Recovering waste heat from urban infrastructures is becoming increasingly important as the UK strives to decarbonise heat, which remains one of the main challenges in the transition towards net zero. The Bunhill Waste Heat Recovery (WHR) System represents a first of its kind scheme that will recover waste energy from a ventilation shaft of the London Underground (LU) transport network. The system is based upon the installation of a heat recovery heat exchanger that consists of cooling coils and a reversible fan. The coils are connected to a heat pump that supplies low-carbon thermal energy to the Bunhill Heat Network in Central London. One particularly important aspect of the Bunhill WHR system is its ability to operate in a way that not on...
Electrical power in cities is typically distributed by means of underground cable tunnels. The cable...
Heat networks are a key technology proposed in the UK Government's Clean Growth Strategy for deliver...
By 2050, the UK government plans to create ‘Net zero society’.1 To meet this ambitious target, the d...
The Bunhill Waste Heat Recovery (WHR) System is a first of its kind scheme that will recover waste e...
Recovering waste heat from urban infrastructures is becoming increasingly important as governments a...
This paper describes the results from a collaborative research project in the UK, focussing on the r...
The potential for recovery and reuse of waste heat from cooling London’s underground train tunnels a...
This paper provides an analysis of a heat recovery scheme that collects waste heat from the London U...
Temperatures in London’s underground railway tunnels are rising year on year and new energy efficien...
This paper aims to introduce a heat recovery scheme that will collect waste energy from the London U...
Cities demand vast amounts of energy for their everyday operation, resulting in significant degradat...
The paper concerns the recovery and use of secondary/waste heat and identifies secondary heat source...
This paper tracks a research journey over a number of years from sustainable cooling to heat recover...
Electrical power distribution within cities is most often distributed through underground cables loc...
Ground source heat pumps (GSHPs) in urban environments can take advantage of surplus ground heat ene...
Electrical power in cities is typically distributed by means of underground cable tunnels. The cable...
Heat networks are a key technology proposed in the UK Government's Clean Growth Strategy for deliver...
By 2050, the UK government plans to create ‘Net zero society’.1 To meet this ambitious target, the d...
The Bunhill Waste Heat Recovery (WHR) System is a first of its kind scheme that will recover waste e...
Recovering waste heat from urban infrastructures is becoming increasingly important as governments a...
This paper describes the results from a collaborative research project in the UK, focussing on the r...
The potential for recovery and reuse of waste heat from cooling London’s underground train tunnels a...
This paper provides an analysis of a heat recovery scheme that collects waste heat from the London U...
Temperatures in London’s underground railway tunnels are rising year on year and new energy efficien...
This paper aims to introduce a heat recovery scheme that will collect waste energy from the London U...
Cities demand vast amounts of energy for their everyday operation, resulting in significant degradat...
The paper concerns the recovery and use of secondary/waste heat and identifies secondary heat source...
This paper tracks a research journey over a number of years from sustainable cooling to heat recover...
Electrical power distribution within cities is most often distributed through underground cables loc...
Ground source heat pumps (GSHPs) in urban environments can take advantage of surplus ground heat ene...
Electrical power in cities is typically distributed by means of underground cable tunnels. The cable...
Heat networks are a key technology proposed in the UK Government's Clean Growth Strategy for deliver...
By 2050, the UK government plans to create ‘Net zero society’.1 To meet this ambitious target, the d...