System and Method for Controlling a Heat Pump
20230324095 · 2023-10-12
Inventors
Cpc classification
B60L53/302
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F25B30/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02B70/3225
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F25B49/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H05K7/20945
ELECTRICITY
Y04S20/222
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y04S20/244
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F24H2240/09
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F25B49/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25B30/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
Energy system (1) comprising an inverter (3) for converting an electrical direct voltage into an alternating voltage which can be used to supply electrical consumption units (4) of the energy system (1) and can be converted into heat by means of at least one heat pump (7) of the energy system (1), characterised in that in that the heat pump (7) can be controlled by means of a system control (10) of the energy system (1) via a control interface (12) in accordance with a heat pump configuration file (WPK) loaded specifically for the at least one heat pump (7) in a data memory (11) of the system control (10), wherein a communication of the system control (10) with a heat pump control (8) provided for the heat pump (7) is effected in accordance with at least one control type of the heat pump (7) indicated in the heat pump configuration file (WPK).
Claims
1. An energy system comprising: at least one electrical consumption unit and at least one heat pump which has a heat pump control, wherein the heat pump is configured to support one or a plurality of control types from a specified group of control types, wherein the group of control types includes the following control types; a first control type, in which the heat pump can be controlled by set power, a second control type, in which the heat pump can be controlled by set temperature, a third control type, in which the heat pump can be controlled by an SG-Ready specification, and a fourth control type, in which the heat pump can be controlled by simulation of a heat pump electricity meter; an inverter for converting an electrical direct voltage into an alternating voltage which can be used to supply the at least one electrical consumption unit and can be converted into heat by the at least one heat pump, a system control having a data memory, into which a heat pump configuration file, which can be configured for various types of heat pumps, is stored, wherein the heat pump configuration file indicates at least one control type supported by the heat pump and includes configurable operating parameters for parameterizing the control type and/or the at least one heat pump; wherein the at least one heat pump can be controlled by the system control via a control interface in accordance with the heat pump configuration file, and wherein a communication of the system control with the heat pump control is effected in accordance with the at least one control type of the heat pump indicated in the heat pump configuration file.
2. The energy system as claimed in claim 1, wherein: at least one communication protocol for communication of the system control with the heat pump control is indicated in the heat pump configuration file, and the communication protocol indicated in the heat pump configuration file has a MODBUS communication protocol.
3. The energy system as claimed in claim 2, wherein the system control is configured to communicate bidirectionally with the heat pump control via the control interface or a bus of the energy system in accordance with a communication protocol indicated in the heat pump configuration file.
4. The energy system as claimed in claim 2, wherein the system control is automatically configured as a master device or as a slave device in dependence upon the control type indicated in the heat pump configuration file.
5. The energy system as claimed in claim 3, wherein: the heat pump configuration file includes a network or IP address of the heat pump control for communicating with the system control of the energy system in accordance with the data point information indicated in the heat pump configuration file of the heat pump, and the heat pump configuration file of the heat pump includes JSON, XML, CSV or TXT file.
6. The energy system as claimed in claim 1, wherein: the system control is integrated in the inverter of the energy system, or the system control is formed by means of a control of the inverter to form an energy management system.
7. The energy system as claimed in claim 6, wherein the control interface is formed by a MODBUS interface of the inverter and of the heat pump.
8. The energy system as claimed in claim 1, wherein the energy system is connected to an electricity supply network via an electricity measuring unit which is configured to provide measurement data to the system control or to an energy management system of the energy system.
9. The energy system as claimed in claim 1, wherein the heat pump configuration file can be selected and extended via a user interface of the system control or of an energy management system of the energy system.
10. The energy system as claimed in claim 1, wherein the heat pump configuration file is loaded by one of: from a web server of a cloud platform via a data network into the local data memory of the system control of the energy system, and a reading unit of the system control from a data carrier into the local data memory of the system control of the energy system.
