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Flexible Air Source Heat pump for domestic heating decarbonisation (FASHION)

Lead Research Organisation: University of Liverpool
Department Name: Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering

Abstract

The UK has set a target to reach net zero emissions by 2050. Heat accounts for nearly half of the UK's energy consumption. Among several possible solutions, heat pumps are considered as one of the most promising technologies for decarbonising the domestic heating sector. Among all heat pumps, air source heat pumps (ASHP) are the most cost-effective option for householders. the Committee on Climate Change (CCC) recommends mass deployment of heat pumps to comply with the net zero target, and their net zero 'Further Ambition' scenario includes the deployment of 19 million heat pumps in homes by 2050. However, the uptake of heat pumps in the UK is very low at present. In 2018, heat pump sales in the UK were around 27,000 units (most are ASHPs), significantly lower than other EU countries. This represents a grand challenge for the government, industry, business, and research communities.

There are a number of technological and non-technological barriers hindering the wide uptake of heat pumps, particularly air source heat pumps in the UK. There is a mismatch between the current ASHP products and the existing infrastructure and property configuration. Over 80% of houses in the UK use gas boilers for space heating, so their heat emitters (i.e., radiators) are designed for high temperature heat supply using gas boilers. However, most ASHPs available in the market have a relatively low heat production temperature. Secondly, ASHPs are vulnerable to ambient conditions. Their heating capacity and coefficient of performance drop dramatically as the ambient air temperature falls. Furthermore, frost starts to build up at the surface of the outdoor unit when the air temperature drops to around 6 C, so the outdoor units have to be regularly defrosted. Non-technical barriers have also played an important role behind the low uptake of heat pumps. The current UK heat pump market suffers from high capital cost and a low awareness of the product.

This project, based on the PI's pending patent (Application number: 2015531.3), aims to develop a novel flexible, multi-mode air source heat pump (ASHP). This offers energy-free defrosting and is capable of continuous heating during frosting, thus eliminating the backup heater that is required by current ASHPs. We will address the key technical and non-technical challenges through interdisciplinary innovations. Our project is also supported by leading industrial companies with substantial contributions (e.g. the compressor). The developed technology offers energy-free defrosting and can be operated at different modes to benefit from off-peak electricity and/or warm air during the daytime. It will be much more energy-efficient than the current products, and thus could facilitate rapid uptake of air source heat pumps, making an important contribution to the decarbonisation of the domestic heating sector in the UK.

Publications

10 25 50

Related Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Award Value
EP/V042033/1 31/08/2021 31/12/2023 £1,149,352
EP/V042033/2 Transfer EP/V042033/1 31/03/2024 30/08/2025 £352,123
 
Description We invented and proved a modified and flexible Evans-Perkins heat pump cycle integrating heat recovery and storage which is then used as an ancillary heat source for the heat pump's operation. It operates in a quasi-two-stage mode to theoretically save up to 20% in compressor power consumption compared with single-stage cycles. We build a prototype with off-the-shelf parts and demonstrate a practical 3.7% power saving at a heat production temperature of 35 °C. Power saving will further increase with heat supply temperature. We also qualitatively show that hot refrigerant exiting the condenser can be directly used for defrosting the evaporator, providing additional energy saving. We revealed that under ideal conditions, the flexible heat pump cycle is thermodynamically similar to two-stage heat pump cycles with full subcooling or flash gas removal, but no intercooling. From the energy recovery perspective, the two-stage cycles recover and reuse some sensible heat carried by hot liquid refrigerant simultaneously using their high-stage compressor, whereas the flexible heat pump cycle decouples the recovery and reuse of such heat in time using a heat storage. However, the irreversible heat transfer via real heat exchangers during charging and discharging processes will reduce the benefits of the flexible heat pump cycle. The effectiveness of all these performance-enhancing methods strongly depends on the characteristics of refrigerants.
Exploitation Route The invention of the flexible heat pump cycle can be applied to all heat pump applications.
Sectors Energy

URL https://www.nature.com/articles/s44172-022-00018-3
 
Description The flexible heat pump technology has been proved in the laboratory. Based on this technology, a consortium comprising of Clear Blue Energy, Source Thermal and the University of Liverpool has been awarded an award from the Department of Energy Security and Net Zero to further develop and demonstrate the innovation towards commercialisation. This has created several short term jobs in these industrial partners.
First Year Of Impact 2024
Sector Energy
Impact Types Economic

 
Description collaboration with Professor Will Swain at Salford University 
Organisation University of Salford
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Collaborate with Prof Will Swain to develop and submit a grant application to EPSRC for developing and demonstrating the flexible heat pump technology using CO2 as working fluids
Collaborator Contribution Energy House facility and their expertise in testing heat pumps
Impact awaiting for the final decision
Start Year 2024