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Featured researches published by Christoph Trinkl.


Journal of Solar Energy Engineering-transactions of The Asme | 2009

Simulation study on a domestic solar/heat pump heating system incorporating latent and stratified thermal storage.

Christoph Trinkl; Wilfried Zörner; Vic I. Hanby

Both solar and heat pump heating systems are innovative technologies for sustaining ecological heat generation. They are gaining more and more importance due to the accelerating pace of climate change and the rising cost of limited fossil resources. Against this background, a heating system combining solar thermal collectors, heat pump, stratified thermal storage, and water/ice latent heat storage has been investigated. The major advantages of the proposed solar/heat pump heating system are considered to be its flexible application (suitable for new and existing buildings because of acceptable space demand), as well as the improvement of solar fraction (extended solar collector utilization time, enhanced collector efficiency), i.e., the reduction of electric energy demand for the heat pump by management of the source and sink temperatures. In order to investigate and optimize the heating system, a dynamic system simulation model was developed. On this basis, a fundamental control strategy was derived for the overall co-ordination of the heating system with particular regard to the performance of the two storage tanks. In a simulation study, a fundamental investigation of the heating system configuration was carried out and an optimization was derived for the system control, as well as the selection of components and their dimensioning. The influence of different parameters on the system performance was identified, where the collector area and the latent heat storage volume were found to be the predominant parameters for system dimensioning. For a modern one-family house of 120 m2 living area with a specific annual heat demand of 60 kWh/(m2 a) for both heating and domestic hot water, a solar collector area of 30 m2, and a latent heat store volume of 12.5 m3 are proposed for the location of Wuerzburg (Germany). In this configuration, the heating system reaches a seasonal performance factor of 4.6, meaning that 78% of the building’s and users’ heat demand are delivered by solar energy. The results show that the solar/heat pump heating system can give an acceptable performance using up-to-date components in a state-of-the-art building.


ASME 2008 2nd International Conference on Energy Sustainability collocated with the Heat Transfer, Fluids Engineering, and 3rd Energy Nanotechnology Conferences | 2008

A domestic solar/heat pump heating system incorporating latent and stratified thermal storage.

Christoph Trinkl

Both solar and heat pump heating systems are innovative technologies for sustaining ecological heat generation. They are gaining more and more importance due to the accelerating pace of climate change and the rising cost of limited fossil resources. Against this background, a heating system combining solar thermal collectors, heat pump, stratified thermal storage and water/ice latent heat storage has been investigated. The major advantages of the proposed solar/heat pump heating system are considered to be its flexible application (suitable for new and existing buildings because of acceptable space demand) as well as the improvement of solar fraction (extended solar collector utilisation time, enhanced collector efficiency), i.e. the reduction of electric energy demand for the heat pump. In order to investigate and optimise the heating system, a dynamic system simulation model was developed. On this basis, a fundamental control strategy was derived for the overall coordination of the heating system with particular regard to the performance of the two storage tanks. In a simulation study, a fundamental investigation of the heating system configuration was carried out and optimisation derived for the system control as well as the selection of components and their dimensioning. The influence of different parameters on the system performance was identified, where the collector area and the latent heat storage volume were found to be the predominant parameters for system dimensioning. For a modern one-family house, a solar collector area of 30m2 and a latent heat store volume of 12.5m3 are proposed. In this configuration, the heating system reaches a seasonal performance factor of 4.6, meaning that 78% of the building’s and users’ heat demand are delivered by solar energy. The results show that the solar/heat pump heating system can give an acceptable performance using up-to-date components in a state-of-the-art building.Copyright


Journal of Solar Energy | 2015

A Dynamic Multinode Model for Component-Oriented Thermal Analysis of Flat-Plate Solar Collectors

Christoph Reiter; Christoph Trinkl; Wilfried Zörner; Vic I. Hanby

A mathematical model of a flat-plate solar collector was developed on the basis of the physical principles of optics and heat transfer in order to determine collector’s component temperatures as well as collector efficiency. In contrast to many available models, the targeted use of this dynamic model is the detailed, theoretical investigation of the thermal behaviour of newly developed or adjusted collector designs on component level, for example, absorber, casing, or transparent cover. The defined model is based on a multinode network (absorber, fluid, glazing, and backside insulation) containing the relevant physical equations to transfer the energy. The heat transfer network covers heat conduction, convection, and radiation. Furthermore, the collector optics is defined for the plane glazing and the absorber surface and also considers interactions between them. The model enables the variation of physical properties considering the geometric parameters and materials. Finally, the model was validated using measurement data and existing efficiency curve models. Both comparisons proved high accuracy of the developed model with deviation of up to 3% in collector efficiency and 1 K in component temperatures.


Energy Procedia | 2014

Performance Optimisation of Polymeric Collectors by Means of Dynamic Simulation and Sensitivity Analysis

Christoph Reiter; Sebastian Brandmayr; Christoph Trinkl; Wilfried Zörner; Victor I. Hanby


Archive | 2010

Systematische Gliederung der Systemkombination von solarthermischen Anlagen und Wärmepumpen

Michel Y. Haller; Elimar Frank; Christoph Trinkl; Wilfried Zörner


EuroSun 2010 | 2010

In-Situ Investigation of a Domestic Solar/Heat Pump Heating System in a One Family House

Christoph Trinkl; Matthias Sonnleitner; Wilfried Zörner


EuroSun 2014 | 2015

Analysis of Polymeric Solar-thermal Collectors in Drain Back Systems by Simulation

Mathias Ehrenwirth; Christoph Reiter; Sebastian Brandmayr; Christoph Trinkl; Wilfried Zörner


Polymeric Materials for Solar Thermal Applications | 2013

Thermal Loads on Solar Collectors and Options for their Reduction

Christoph Reiter; Christoph Trinkl; Wilfried Zörner


EuroSun 2010 | 2010

Thermal load analysis of a solar-thermal flat plate collector in a domestic heating system

Christoph Reiter; Christoph Trinkl; W. Zoerner; V. I. Hanby


Chemical Engineering & Technology | 2018

Partially Upgraded Biogas: Potential for Decentralized Utilization in Agricultural Machinery

Abdessamad Saidi; Christoph Trinkl; Fosca Conti; Markus Goldbrunner; J. Karl

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J. Karl

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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