DocumentCode
3023259
Title
Thermal storage of off-peak electrical energy in solar heating and cooling systems
Author
Crane, R.E. ; Lorsch, H.G. ; Oswald, R.L.
Author_Institution
Franklin Research Center, Philadelphia, PA
fYear
1979
fDate
10-12 Jan. 1979
Firstpage
197
Lastpage
202
Abstract
As fossil fuels become ever scarcer, the back-up systems for solar heating and cooling systems tend to employ electrical energy. This puts high peak demands on the electric utilities supplying solar heating customers, because the thermal storage of solar heating systems is likely to be empty during cold periods which coincide with the peak loads of winter peaking utilities. Oversizing thermal storage is shown not to be an efficient way of decreasing peak demands from solar heating backup systems. Solar cooling systems, on the other hand, are likely to be beneficial to electric utilities because, in general, sunny weather and periods of summer peaking utility load peaks are coincident. The thermal storage devices of solar systems can be used to reduce electric demand peaks by storing off-peak power. The use of separate storage devices for solar and off-peak electrical energy is shown to be desirable. However, the resultant increase in first cost must be weighed against cost reductions from lower peak demands.
Keywords
Costs; Energy consumption; Energy storage; Minimization methods; Power industry; Resistance heating; Solar cooling; Solar heating; Solar system; Sun;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Decision and Control including the 17th Symposium on Adaptive Processes, 1978 IEEE Conference on
Conference_Location
San Diego, CA, USA
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CDC.1978.267919
Filename
4046106
Link To Document