The energy quay wall: Results from a full-scale field test

Philip J. Vardon*, Marco Gerola, Vincent Leclercq, Korneel de Jong, Jacco Haasnoot, Richard Janssen, Patrick Stoelhorst, Ivaylo Pantev, Jorrit de Vries, More Authors

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

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Abstract

Energy Quay Walls (EQWs) are innovative energy geostructures which exchange thermal energy with both soil and open water while providing a structural function. A full-scale EQW with thermally activated sheet piles was tested, measuring 8.4 m in length along a 1.75m deep canal, with the sheet piles embedded 13m into the underlying soil. Two different length heat exchangers were used: shallow (3 m length) loops primarily extracting thermal energy from the open water, and deep (15 m length) loops extracting energy also from the soil. The shallow loops demonstrated a high heat extraction rate per activated surface area (∼200 W/m2 at 8 °C water temperature, compared with ∼60 W/m2 for the deep loops), with their performance closely linked to the open water temperature. The shallow loops did not require time to restore surrounding temperatures, indicating stable long-term performance, yet can extract the least energy at the coldest time periods. In contrast, the deeper loops exhibit greater stability across varying open water temperatures and achieve the highest total energy extraction per quay wall length (∼900 W/m at 8 °C water temperature, compared with ∼600 W/m for the shallow loops). Realistic operation of the deep loops lowered the soil temperature by ∼2 °C.
Original languageEnglish
Article number123552
Number of pages13
JournalRenewable Energy
Volume253
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025

Keywords

  • Energy geo-structure
  • Energy storage
  • Field test
  • Shallow geothermal
  • Thermal energy

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