A numerical approach to exergy-based sustainability and environmental assessments of solar energy-powered district cooling systems using actual operational data

dc.contributor.author Huseyin Gunhan Ozcan
dc.contributor.author A. Hepbasli
dc.contributor.author Aysegul Abusoglu
dc.date.accessioned 2025-10-06T17:48:56Z
dc.date.issued 2024
dc.description.abstract The demand for cooling in buildings has been increasing at a higher rate than heating and more energy is expected to meet this demand. Solar energy can be vital in fulfilling this energy requirement based on its unique renewable energy features. The solar thermal powered absorption cooling (STAC) and solar electrical assisted vapor compression cooling (SEVC) systems are assessed in this study by conducting the conventional and advanced exergy analyses and environmental assessment. Determining the unavoidable part of exergy destruction as in this study provides a unique convenience in design problems where the thermodynamic performances of distinct systems are compared. Under current technological conditions removing the thermodynamically optimized parameters of the designed systems from the minima-maxima dichotomy and rationally evaluating the avoidable part of exergy destruction will protect the researcher from the arbitrariness of the design. The obtained results based on conventional exergy analysis in a component manner showed that priority should be given to solar technologies due to their lowest exergy efficiencies (0.16 for a photovoltaic (PV) and 0.19 for a collector) and sustainability indices (1.20 for the PV and 1.24 for the collector). Advanced exergy analysis results revealed that the exergy destruction significantly originated from the unavoidable part of the total exergy destruction of the components for the solar technologies (93.02 % for the collector and 96.41 % for the PV) cooling (92.12 % for the absorption and 98.42 % for the vapor compression) and overall system (99.92 % for the SEVC and 99.99 % for the STAC). The initial estimated carbon dioxide emissions from the STAC were 0.28 kg CO<inf>2-eq</inf> attributed to pump power consumption. However these emissions varied dynamically for the SEVC ranging from 0 (when the solar PV field meets the total power) to 5.58 kg CO<inf>2-eq</inf> (when radiation is not available) depending on the power-consuming components (compressor and pumps). © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
dc.identifier.doi 10.1016/j.psep.2024.06.043
dc.identifier.issn 09575820, 17443598
dc.identifier.issn 0957-5820
dc.identifier.uri https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85196320041&doi=10.1016%2Fj.psep.2024.06.043&partnerID=40&md5=15acd338740a44782a7269f61f643995
dc.identifier.uri https://gcris.yasar.edu.tr/handle/123456789/8175
dc.language.iso English
dc.publisher Institution of Chemical Engineers
dc.relation.ispartof Process Safety and Environmental Protection
dc.source Process Safety and Environmental Protection
dc.subject Absorption Cooling, Advanced Exergy Analysis, Solar Energy, Sustainability Index, Vapor Compression Cooling, Absorption Cooling, Cooling Systems, Environmental Impact, Exergy, Global Warming, Solar Power Generation, Solar Thermal Energy, Sustainable Development, Advanced Exergy Analyse, Environmental Assessment, Exergy Analysis, Exergy Destructions, Numerical Approaches, Photovoltaics, Solar Technology, Solar Thermal, Sustainability Index, Vapor Compression Cooling, Carbon Dioxide
dc.subject Absorption cooling, Cooling systems, Environmental impact, Exergy, Global warming, Solar power generation, Solar thermal energy, Sustainable development, Advanced exergy analyse, Environmental assessment, Exergy Analysis, Exergy destructions, Numerical approaches, Photovoltaics, Solar technology, Solar thermal, Sustainability index, Vapor compression cooling, Carbon dioxide
dc.title A numerical approach to exergy-based sustainability and environmental assessments of solar energy-powered district cooling systems using actual operational data
dc.type Article
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gdc.description.endpage 1422
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gdc.description.volume 188
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person.identifier.scopus-author-id Ozcan- Huseyin Gunhan (57220454056), Hepbasli- A. (55131010100), Abusoglu- Aysegul (23988363000)
project.funder.name Funding text 1: This research is part of the \u201CHeatReFlex-Green and Flexible District Heating/Cooling\u201D project (www.heatreflex.et.aau.dk) funded by the Danida Fellowship Centre and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark to research in growth and transition countries under the grant no. 18-M06-AAU., Funding text 2: The authors acknowledge the support of the \u201CHeatReFlex \u2013 Green and Flexible District Heating/Cooling\u201D project ( www.heatreflex.et.aau.dk ) funded by the Danida Fellowship Centre and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark to research in growth and transition countries under the grant no. 18-M06-AAU. The authors are very grateful to the reviewers and the editor for their constructive and valuable suggestions through which the quality of the paper could be improved.
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