• No results found

Aging of district heating pipes an international task

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2021

Share "Aging of district heating pipes an international task"

Copied!
1
0
0

Loading.... (view fulltext now)

Full text

(1)

Linnaeus ECO-TECH 2020 Kalmar, Sweden, November 23-25, 2020

©2020 Author/s. This is an Open Access abstract distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0), permitting all non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

ISBN: 978-91-89081-03-1

AGEING OF DISTRICT HEATING PIPES AN

INTERNATIONAL TASK

Stefan Hay

AGFW | Energy efficiency association for heating, cooling and CHP, Germany

Abstract

District Heating (DH) systems in Europe developed historically, depending on local boundary conditions and corresponding requirements. Therefore, each DH system has its own individual characteristics. Nevertheless, DH utilities in Germany and Europe pursue similar targets: Increasing the overall efficiency of their systems while improving the security and quality of supply. This has led to a similar development of DH systems concerning the technical progress. In Europe, depending on age, operating conditions and installation costs, similar installation systems and pipe materials in DH networks are used.

Today DH utilities are forced to work on status assessment and lifetime prediction while a large number of pipes in their DH systems are close to the expected service lifetime, according to the design. Consequently, they have to think about suitable maintenance strategies. Additional they must also work on the transformation of their DH systems towards the increased use of renewable energy sources. To solve these issues, there are several national research projects working on the improvement of knowledge of status assessment, accelerated ageing and models for lifetime predictions. Since in most cases the material characteristics of the pipe systems were not recorded during the construction phase and historical operating conditions are not sufficiently available, a major challenge is to develop reliable calculation models with this limited data basis. A suitable approach is to pool national research results, compile statistics and improve the state of the art through scientific discussion and international cooperation. The IEA DHC Annex Task Shared Project “Status assessment, ageing, lifetime prediction and asset management of District Heating (DH) Pipes” intends to initiate this collaborative work within the International Energy Agency’s (IEA) Implementing Agreement “District Heating and Cooling including CHP” (DHC). Experts, researchers and manufacturers are invited to participate in this project and to contribute with their expertise on this international task.

References

Related documents

The position for the temperature measurements are shown in Figure 3.8, where S and R represent the supply and return pipes, u, s and d represent the up, side and down position

09.10 Reliability and lifetime aspects of Lithuanian DH networks, by Valdas Lukoševičius, Lithuanian District Heating Association (Lithuania). 09.30 Ideas of Smart

The heat deficit and heat surplus are different depending on the type of building, if it is residential or commercial, as the internal heat generated in both types of building is

The data used for calibration and validation of the load model was supply temperature, return temperature, mass flow and volume flow out from the CHP-plant Idbäcken in Nyköping to the

This dissertation focuses on an infrasystem that epitomizes these challenges and new prerequisites; the district heating systems in the Stockholm region.. The thesis (and

During summer time, a lot of cities in Sweden can use the industrial waste heat to cover the district heating load, and in some cities where there is no industrial waste heat

The simulation experiments showed that the suggested approach to district heating management makes it possible to control the trade-off between quality-of-service (measured in

– Local Possibilities for Global Climate Change Mitigation.