Potential evaluation of integrated high temperature heat pumps: A review of recent advances

Abstract

Industrial and high temperature pumps are a well-established, sustainable, and low-emission technology for processing temperatures below 100 °C, especially when driven by renewable energy. The next frontier in heat pumping is to enhance the economic working envelope to serve the 100–200 °C range, where an estimated 27% of industrial process heat demand is required. High temperature heat pumps (HTHP) are an effective technology for delivering heat and recovering waste heat from various industrial processes, hence reducing primary energy consumption and the resulting CO2 emissions. The integration of high temperature heat pumps into different industrial process networks provides significant environmental and performance improvements,an innovative and profitable solution for different decarbonizing sectors. Higher temperature heat pumps offer significant potential to enhance thermally demanding industrial processes due to their high temperature lift capability. This review looks at how future improvements in HTHP technology can take use of breakthroughs in high-temperature heat pump research to address important technical obstacles. This review primarily consolidates data from HTHPs integrated with various industrial processes applications such as thermal energy storage, low-grade waste heat recovery, membrane fuel cell, organic Rankine cycle, super-critical water desalination, co-generation and poly-generation, vapor injection, steam injected gas turbine, and solar absorption system. However, the widespread diffusion of HP technologies faces several challenges, including technological (limitation of the electrical network due to intensive electrification of the heating sector), economic (high investment and installation cost), regulatory (lack of standards and mandatory policies), policy (uncertainty in policy and lack of clear heat decarbonization pathways and technology uptake), and public acceptance issues (unwarranted fear, misperception, misinformation, and previous experiences on the reliability of heat pumps) are highlighted.

Publication DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.applthermaleng.2023.120720
Divisions: College of Engineering & Physical Sciences > School of Engineering and Technology
College of Engineering & Physical Sciences
Aston University (General)
Funding Information: This publication has been funded by HighEFF - Centre for an Energy Efficient and Competitive industry for the Future, an 8-years’ Research Centre under the FME-scheme (Centre for Environment-friendly Energy Research, 257632). The authors gratefully acknow
Additional Information: Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Uncontrolled Keywords: Energy efficiency,High temperature heat pump,Low grade waste heat recovery,Natural and mixtures refrigerants,Process integration,Energy Engineering and Power Technology,Mechanical Engineering,Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering
Publication ISSN: 1873-5606
Data Access Statement: Data will be made available on request.
Last Modified: 31 Mar 2025 07:27
Date Deposited: 10 Jan 2025 14:40
Full Text Link:
Related URLs: http://www.scop ... tnerID=8YFLogxK (Scopus URL)
https://www.sci ... 7494?via%3Dihub (Publisher URL)
PURE Output Type: Article
Published Date: 2023-07-25
Published Online Date: 2023-05-08
Accepted Date: 2023-05-03
Authors: Hamid, Khalid
Sajjad, Uzair
Ulrich Ahrens, Marcel
Ren, Shuai
Ganesan, P.
Tolstorebrov, Ignat
Arshad, Adeel (ORCID Profile 0000-0002-2727-2431)
Said, Zafar
Hafner, Armin
Wang, Chi-Chuan
Wang, Ruzhu
Eikevik, Trygve M.

Download

[img]

Version: Published Version

License: Creative Commons Attribution

| Preview

Export / Share Citation


Statistics

Additional statistics for this record