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Sensitivity of heating performance of an energy self-sufficient building to climate zone, climate change and HVAC system solutions

TitoloSensitivity of heating performance of an energy self-sufficient building to climate zone, climate change and HVAC system solutions
Tipo di pubblicazioneArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Anno di Pubblicazione2020
Autoride Rubeis, Tullio, Falasca Serena, Curci Gabriele, Paoletti Domenica, and Ambrosini Dario
RivistaSustainable Cities and Society
Volume61
Type of ArticleArticle
Parole chiaveAir conditioning, Air handling units, Air-to-water heat pump, Biomass boiler, Boilers, Building energy, Climate change, Efficiency measure, Energy dissipation, energy efficiency, Heat pump systems, heating, Heating performance, HVAC, Overall efficiency, Self sufficient buildings, Structural design
Abstract

The building energy behavior is strongly influenced by design choices made to contain energy losses through the envelope and to maximize the overall efficiency of HVAC systems. However, a thorough assessment of energy efficiency measures in relation to weather conditions is necessary. Ongoing climate change requires that design choices be also assessed in relation to projections of their future state. In this paper, the heating performance of real-world energy self-sufficient building, located in L'Aquila (Italy), is analyzed via calibrated EnergyPlus model. Different interventions are hypothesized for the HVAC system (biomass boiler, air handling unit, condensing gas boiler, air-to-water heat pump, their combinations) and effects are tested in relation to climate zone, by four Italian (L'Aquila, Rome, Palermo, Milan) and two European (Madrid, London) cities, and considering climate change to 2050 and 2080 for the city of L'Aquila. Results showed how heating system is influenced by weather conditions and what are the best choices in relation to them, ranging from 3.0 kWhm−2yr−1, achieved with combination of condensing gas boiler and air handling unit, to 54.2 kW hm−2yr−1, obtained with air-to-water heat pump. Finally, future climate change has highlighted significant reductions in heating energy demand between −8.5 % (2050) and −44.8 % (2080). © 2020 Elsevier Ltd

Note

Cited by: 34

URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85086820358&doi=10.1016%2fj.scs.2020.102300&partnerID=40&md5=77de648cf928f526ac78626518b7ee47
DOI10.1016/j.scs.2020.102300
Citation Keyde Rubeis2020