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Not What You Meant?  There are 6 definitions for Heat storage.

Seasonal thermal store

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A seasonal thermal store (also known as a seasonal heat store or inter-seasonal thermal store) is a store designed to retain heat deposited during the hot summer months for use during colder winter weather. The heat is typically captured using solar collectors, although other energy sources are sometime used separately or in parallel.

Contents

Types of seasonal thermal storage system

Seasonal (or "annualized") thermal storage can be divided into two broad categories:

  • Low-temperature systems use the soil adjoining the building as a low-temperature seasonal heat store (reaching temperatures similar to average annual air temperature), drawing upon the stored heat for space heating. Such systems can also be seen as an extension to the building design (normally passive solar building design), as the design involves some simple but significant differences when compared to 'traditional' buildings.
  • High-temperature seasonal heat stores are essentially an extension of the building's HVAC and water heating systems. Water is normally the storage medium, stored in tanks at temperatures that can approach boiling point. Phase change materials (which are expensive but which require much smaller tanks) and high-tech soil heating systems (remote from the building) are occasionally used instead. For systems installed in individual buildings, additional space is required to accommodate the size of the storage tanks.

In both cases, very effective above-ground insulation / superinsulation of the building structure is required to minimise heat-loss from the building, and hence the amount of heat that needs to be stored and used for space heating. Despite the differences in design that they involve, low-temperature systems tend to offer simple and relatively inexpensive implementations which are less vulnerable to equipment failure. They do, however, require the site of the building to be clear of the water table, bedrock and existing buildings, and are limited to temperate (or warmer) climate zones and to space heating only. High-temperature systems share the same vulnerabilities as conventional space and water heating systems due to their 'active' mechanical and electrical components, as well as their advantage of enabling greater control. They can also be employed in colder climates.

Low-temperature seasonal heat stores

One of the original motivations of early man's movement into caves was probably the ability of the earth to naturally even out variations in temperature. At depths of about 20 feet (6m) temperature is naturally “annualised” at a stable year-round temperature. With the development of modern passive solar building design, during the 1970s and 1980s a number of techniques were developed in the US that enabled thermally and moisture-protected soil to be used as an effective seasonal storage medium for space heating, with direct conduction as the heat return method. Two basic techniques can be employed:

  • In the Passive Annual Heat Storage (PAHS) [1] and similar direct solar gain systems, solar heat is directly captured by the structure's spaces (through windows and other surfaces) in summer and then passively transferred (by conduction) through its floors, walls (and, sometimes, roof) into adjoining thermally-buffered soil. It is then passively returned (by conduction and radiation) as those spaces cool in winter. These techniques were advocated in Daniel Geery's 1982 book Solar Greenhouses: Underground and John Hait's 1983 Passive Annual Heat Storage.
  • The Annualized Geo-Solar (AGS) concept [2] involves the capture of heat by isolated solar gain devices (rather than the building structure). From here it is deposited in the earth (or other storage masses or mediums) adjoining the building using active or passive technology. The depth at which the heat is deposited is calculated (according to soil type) to provide a controlled 6-month heat-return time-lag to the building through conduction as the building cools. This alternative was posed by Don Stephens.

These concepts are compared in greater detail at: www.greenershelter.com.

High-temperature seasonal thermal stores

High-temperature seasonal thermal stores are found on a variety of scales, from those installed in individual houses to those serving neighbourhoods via district heating.

Individual structures

Although the use of high-temperature seasonal thermal stores within individual buildings dates back to at least 1939 (MIT Solar House #1), the United States, Switzerland and Germany have all been notable pioneers in this field. Perhaps the best known international example of this active approach is the experimental “Jenni-Haus” built in 1989 in Oberburg, Switzerland. This has 3 tanks storing a total of 118m³ (4,100 cubic feet) [3] providing far more heat than is required to heat the building. The more recent “Zero Heating Energy House”, completed in 1997 in Berlin as part of the IEA Task 13 low energy housing demonstration project, stores water at temperatures up to 90°C (195°F) inside a 20m³ (700 cubic feet) tank in the basement [4], and is now one of a growing number of similar properties.

Neighbourhoods

At the neighbourhood level, the Wiggenhausen-Süd solar development at Friedrichshafen has received international attention. This features a 12,000 m³ (424,000 cubic feet) reinforced concrete thermal store linked to 4,300m² (46,000 square feet) of solar collectors, which will supply the 570 houses with around 50% of their heating and hot water [5]. A different approach is illustrated by the Drake Landing Solar Community development in Okotoks, Alberta. Here the store is created from the ground itself, with solar heated water pumped into a Borehole Thermal Energy Storage (BTES) system. This consists of 144 boreholes, each 37m (121 feet) deep, which heat the ground to a maximum of around 90°C (195°F) [6].

See also

Sustainable development Portal

External links

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Seasonal thermal store from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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