B119

Measuring energy efficiency for elevated tank water supply systems

Brief:

Energy efficiency of water supply systems in high-rise residential buildings becomes a concern for sustainable development nowadays. This paper presents an energy efficiency evaluation measure for water supply system designs that utilizes the potential energy of the water demands at end-users in buildings divided by the pumping energy required. A mathematical model is formulated for optimizing pumping energy through the arrangement of water tanks in a building. Measurement data of some highrise residential buildings in Hong Kong are employed to demonstrate the model applicability. The results show the energy efficiency of many existing high-rise water supply systems is about 0.24 and can be improved to 0.26-0.30 via water storage tank relocations, corresponding to an annual electricity saving potential of 192 TJ, a 0.1% of the total annual electricity consumption in Hong Kong. The proposed measure of energy efficiency can be a parameter of designing sustainable water supply systems for buildings.

Further information:

Wong LT, Mui KW, Cheung CT, 2013. Measuring energy efficiency for elevated tank water supply systems, 12th International Conference on Sustainable Energy technologies (SET-2013), Hong Kong, 26-29th August, 2013.