Perspectives on fourth and fifth generation district heating - ScienceDirect

This freely accessible research article about Perspectives on 4th and 5th generation district heating was written by Henrik LundaPoul Alberg ØstergaardTore Bach NielsenSven WernerJan Eric ThorsenOddgeir Gudmundsson, Ahmad ArabkoohsarBrian Vad Mathiesen 

Highlights

• Differences and similarities between 4GDH and 5GDHC are identified and discussed.

• 4GDH and 5GDHC are common in the overarching aim and share essential abilities.

• 5GDHC can be regarded as a promising technology with its own merits.

• The 5GDHC label is partly misleading since it is not a clear progression of 4GDH.

• 5GDHC should be seen as a parallel rather than a sequential development of 4GDH.

Abstract

Fourth-generation district heating (4GDH) has been used as a label or expression since 2008 to describe a transition path for decarbonization of the district heating sector and was defined in more detail in 2014. During recent years, several papers have been published on a concept called fifth generation district heating and cooling (5GDHC). This article identifies differences and similarities between 4GDH and 5GDHC regarding aims and abilities. The analysis shows that these two are common not only in the overarching aim of decarbonization but that they also to some extent share the five essential abilities first defined for 4GDH. The main driver for 5GDHC has been a strong focus on combined heating and cooling, using a collective network close to ambient temperature levels as common heat source or sink for building-level heat pumps. It is found that 5GDHC can be regarded as a promising technology with its own merits, yet a complementary technology that may coexist in parallel with other 4GDH technologies. However, the term “generation” implies a chronological succession, and the label 5GDHC does not seem compatible with the established labels 1GDH to 4GDH.

 

Read the article on Science Direct

 

 

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