TY - JOUR
T1 - A Simulation-Assisted Field Investigation on Control System Upgrades for a Sustainable Heat Pump Heating
AU - Qv, Dehu
AU - Wang, Jijin
AU - Wang, Luyang
AU - Kosonen, Risto
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 by the authors.
PY - 2024/11
Y1 - 2024/11
N2 - Heat pump-based renewable energy and waste heat recycling have become a mainstay of sustainable heating. Still, configuring an effective control system for these purposes remains a worthwhile research topic. In this study, a Smith-predictor-based fractional-order PID cascade control system was fitted into an actual clean heating renovation project and an advanced fireworks algorithm was used to tune the structural parameters of the controllers adaptively. Specifically, three improvements in the fireworks algorithm, including the Cauchy mutation strategy, the adaptive explosion radius, and the elite random selection strategy, contributed to the effectiveness of the tuning process. Simulation and field investigation results demonstrated that the fitted control system counters the adverse effects of time lag, reduces overshoot, and shortens the settling time. Further, benefiting from a delicate balance between heating demand and supply, the heating system with upgraded management increases the average exergetic efficiency by 11.4% and decreases the complaint rate by 76.5%. It is worth noting that the advanced fireworks algorithm mitigates the adverse effect of capacity lag and simultaneously accelerates the optimizing and converging processes, exhibiting its comprehensive competitiveness among this study’s three intelligent optimization algorithms. Meanwhile, the forecast and regulation of the return water temperature of the heating system are independent of each other. In the future, an investigation into the implications of such independence on the control strategy and overall efficiency of the heating system, as well as how an integral predictive control structure might address this limitation, will be worthwhile.
AB - Heat pump-based renewable energy and waste heat recycling have become a mainstay of sustainable heating. Still, configuring an effective control system for these purposes remains a worthwhile research topic. In this study, a Smith-predictor-based fractional-order PID cascade control system was fitted into an actual clean heating renovation project and an advanced fireworks algorithm was used to tune the structural parameters of the controllers adaptively. Specifically, three improvements in the fireworks algorithm, including the Cauchy mutation strategy, the adaptive explosion radius, and the elite random selection strategy, contributed to the effectiveness of the tuning process. Simulation and field investigation results demonstrated that the fitted control system counters the adverse effects of time lag, reduces overshoot, and shortens the settling time. Further, benefiting from a delicate balance between heating demand and supply, the heating system with upgraded management increases the average exergetic efficiency by 11.4% and decreases the complaint rate by 76.5%. It is worth noting that the advanced fireworks algorithm mitigates the adverse effect of capacity lag and simultaneously accelerates the optimizing and converging processes, exhibiting its comprehensive competitiveness among this study’s three intelligent optimization algorithms. Meanwhile, the forecast and regulation of the return water temperature of the heating system are independent of each other. In the future, an investigation into the implications of such independence on the control strategy and overall efficiency of the heating system, as well as how an integral predictive control structure might address this limitation, will be worthwhile.
KW - advanced fireworks algorithm
KW - cascade control
KW - changing consumption and production patterns of heating
KW - clean heating upgrade
KW - fractional-order PID controller
KW - heat pump heating
KW - renewable sources of energy
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85210232250&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3390/su16229981
DO - 10.3390/su16229981
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85210232250
SN - 2071-1050
VL - 16
JO - Sustainability (Switzerland)
JF - Sustainability (Switzerland)
IS - 22
M1 - 9981
ER -