Aalborg University, Department of Civil Engineering
Abstract
Ground Source Heat Pumps are energy-efficient HVAC systems usually adopted in residential
and commercial buildings. However the control of the thermal environment is required not only
in spaces occupied by people, but also in intensive breeding farms, in order to maintain healthy
conditions and to increase productivity. In the Italian livestock breedings, heating is usually
provided by means of gas or Diesel burners directly installed in the stable. An important part of
the heating load is due to the large ventilation rates required for the livestock wellbeing.
Cooling is either absent or achieved by evaporative systems that also increase the humidity level
in the stables, thus requiring even larger ventilation rates. Therefore the applicability of
geothermal heating and cooling in breeding farms was analysed in a research project co-funded
by the Lombardy Region and the Italian Ministry of Research and Education. A pilot system for
heating, cooling and ventilation was designed and installed in a piglets room at the
Experimental and Didactic Zoo-technical Center of the University of Milan. Five Borehole Heat
Exchangers (BHEs), installed down to a depth of 60 meters into an alluvial aquifer, were
coupled with a Ground Source Heat Pump. The heat pump provides heating and cooling to an
Air Handling Unit, including a Heat Recovery system. A monitoring system was installed in
order to measure comfort conditions in the piglet room, operating conditions and energy
consumption of the HVAC system, together with the spreading of the thermal plume in the
ground. In this paper the results of a monitoring campaign carried out in a typical winter period
are presented and discussed. The overall energy efficiency of the system, expressed in terms of a
COP, results to be equal to 4.04. A comparison between the pilot HVAC system and a
traditional one is also carried out, showing that the proposed solution can provide over 40%
primary energy saving. Following, cost savings in energy bills for farmers are found, although
the ratio between electricity cost and fuel cost is a key parameter