Power system resilience support from heat-pump equipped houses — thermal comfort consequence for various room priority strategies
Journal article, 2026
A flexibility of 100% is provided for 5 h, when all rooms reduce thermal comfort equally to about 16 ◦C, at an outdoor temperature of −5◦C. The same flexibility can also be provided by heating only a smaller area, such as a better insulated bedroom, which is 8% of the total floor area, to 17.5 ◦C, while ensuring that the temperatures in the other rooms do not fall below 10 ◦C. After the first five hours, the flexibility decreases from 100% to 47% and 57%, respectively, in the above cases, for as long as the flexibility required. The impact of offering various levels of flexibility in relation to thermal comfort is demonstrated and quantified in this article.
Flexibility quantification
heat pumps
space heating
multi-room house
Author
Sindhu Kanya Nalini Ramakrishna
Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Electric Power Engineering
Torbjörn Thiringer
Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Electric Power Engineering
Peiyuan Chen
Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Electric Power Engineering
Energy Conversion and Management: X
25901745 (eISSN)
Vol. 29 101436Nätresiliens - bostädersmöjligheter att bidra till ett mer resilient elnät
Swedish Energy Agency (50343-1), 2020-06-01 -- 2024-12-31.
Areas of Advance
Energy
Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)
Energy Engineering
Electrical Engineering, Electronic Engineering, Information Engineering
DOI
10.1016/j.ecmx.2025.101436