing the phase space coordinates of a pair of atoms after
a successful collision and demonstrate that the exact microscopic setup has no
influence on the macroscopic outcome
Towards a new determination of the QCD Lambda parameter from running couplings in the three-flavour theory
We review our new strategy and current status towards a high precision
computation of the Lambda parameter from three-flavour simulations in QCD. To
reach this goal we combine specific advantages of the Schr\"odinger functional
and gradient flow couplings.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures; Proceedings of the 32nd International Symposium
on Lattice Field Theory; 23-28 June, 2014, Columbia University, New Yor
Gamma ray observations of the galactic center and some possible point sources
Observations of galactic center radiation and possible point sources obtained by gamma ray telescope flown on three balloon flight
Observing Long Colour Flux Tubes in SU(2) Lattice Gauge Theory
We present results of a high statistics study of the chromo field
distribution between static quarks in SU(2) gauge theory on lattices of volumes
16^4, 32^4, and 48^3*64, with physical extent ranging from 1.3 fm up to 2.7 fm
at beta=2.5, beta=2.635, and beta=2.74. We establish string formation over
physical distances as large as 2 fm. The results are tested against Michael's
sum rules. A detailed investigation of the transverse action and energy flux
tube profiles is provided. As a by-product, we obtain the static lattice
potential in unpreceded accuracy.Comment: 66 pages, 29 figures, uuencoded latex file with epsfigures (450 K),
supplementary full colour figures are available via ftp, CERN-TH.7413/94
(extended version
The -parameter in 3-flavour QCD and by the ALPHA collaboration
We present results by the ALPHA collaboration for the -parameter in
3-flavour QCD and the strong coupling constant at the electroweak scale,
, in terms of hadronic quantities computed on the CLS gauge
configurations. The first part of this proceedings contribution contains a
review of published material \cite{Brida:2016flw,DallaBrida:2016kgh} and yields
the -parameter in units of a low energy scale, . We
then discuss how to determine this scale in physical units from experimental
data for the pion and kaon decay constants. We obtain MeV which translates to
using perturbation theory to match between 3-, 4- and 5-flavour QCD.Comment: 21 pages. Collects contributions of A. Ramos, S. Sint and R. Sommer
to the 34th annual International Symposium on Lattice Field Theory; LaTeX
input encoding problem fixe
Towards a precision computation of f_Bs in quenched QCD
We present a computation of the decay constant f_Bs in quenched QCD. Our
strategy is to combine new precise data from the static approximation with an
interpolation of the decay constant around the charm quark mass region. This
computation is the first step in demonstrating the feasability of a strategy
for f_B in full QCD. The continuum limits in the static theory and at finite
mass are taken separately and will be further improved.Comment: Lattice2003(heavy), 3 pages, 2 figure
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