Water from abandoned mines as a heat source : practical experiences of open- and closed-loop strategies, United Kingdom
Banks, David and Athresh, Anup and Al-Habaibeh, Amin and Burnside, Neil (2019) Water from abandoned mines as a heat source : practical experiences of open- and closed-loop strategies, United Kingdom. Sustainable Water Resources Management, 5 (1). pp. 29-50. ISSN 2363-5045 (https://doi.org/10.1007/s40899-017-0094-7)
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Abstract
Pilot heat pump systems have been installed at two former collieries in Yorkshire/Derbyshire, England, to extract heat from mine water. The installations represent three fundamental configurations of heat exchanger. At Caphouse Colliery, mine water is pumped through a heat exchanger coupled to a heat pump and then discharged to waste (an open-loop heat exchange system). The system performs with high thermal efficiency, but the drawbacks are: (1) it can only be operated when mine water is being actively pumped from the colliery shaft for the purposes of regional water-level management, and (2) the fact that the water is partially oxygenated means that iron oxyhydroxide precipitation occurs, necessitating regular removal of filters for cleaning. At Markham Colliery, near Bolsover, a small amount of mine water is pumped from depth in a flooded shaft, circulated through a heat exchanger coupled to a heat pump and then returned to the same mine shaft at a slightly different depth (a standing column arrangement). This system’s fundamental thermal efficiency is negatively impacted by the electrical power required to run the shaft submersible pump, but clogging issues are not significant. In the third system, at Caphouse, a heat exchanger is submerged in a mine water treatment pond (a closed-loop system). This can be run at any time, irrespective of mine pumping regime, and being a closed-loop system, is not susceptible to clogging issues.
ORCID iDs
Banks, David, Athresh, Anup, Al-Habaibeh, Amin and Burnside, Neil ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4110-2623;-
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Item type: Article ID code: 75488 Dates: DateEvent7 March 2019Published13 April 2017Published Online15 February 2017AcceptedSubjects: Technology > Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) > Environmental engineering Department: Faculty of Engineering > Civil and Environmental Engineering Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 18 Feb 2021 12:21 Last modified: 11 Nov 2024 12:57 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/75488