Optimizing energy efficiency and legionella control in hot water circulation systems: laboratory validation and field assessment in Swedish multifamily buildings
Journal article, 2026

Hot water circulation (HWC) systems in multifamily buildings face a fundamental trade-off: maintaining temperatures sufficient to suppress Legionella pneumophila (≥50 °C) while minimizing the 2.5–4.3 TWh annual energy loss these systems represent in Sweden alone. This study employed a novel dual approach combining controlled laboratory experiments with real-world validation to address this challenge. We constructed a full-scale test rig simulating a 20-apartment building to quantify thermal losses and microbial dynamics under varying flow rates and temperatures. This was complemented by a field validation encompassing 56 water samples from 31 multifamily buildings. The results demonstrate that when optimizing the system to maintain a regulatory required return temperature of 50 °C, thermal heat losses were nearly identical between low-flow (0.2 m/s) and high-flow (0.5 m/s) operation. The decisive factor was pump energy, where high-flow operation required 3.4 times more power than low-flow operation (108 W vs. 32 W). This resulted in a total annual energy saving of approximately 12% for the low-flow strategy, entirely attributable to reduced electricity consumption for the pump. Periodic thermal shocks at 60–65 °C effectively reduced L. pneumophila concentrations, indicating that continuous high-temperature operation is not required for microbial control. Field sampling revealed that 23% of samples tested positive for legionella, with problematic cases strongly linked to design flaws like towel warmers connected to the HWC loop. These findings indicate that a risk-based strategy combining low-flow circulation (0.2 m/s), a baseline return temperature of 50 °C, and periodic thermal shocks can significantly reduce system energy consumption while maintaining legionella safety.

Hot water circulation

Building systems optimization

Biofilm dynamics

Thermal disinfection

Legionella pneumophila

Energy efficiency

Author

Jesper Knutsson

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Water Environment Technology

Jörgen Wallin

Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)

Energy Nexus

27724271 (eISSN)

Vol. 21 100613

Legionella growth in DHW circulation systems

Swedish Energy Agency (2022-00868), 2023-01-01 -- 2024-12-31.

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Areas of Advance

Energy

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Energy Engineering

DOI

10.1016/j.nexus.2025.100613

More information

Latest update

12/22/2025