The world’s cooling demand has increased considerably during the last
decades due to increased population, industrialisation, comfort demands,
electronic equipment usage and new building technologies. Conventional
cooling is often produced by electrically driven devices. One less prime
energy-consuming alternative is to use stored winter cold in snow and ice
for cooling during the summer. This ancient technique is feasible in large
parts of the world.
Different systems for seasonal snow and ice storage exist, i.e. the
snow/ice can be stored indoors, on the ground, in the ground and
underground. This study focuses on in ground storage, in an open pond,
where the cold energy is extracted by water that is cooled by direct
contact with the snow.
Open pond snow storage must be thermally insulated; hence, different
insulation alternatives were discussed. Cutter shavings were studied in
laboratory experiments and numerical modelling. The surface melt rate of
snow covered with cutter shavings increased with increased solar radiation,
air velocity, air temperature, and decreased insulation layer thickness.
The evaporation rate contributed significantly to the energy balance. The
surface melt rate was similar with initially wet and initially dry wood
chips. It was concluded that evaporative cooling is an important part of
the thermal insulation qualities of wood chips.
It was also found that heat transfer from the rain and ground is usually
relatively small. The heat transfer from the ground depends on soil and
groundwater properties.
The Sundsvall Regional Hospital snow cooling plant in Sweden has
successfully operated since 1999. Natural and artificial snow is stored in
a slightly sloping, shallow pond of watertight asphalt. During these years,
the plant has delivered the main part (77-93%) of the cooling, totalling
655-1,345 MWh. The snow was thermally insulated by a 0.1-0.2 m layer of
wood chips. The total coefficient of performance, including construction
energy, was 2.0-6.6 times greater than that of a conventional chiller
system.
The environmental impact of a snow cooling plant and a chiller system was
compared, for both existing and “environmentally optimised systems”. Of the
existing systems, the chillers had the largest impact concerning climate
change, acidification and nitrification, while the snow cooling system
meant more photochemical ozone emissions. The dominating impact sources of
the snow cooling system were fuel and electricity. In the construction
phase, ground insulation had the greatest impact.
In future open pond storage, a more compact design (deeper storage) is
suggested to reduce maintenance and melt loss. Total cooling costs were
estimated to be 0.29-0.47 SEK kWh-1 for a new open pond storage, i.e. lower
than that of district cooling.
The study also comprised mass loss of freezing water, since repeated
freezing and thawing during the spring will evaporate large amounts of
water. This was estimated to have little effect on Swedish snow storage,
though the loss might be considerable at other locations.