DOI: 10.3390/en19132989 ISSN: 1996-1073

Enhancing the Performance of District Heating Networks Using a Low-Temperature Hybrid Heat Recovery System for Gas Cogeneration Units

Łukasz Jendryasek, Marcel Barzantny, Aleksandra Banasik, Marcin Szega, Wojciech Kostowski

This study explores the selection of a heat recovery system for cogeneration units based on gas engines supplying the district heating system in Opole in order to enhance the efficiency and sustainability of the system. The proposed modifications focus on utilizing low-temperature (LT) waste heat from engine cooling circuits and improving exhaust heat recovery. The research examines retrofitting three cogeneration engines (total thermal capacity of 7.6 MW) by integrating water-to-water heat pumps to upgrade low-temperature waste heat (55–45 °C up to 700 kW), enhancing heat supply to the district heating network. Additionally, a second stage of economizers is evaluated to maximize condensation-based exhaust heat recovery from the existing 95–135 °C system. These system modifications increase the overall thermal capacity up to 9–9.1 MW. To maintain heat supply during cogeneration unit shutdowns (due to failures or electricity price fluctuations), an auxiliary air-to-water cascade heat pump provides an additional 0.8–1 MW. With increasing electricity price volatility, these system modifications provide crucial operational flexibility. Computational simulations confirm that the hybrid configuration successfully upgrades waste heat while strictly maintaining the existing engine return water safety limit. The evaluation demonstrates high economic profitability alongside stable emission reductions. This research presents a case study in optimizing heat recovery in cogeneration-based district heating networks, demonstrating practical and scalable applications for sustainable energy systems.

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