Title: Energy Efficient Cities
1Energy Efficient Cities
- Ann Dowling
- University of Cambridge
2The importance of addressing Energy Efficiency in
Cities
- 80 of the population of the UK lives in towns
and cities - Of the demand for energy in the UK
- buildings account for approx 40
- (excluding embodied energy of construction
materials) - ground transportation 27
- Addressing energy demand reduction in the urban
environment involves assessing a series of
trade-offs - For example,
- Low density buildings
- provide more scope for distributed power
- reduce heat island effect
- more opportunity to use natural convection,
shading by vegetation etc to control internal
temperatures - but increase transportation demands
- New build
- provides more opportunities to incorporate
energy efficiency but embedded energy in
construction is substantial. It can take 40
years to energy savings to match energy used in
producing construction materials
3Energy in different products life cycles
Which phase dominates?
4Energy Efficient Cities
- Is a new interdisciplinery collaboration
involving the Departments of Engineering,
Architecture and Chemical Engineering, the
Computer Laboratory, Judge Business School and
the BP Institute at the University of Cambridge - Currently 13 external partners including BP, Ove
Arup, Short Associates - Hoare Lea Consulting Engineers, BT,
Howes-Macnaghten Technology - Quiet Revolution, Department of Health,
Rolls-Royce plc, Rolls-Royce Fuel - Cells Ltd, Jaguar, Denso, Johnson Matthey
- Kick-started with 2.9M funding from the
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research
Council - Many current staff of the University involved
- In addition, we are appointing three new
Lecturers associated with the Initative, one in
Civil Engineering, one in Mechanical Engineering
and one in Architecture -
5Energy Efficient Cities
-
- Addresses energy demand reduction in urban
environment by integrating design and the
development of novel technologies for energy
efficient cities, with links to economic, policy
and regulatory considerations - Aim to develop a systems view of energy
utilisation (buildings and transport) and
distributed power generation and so that trade
offs can be assessed within a unified framework - Areas range from urban planning, building design,
transport and micro-generation
6Urban planning
- Areas include
- city layout, use of green spaces, transport
system - Examples from colleagues current activities
- Peter Guthrie is working with property developer
Land Securities plc is investigating issues
around Building Sustainable Communities using
their Ebbsfleet Valley development in North Kent
Thameside as a case study - Partner BT is looking at the scope for IT to
support an energy efficient community also at
Ebbsfleet
- Koen Steemers is co-ordinating an International
Network with China on sustainable building and
urban design
7Urban planning
- Urban planning and policies for transport
- Marcial Echenique (Arch)
- Testing alternative designs
- assessment of economic, social and
- environmental impacts
London region commuter - simulation
- Smart networks for traffic control
- Andy Hopper, Jean Bacon (Computer Lab)
- research, application development and deployment
of urban transport monitoring systems - Applications
- bus arrival time displays
- notification of traffic delays
- empty taxi location etc
8Urban planning
- Role of city/road layout and use of green spaces
for buildings
- In heat transfer issues (surface albedos for
reduction of the urban heat island effect,
turbulence around and heat loss from groups
buildings, turbulence and ventilation patterns to
facilitate
- removal of heat from urban areas, effect of
roofs with vegetation) - Optimal selection of vegetation (for benefits
of evapotranspiration and CO2 uptake, for
avoidance of overshadowing)
9Design and technologies for low carbon buildings
- Overhead
- renewables solar thermal, photovoltaics, wind
energy - role of the canopy in heat transfer and
ventilation, reduction of heat island effect - capture and use of rainwater
10Design and technologies for low carbon buildings
- Overhead
- renewables solar thermal, photovoltaics, wind
energy - role of the canopy in heat transfer and
ventilation, reduction of heat island effect - capture and use of rainwater
- The ground
- ground source heat pumps
- energy storage in below ground in man-made
structures
11Design and technologies for low carbon buildings
- Overhead
- renewables solar thermal, photovoltaics, wind
energy - role of the canopy in heat transfer and
ventilation, reduction of heat island effect - capture and use of rainwater
- The buildings
- lower energy consumption in production of
traditional materials (eg concrete, aluminium) - addressing heat transfer through and ventilation
flows in buildings - phase-change materials
- surface treatments, eg green walls (effects on
thermal insulation, potential for increased
biodiversity) - sensors and smart computer-based systems to
optimise energy use - interaction of daylighting with next generation
LED lighting - combined heat and power
- The ground
- ground source heat pumps
- energy storage in below ground in man-made
structures
12Design and technologies for low carbon buildings
- Overhead
- renewables solar thermal, photovoltaics, wind
energy - role of the canopy in heat transfer and
ventilation, reduction of heat island effect - capture and use of rainwater
- The buildings
- lower energy consumption in production of
traditional materials (eg concrete, aluminium) - addressing heat transfer through and ventilation
flows in buildings - phase-change materials
- surface treatments, eg green walls (effects on
thermal insulation, potential for increased
