862 resultados para energy efficiency, performance assessment, retrofit
Resumo:
Hoje em dia a preocupação ambiental e a economia são fatores de sustentabilidade que são tidos em conta em países desenvolvidos, especialmente no seio da União Europeia. Reduzir os consumos de energia é, portanto, um ponto-chave para a redução das emissões de gases com efeito de estufa e aumentar a dependência das energias renováveis. Consequentemente surge então a necessidade de aumentar a eficiência dos equipamentos, em particular no presente caso, equipamentos de refrigeração. Para isso foi adotado pela Comissão Europeia uma rotulagem nos produtos consumidores de energia, em particular na refrigeração, os frigoríficos e congeladores domésticos permitindo informar o consumidor para os equipamentos mais eficientes. Mais recentemente, frigoríficos comerciais e profissionais também terão obrigatoriedade de incluir um rótulo energético na parte externa dos mesmos. Nesses rótulos estão incluídas várias informações técnicas do aparelho representadas de uma forma compreensível e lúdica aos olhos do consumidor mais leigo, entre as quais as classes de eficiência energética. As classes de eficiência energética caracterizam-se pela componente tecnológica dos frigoríficos. Perceber quais os componentes e materiais em particular que promovem uma melhor eficiência, quantificar a sua influência e avaliar os seus custos de integração torna-se assim essencial para toda a cadeia envolvida na produção destes equipamentos. Os fluídos frigorigénios e compressores aparentam ser os que mais exercem influência na eficiência de frigoríficos de baixa potência. Tubos capilares com trocador de calor são uma escolha mais eficiente comparado com o tubo capilar padrão que é utilizado nestes frigoríficos. Por forma a obter informação adicional e relevante do ponto de vista da análise energética realizaram-se simulações para determinação do consumo elétrico anual com recurso ao software Pack Calculation Pro. Entre os fluídos frigorigénios R-134a, R-22 e R-410a, os compressores scroll apresentaram consumos mais reduzidos (no máximo de 16%) do que os compressores alternativos. No caso do amoníaco (R-717) os compressores alternativos consumiram em média 14% menos do que os compressores parafuso. O recurso a velocidade variável em compressores permite reduzir o consumo na ordem dos 25%. Válvulas de expansão eletrónicas trazem reduções no consumo de 1,5% quando comparadas com válvulas de expansão termostáticas em compressores de velocidade variável. O propano (R-290) é um gás que mostra ter um melhor desempenho do que o R-134a e R404a em vários compressores, consumindo 16% menos do que o R-404a. Em função da temperatura exterior, o R-290 também apresentou um bom desempenho consumindo em climas quentes (Belém, Brasil) 24% menos do que o R-404a.
Resumo:
A presente dissertação centra-se no estudo das implicações originadas, ao nível das soluções construtivas presentes na envolvente dos edifícios de habitação, pelas recentes alterações efetuadas ao Regulamento de Desempenho Energético de Edifícios de Habitação (REH). Com o intuito de aferir o desempenho energético, através da aplicação do REH, considerou-se como caso de estudo um edifício de habitação novo, unifamiliar com tipologia T3, localizado a cerca de 10 metros acima do nível médio das águas do mar e na periferia da zona urbana de Vila Nova de Gaia. Após o levantamento das necessidades energéticas do edifício em estudo, realizaram-se diversas simulações, com o intuito de identificar e quantificar as alterações provocadas pela entrada em vigor da Portaria 379-A/2015, de 22 de outubro. Inicialmente estudou-se o comportamento térmico da habitação unifamiliar admitindo diferentes soluções construtivas: as soluções que cumpriam com as exigências em vigor até ao final de 2015 e as que cumprem as imposições atuais. Desta forma tentou perceber-se quais as implicações dessas alterações nas necessidades energéticas da habitação. Em seguida, e utilizando o mesmo conceito da simulação inicial, fez-se um estudo considerando que a fração se situava nas diferentes zonas climáticas existentes em Portugal. Para que tal fosse possível, teve que se considerar a implantação da habitação em diferentes localizações geográficas e a diferentes altitudes. Também se procurou avaliar a importância que as pontes térmicas planas assumem nas transferências de calor, nas duas estações. Assim, foi necessário fazer um pré- dimensionamento da solução estrutural adotada, quantificar a área destes elementos e o respetivo coeficiente de transmissão. Quantificou-se, posteriormente, quais as necessidades energéticas obtidas com a solução estrutural perfeitamente definida e as que se obteriam se se desprezasse a sua existência. Com as análises comparativas dos diferentes resultados obtidos, verificou-se que as atualizações das exigências regulamentares a que os edifícios de habitação estão sujeitos originam grande impacto nos sistemas construtivos adotados.
