Urban-Scale Borehole Heat Exchanger Network Optimisation in Groningen: GIS–Python workflow with iterative demand assignment, g-functions and depth sizing

dc.contributor
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament d'Enginyeria Química
dc.contributor
Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
dc.contributor
Pérez González, Juan Jesús
dc.contributor
Miocic, Johannes
dc.contributor.author
Plaja Dorca, Sergi
dc.date.accessioned
2026-03-02T04:28:45Z
dc.date.available
2026-03-02T04:28:45Z
dc.identifier
https://hdl.handle.net/2117/456316
dc.identifier
PRISMA-201682
dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/2117/456316
dc.description.abstract
Borehole Heat Exchangers (BHEs) are a promising solution for decarbonising space heating and cooling in urban environments. However, large-scale deployment requires careful planning to account for limited drilling space, thermal interaction between neighbouring systems, and the need to allocate demand in a spatially consistent way. This thesis presents an end-to-end GIS–Python workflow to support urban-scale BHE planning for the city of Groningen. The pipeline integrates building-level heating and cooling demand with cadastral parcels and subsurface thermal property descriptors. It combines geometric feasibility rules for borehole placement with a scalable interaction indicator derived from borehole layouts, and a thermal sizing model that determines the minimum borehole depth required to meet assigned loads under temperature constraints. Akey contribution of the methodology is an iterative coupling between demand allocation and depth sizing. Building demand is assigned to nearby boreholes under practical distance and capacity constraints, after which borehole depths are resized to satisfy the updated assigned loads. Repeating this loop improves internal consistency between the spatial allocation of demand and the resulting borehole designs, and allows constraint-driven patterns to emerge in a traceable way. The workflow produces network-wide indicators such as depth distributions, capacity utilisation and assignment reach, as well as GIS-ready spatial outputs at borehole, parcel and block level. Overall, the proposed approach provides a reproducible and transparent framework for screening and interpreting urban-scale geothermal feasibility, and can be adapted to other cities with comparable datasets.
dc.description.abstract
Outgoing
dc.format
application/pdf
dc.language
dc.publisher
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya
dc.rights
Open Access
dc.subject
Àrees temàtiques de la UPC::Energies::Energia geotèrmica
dc.subject
Geothermal resources
dc.subject
Energia geotèrmica
dc.title
Urban-Scale Borehole Heat Exchanger Network Optimisation in Groningen: GIS–Python workflow with iterative demand assignment, g-functions and depth sizing
dc.type
Master thesis
dc.coverage
east=6.566501799999999; north=53.2193835; name=Oude Ebbingestraat 26b, 9712 HJ Groningen, Países Bajos


Fitxers en aquest element

FitxersGrandàriaFormatVisualització

No hi ha fitxers associats a aquest element.

Aquest element apareix en la col·lecció o col·leccions següent(s)