biodiversity) - sensors and smart computer-based systems to
optimise energy use - interaction of daylighting with next generation
LED lighting - combined heat and power
- The ground
- ground source heat pumps
- energy storage in below ground in man-made
structures
Distributed power use of biomass, wind, solar,
fuel cells integration of electrical vehicles and
building supply
13Materials
- 20 global GHG emissions from energy arise in
the production of five key materials cement,
steel, plastic, paper, aluminium - Should consider energy use in production of
materials when choosing which materials to use
Ashby map
stiffness versus energy
Research into energy efficient ways of producing
cement, steel and aluminum
14Exploiting natural ventilation and thermal mass
- Andy Woods BPI, Koen Steemers and Alan Short
Department of Architecture - Heat transfer and ventilation flows in buildings
from modelling, lab experiments, design and use
in real buildings, monitoring - Being commercialised through spin-out company
E-stack Ltd which develops ventilation stack
systems for schools and offices - Research has identified strategies for control
of these non-linear convective flows which often
involve multiple steady-state regimes, and
complex transition between states
An experiment showing overturn in a naturally
ventilated model theatre
Alan Shorts design for the School of Slavonic
East European Studies UCL making use of passive
downdraft cooling, because of its central London
location, natural convection was not sufficient
15Other relevant research
- Using less energy intensive materials in building
construction, Michael Ramage, Architecture - Energy audit of materials and processes, Julian
Allwood, Engineering - Green concrete Abir Al Tabba, Engineering
- Surface treatments, active glass, Mauro Overend,
Engineering - Low power lighting, next generation of LEDS,
Colin Humphreys, Material Science - New sensors and smart computer-based systems to
optimise energy use (Andy Rice, Computer Lab) - Reducing computers power consumption (Andy Rice,
Computer Lab)
16Distributed Power
- When electricity is generated for the grid
- Centralised power stations are only about
- 45-55 efficient - gas combined cycle
- 35 efficient coal
- Grid losses account for a further 7.7
- So for every 1 KWH of electricity consumed in the
home between 2 and 3 KWH of fuel has been burned - Demand on centralised power generation can be
minimised by combining urban design with district
heat and power generation from medium-scale power
generators, small scale on site generation, and
even integrating the energy use in buildings with
the power to/from hybrid electric cars
17Distributed Power Generation
- Combustion/Gasification of Biomass
- Dennis (Chem Eng), Scott (Engineering)
- fluidised bed gasifiers to convert locally
available fuels (sewage sludge, wood coppice) to
syngas for use in power generation cycles - Fuel cells
- Young (Engineering)
- Solid oxide fuel cells (SOFC) coupled to a gas
turbine (SOFC-GT) can generate electrical power
from natural gas with - an efficiency of 75
- with near-zero levels of NOX, SOX and
particulates - future developments could include fuel
pre-processing to reform the primary fuel to H2
and remove the CO2 at source for sequestation
18Research on the future generations of
photovoltaics
- Within the University we have research on the
next generations of photovoltaics - This includes low cost methods for producing
solar-grade silicon (Mats. Sci, Fray) - low-cost, nano-oxide arrays for use in hybrid
solar cells (Mats. Sci, Driscoll) - Polymer Photovoltaics Prof. Sir Richard Friend
and others in Physics - Conjugated polymer semiconductors
- Low-temperature deposition from solution
- Potential for roll-to-roll printing of cheap
- solar cells, lt1/Wp
19Grid Connected Solar Power
- Gehan Amaratunga in Department of Engineering
- Research to remove the bottleneck to make solar
a true consumer product
- Cost of electronics for conditioning variable dc
solar power for connection to stable ac grid - Solution small inverter on each panel
- Research challenge
- to overcome feeding small powers (10W)
efficiently with good power quality, reliability,
low cost, safe easy installation - currently being commercialised by spinout company
Enecsys
20Vertical Axis Wind Turbines
- Holger Babinsky (Engineering) in partnership with
quietrevolution
- Horizontal axis wind turbines do not work well in
gusty conditions - Vertical axis wind turbines do and so are ideal
for urban environment - Co-locates energy use and generation, minimising
transmission loss - Aesthetics are important
- Have been
- Optimising design and operation for urban wind
- Developing controller strategies to optimise
power output - Investigating installation effects
21Summary
- No one specific technology, but rather the
integration of many different technologies into
an energy efficient city - Requires more integration than a traditional
design - At urban level integration of layout of
buildings, transport systems, green spaces,
opportunities for distributed power, IT
infrastructure, etc - At building level great integration of building
and building services - All with a consideration of how people will
interact with and use the buildings - Emphasis on any new technologies being developed
with a consideration of use and the overall life
cycle energy consumption -
22Current Industrial Partners
- BP International Limited
- Ove Arup Partners Ltd
- Short and Associates
- Hoare Lea Consulting Engineers
- BT
- Howes-Macnaghten Technology Ltd
- Quiet Revolution
- Department of Health
- Rolls-Royce plc
- Rolls-Royce Fuel Cells Ltd
- Jaguar Cars Limited
- Denso Sales UK Ltd
- Johnson Matthey