Resumo:
The performance, energy efficiency and cost improvements due to traditional technology scaling have begun to slow down and present diminishing returns. Underlying reasons for this trend include fundamental physical limits of transistor scaling, the growing significance of quantum effects as transistors shrink, and a growing mismatch between transistors and interconnects regarding size, speed and power. Continued Moore's Law scaling will not come from technology scaling alone, and must involve improvements to design tools and development of new disruptive technologies such as 3D integration. 3D integration presents potential improvements to interconnect power and delay by translating the routing problem into a third dimension, and facilitates transistor density scaling independent of technology node. Furthermore, 3D IC technology opens up a new architectural design space of heterogeneously-integrated high-bandwidth CPUs. Vertical integration promises to provide the CPU architectures of the future by integrating high performance processors with on-chip high-bandwidth memory systems and highly connected network-on-chip structures. Such techniques can overcome the well-known CPU performance bottlenecks referred to as memory and communication wall. However the promising improvements to performance and energy efficiency offered by 3D CPUs does not come without cost, both in the financial investments to develop the technology, and the increased complexity of design. Two main limitations to 3D IC technology have been heat removal and TSV reliability. Transistor stacking creates increases in power density, current density and thermal resistance in air cooled packages. Furthermore the technology introduces vertical through silicon vias (TSVs) that create new points of failure in the chip and require development of new BEOL technologies. Although these issues can be controlled to some extent using thermal-reliability aware physical and architectural 3D design techniques, high performance embedded cooling schemes, such as micro-fluidic (MF) cooling, are fundamentally necessary to unlock the true potential of 3D ICs. A new paradigm is being put forth which integrates the computational, electrical, physical, thermal and reliability views of a system. The unification of these diverse aspects of integrated circuits is called Co-Design. Independent design and optimization of each aspect leads to sub-optimal designs due to a lack of understanding of cross-domain interactions and their impacts on the feasibility region of the architectural design space. Co-Design enables optimization across layers with a multi-domain view and thus unlocks new high-performance and energy efficient configurations. Although the co-design paradigm is becoming increasingly necessary in all fields of IC design, it is even more critical in 3D ICs where, as we show, the inter-layer coupling and higher degree of connectivity between components exacerbates the interdependence between architectural parameters, physical design parameters and the multitude of metrics of interest to the designer (i.e. power, performance, temperature and reliability). In this dissertation we present a framework for multi-domain co-simulation and co-optimization of 3D CPU architectures with both air and MF cooling solutions. Finally we propose an approach for design space exploration and modeling within the new Co-Design paradigm, and discuss the possible avenues for improvement of this work in the future.
Resumo:
The proliferation of new mobile communication devices, such as smartphones and tablets, has led to an exponential growth in network traffic. The demand for supporting the fast-growing consumer data rates urges the wireless service providers and researchers to seek a new efficient radio access technology, which is the so-called 5G technology, beyond what current 4G LTE can provide. On the other hand, ubiquitous RFID tags, sensors, actuators, mobile phones and etc. cut across many areas of modern-day living, which offers the ability to measure, infer and understand the environmental indicators. The proliferation of these devices creates the term of the Internet of Things (IoT). For the researchers and engineers in the field of wireless communication, the exploration of new effective techniques to support 5G communication and the IoT becomes an urgent task, which not only leads to fruitful research but also enhance the quality of our everyday life. Massive MIMO, which has shown the great potential in improving the achievable rate with a very large number of antennas, has become a popular candidate. However, the requirement of deploying a large number of antennas at the base station may not be feasible in indoor scenarios. Does there exist a good alternative that can achieve similar system performance to massive MIMO for indoor environment? In this dissertation, we address this question by proposing the time-reversal technique as a counterpart of massive MIMO in indoor scenario with the massive multipath effect. It is well known that radio signals will experience many multipaths due to the reflection from various scatters, especially in indoor environments. The traditional TR waveform is able to create a focusing effect at the intended receiver with very low transmitter complexity in a severe multipath channel. TR's focusing effect is in essence a spatial-temporal resonance effect that brings all the multipaths to arrive at a particular location at a specific moment. We show that by using time-reversal signal processing, with a sufficiently large bandwidth, one can harvest the massive multipaths naturally existing in a rich-scattering environment to form a large number of virtual antennas and achieve the desired massive multipath effect with a single antenna. Further, we explore the optimal bandwidth for TR system to achieve maximal spectral efficiency. Through evaluating the spectral efficiency, the optimal bandwidth for TR system is found determined by the system parameters, e.g., the number of users and backoff factor, instead of the waveform types. Moreover, we investigate the tradeoff between complexity and performance through establishing a generalized relationship between the system performance and waveform quantization in a practical communication system. It is shown that a 4-bit quantized waveforms can be used to achieve the similar bit-error-rate compared to the TR system with perfect precision waveforms. Besides 5G technology, Internet of Things (IoT) is another terminology that recently attracts more and more attention from both academia and industry. In the second part of this dissertation, the heterogeneity issue within the IoT is explored. One of the significant heterogeneity considering the massive amount of devices in the IoT is the device heterogeneity, i.e., the heterogeneous bandwidths and associated radio-frequency (RF) components. The traditional middleware techniques result in the fragmentation of the whole network, hampering the objects interoperability and slowing down the development of a unified reference model for the IoT. We propose a novel TR-based heterogeneous system, which can address the bandwidth heterogeneity and maintain the benefit of TR at the same time. The increase of complexity in the proposed system lies in the digital processing at the access point (AP), instead of at the devices' ends, which can be easily handled with more powerful digital signal processor (DSP). Meanwhile, the complexity of the terminal devices stays low and therefore satisfies the low-complexity and scalability requirement of the IoT. Since there is no middleware in the proposed scheme and the additional physical layer complexity concentrates on the AP side, the proposed heterogeneous TR system better satisfies the low-complexity and energy-efficiency requirement for the terminal devices (TDs) compared with the middleware approach.
