Title of article :
Shallow gravel aquifers and the urban ‘heat island’ effect: a source of low enthalpy geothermal energy
Author/Authors :
Alistair Allen، نويسنده , , Dejan Milenic، نويسنده , , Paul Sikora، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
Northern European countries with no high temperature geothermal resources can utilise the
urban ‘heat island’ effect to generate low enthalpy geothermal energy for space heating/cooling
systems in buildings, provided a suitable aquifer underlies the urban area. Buried valleys,
formed at the height of the Pleistocene glaciation 15,000 years ago, when sea level was 130 m
lower than present, and infilled with gravels as sea level rose again at the end of the Pleistocene,
underlie many European cities. These high yielding aquifers exist at only a few metres
depth, and can provide a supply of groundwater at temperatures elevated 3–4 K above the
average rural groundwater temperatures. This can produce a marked improvement both in
the output and in the efficiency of a geothermal system making use of this source. When
passed through a heat pump operating at a Coefficient of Performance (COP) of 4.5:1, a well
yielding 20 l/s of groundwater at 13 C can generate 865 kW heat, sufficient to supply space
heating for buildings with a footprint in excess of 12,000 m2 with a peak heating intensity of
70 W/m2. The economics of this low enthalpy geothermal energy source are outlined.
Although development costs are minimal, at current low natural gas fuel prices in Ireland,
heating-only applications will be less attractive, and a real cost saving will only accrue if dual
heating/cooling functions can be developed.
# 2003 Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of CNR.
Keywords :
Buried valleys , low enthalpy , Heat island’ effect , Heat pumps , Gravel aquifers , Ireland
Journal title :
Geothermics
Journal title :
Geothermics