Comparative analysis of solar photovoltaic/thermal assisted heat pump systems coupled with PCM storage and EV charging with reference to the UK’s national carbon intensity

Journal article


Kutlu, Cagri, Dik, A., Erdinc, Mehmet Tahir, Su, Yuehong and Riffat, Saffa 2025. Comparative analysis of solar photovoltaic/thermal assisted heat pump systems coupled with PCM storage and EV charging with reference to the UK’s national carbon intensity. Energies. 18 (4), pp. 1-24. https://doi.org/10.3390/en18040920
AuthorsKutlu, Cagri, Dik, A., Erdinc, Mehmet Tahir, Su, Yuehong and Riffat, Saffa
Abstract

Emerging trends in heat pump (HP) and electric vehicle (EV) adoption within communities aim to reduce carbon emissions in the heating and transportation sectors. However, these technologies rely on grid electricity, whose carbon intensity varies over time. This study explores how the carbon-saving potential of these technologies can be further enhanced through demand-shifting operations and renewable energy integration. The research compares photovoltaic–thermal (PV/T) and hybrid solar heat pump systems that integrate EV charging and PCM-enhanced heat storage to improve space heating efficiency under low solar irradiance in the UK while reducing CO2 emissions. The study simulates solar collector configurations and sizes, combining PV modules and heat pumps to enhance system performance. Control systems synchronize operations with periods of low grid CO2 intensity, minimizing the environmental impact. The analysis evaluates PV/T systems, separate PV and thermal collectors, highlighting their energy efficiency and CO2 reduction potential. Control systems further optimize HP operation and EV charging during periods of high renewable energy availability, preventing uncontrolled use that could result in elevated emissions. Using real weather data and a detailed building model, the findings show that a solar-assisted HP with 100% thermal collectors achieves a daily COP of 3.49. Reducing thermal collectors to 60% lowers the COP to 2.57, but PV output compensates, maintaining similar emission levels. The system achieves the lowest emission with high-efficiency evacuated flat plate PV/T collectors.

Keywordsdemand-side management; PV/T heat pump; PCM storage; smart EV charging solutions
Year2025
JournalEnergies
Journal citation18 (4), pp. 1-24
PublisherMDPI
ISSN1996-1073
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.3390/en18040920
Web address (URL)https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/18/4/920
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Open
Output statusPublished
Publication dates14 Feb 2025
Publication process dates
Accepted12 Feb 2025
Deposited17 Mar 2025
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https://repository.derby.ac.uk/item/qx400/comparative-analysis-of-solar-photovoltaic-thermal-assisted-heat-pump-systems-coupled-with-pcm-storage-and-ev-charging-with-reference-to-the-uk-s-national-carbon-intensity

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energies-18-00920.pdf
License: CC BY 4.0
File access level: Open

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