Resumo:
Nowadays, evaluation methods to measure thermal performance of buildings have been developed in order to improve thermal comfort in buildings and reduce the use of energy with active cooling and heating systems. However, in developed countries, the criteria used in rating systems to asses the thermal and energy performance of buildings have demonstrated some limitations when applied to naturally ventilated building in tropical climates. The present research has as its main objective to propose a method to evaluate the thermal performance of low-rise residential buildings in warm humid climates, through computational simulation. The method was developed in order to conceive a suitable rating system for the athermal performance assessment of such buildings using as criteria the indoor air temperature and a thermal comfort adaptive model. The research made use of the software VisualDOE 4.1 in two simulations runs of a base case modeled for two basic types of occupancies: living room and bedroom. In the first simulation run, sensitive analyses were made to identify the variables with the higher impact over the cases´ thermal performance. Besides that, the results also allowed the formulation of design recommendations to warm humid climates toward an improvement on the thermal performance of residential building in similar situations. The results of the second simulation run was used to identify the named Thermal Performance Spectrum (TPS) of both occupancies types, which reflect the variations on the thermal performance considering the local climate, building typology, chosen construction material and studied occupancies. This analysis generates an index named IDTR Thermal Performance Resultant Index, which was configured as a thermal performance rating system. It correlates the thermal performance with the number of hours that the indoor air temperature was on each of the six thermal comfort bands pre-defined that received weights to measure the discomfort intensity. The use of this rating system showed to be appropriated when used in one of the simulated cases, presenting advantages in relation to other evaluation methods and becoming a tool for the understanding of building thermal behavior
Resumo:
PV energy is the direct conversion of solar radiation into electricity. In this paper, an analysis of the influence of parameters such as global irradiance or temperature in the performance of a PV installation has been carried out. A PV module was installed in a building at the University of Málaga, and these parameters were experimentally determined for different days and different conditions of irradiance and temperature. Moreover, IV curves were obtained under these conditions to know the open-circuit voltage and the short-circuit current of the module. With this information, and using the first law of thermodynamics, an energy analysis was performed to determine the energy efficiency of the installation. Similarly, using the second law of thermodynamics, an exergy analysis is used to obtain the exergy efficiency. The results show that the energy efficiency varies between 10% and 12% and the exergy efficiency between 14% and 17%. It was concluded that the exergy analysis is more suitable for studying the performance, and that only electric exergy must be considered as useful exergy. This exergy efficiency can be improved if heat is removed from the PV module surface, and an optimal temperature is reached.
Resumo:
(English)The Swedish industrial sector has overcome the oil crisis and has maintained the energy use constant even though the production has grown. This has been achieved thanks to the development of several energy policies, by the Swedish government, towards the 2020 goals. This thesis carries on this path and performs an energy audit for an old industrial building in Gävle (Sweden) in order to propose different energy efficiency measures to use less energy while maintaining the thermal comfort. The building is in quite a bad shape and some of the areas are unused making them a waste of money. By means of the invoices provided by different companies, the information from the staff and some measures that have been carried out in-situ, the energy balance has been calculated from where conclusions have been drawn. Although it is an industrial building, the study is not going to be focused in the industrial process but in the building’s envelope and support processes, since the unit combines both production and office areas. Therefore, the energy balance is divided in energy supplies (district heating, free heating and sun irradiation) and energy losses (transmission, ventilation hot tap water and infiltrations). The results show that the most important supply is that of the DH whereas the most important losses are the transmission and infiltration. Thus, the measures proposed are focused on the reduction of this relevant parameters. The most important measures are the renovation of the windows, heating systems valves and the ventilation. The glazing of the dwelling is old and some of it is broken accounting for quite a large amount of the losses. The radiator valves are not properly working and there does not exist any temperature control. Therefore the installation of thermostatic valves turns out to be a must. Moreover, some part of the building has no mechanical ventilation but conserves the ducts. These could be utilized if they are connected to the workshop’s ventilation which is capable of generating sufficient flow for the entire building. Finally, although other measures could also be carried out, the ones proposed appear to be the essential ones. A further analysis should be carried out in order to analyze the payback time or investment capability of the company so as to decide between one measure or another. A market study for possible new tenants for the unused parts of the building is also advisable.