11. A method for controlling a heat pump comprising the steps of: loading a heat pump configuration file which can be configured for various types of heat pumps into a data memory of a system control of an energy system, wherein the heat pump configuration file indicates at least one control type supported by the heat pump and includes configurable operating parameters for parameterizing the control type and/or the heat pump; and communicating by the system control of the energy system with a heat pump control provided for the heat pump in accordance with the control type indicated in the heat pump configuration file, whereby the heat pump is incorporated into an energy management system of the energy system, wherein the heat pump supports one or a plurality of control types from a specified group of control types, and wherein the plurality of control types includes; a first control type, in which the heat pump is controlled by set power, a second control type, in which the heat pump is controlled by set temperature, a third control type, in which the heat pump is controlled by an SG-Ready specification, and a fourth control type, in which the heat pump is controlled by simulation or emulation of a heat pump electricity meter.
12. The method as claimed in claim 11, wherein: at least one communication protocol for communication of the system control with the heat pump control is indicated in the loaded heat pump configuration file, and the communication between the system control and the heat pump control is effected in accordance with the indicated communication protocol, and the communication protocol has a MODBUS communication protocol.
13. A system control for an energy system having at least one heat pump, wherein the heat pump is configured to support one or a plurality of control types from a specified group of control types, wherein the group of control types comprises the following control types: a first control type, in which the heat pump can be controlled by set power, a second control type, in which the heat pump can be controlled by set temperature, a third control type, in which the heat pump can be controlled by an SG-Ready specification, and a fourth control type, in which the heat pump can be controlled by simulation or emulation of a heat pump electricity meter, wherein the system control includes; a data memory, in which a heat pump configuration file for a heat pump is loaded, wherein the heat pump configuration file which can be configured for various types of heat pumps, indicates at least one control type supported by the heat pump and includes configurable operating parameters for parameterising the control type and/or the heat pump; and a control interface, via which the system control communicates with a heat pump control provided for the heat pump in accordance with the control type, indicated in the loaded heat pump configuration file, for incorporating the heat pump into the energy management system.
14. The energy system of claim 1, wherein the MODBUS communication protocol is one of a MODBUS-TCP communication protocol and a MODBUS-RTU communication protocol.
15. The method of claim 12, wherein the MODBUS communication protocol is one of a MODBUS-TCP communication protocol and a MODBUS-RTU communication protocol.
Description
[0040] In the drawing:
[0041]
[0042]
[0043]
[0044]
[0045]
[0046]
[0047]
[0048] As can be seen in
[0049] The energy system 1 has a system control 10 having a data memory 11. In one possible embodiment, the data memory 11 can be integrated in the system control 10, as illustrated in
[0050] A heat pump configuration file WPK (as illustrated by way of example in
[0051] The data memory 11 of the energy system 1 is used for local data storage of the heat pump configuration file WPK of the heat pump 7. In one possible embodiment, the heat pump configuration file WPK is loaded from a web server of a cloud platform via a data network into the local data memory 11 of the system control 10 of the energy system 1. Alternatively, the heat pump configuration file WPK can also be loaded by means of a reading unit of the system control 10 from a data carrier into the local data memory 11 of the system control 10 of the energy system 1. In one possible embodiment, the heat pump configuration file WPK of the heat pump 7 can have a JSON, XML, CSV or TXT file. In one possible embodiment, at least one parameter indicated in the heat pump configuration file indicates a communication protocol for communication of the system control 10 with the heat pump control 8. In one possible embodiment, the communication protocol indicated in the heat pump configuration file WPK has a MODBUS communication protocol. This can be a MODBUS-TCP communication protocol or a MODBUS-RTU communication protocol. In one possible embodiment, the control interface 12 between the system control 10 of the energy system 1 and the heat pump control 8 of the heat pump 7 has a bus for transmitting control signals and/or data. In one possible embodiment of the energy system 1 in accordance with the invention, the communication between the system control 10 and the heat pump control 8 is bidirectional, i.e. by exchanging data and control signals in both directions. In one embodiment, the communication can also be effected via a radio interface between the heat pump control 8 and the system control 10. In one possible embodiment, the system control 10 of the energy system 1 is automatically configured as a master device or as a slave device in dependence upon the control type indicated in the heat pump configuration file WPK. In one possible embodiment, the heat pump configuration file WPK of the heat pump 7 includes a network address of the heat pump control 8 for communication with the system control 10 of the energy system 1 according to the data point information indicated in the heat pump configuration file WPK of the heat pump 7. The heat pump configuration file WPK includes preferably configurable operating parameters for parameterising the control type of the heat pump and/or of the heat pump 7 itself.
[0052]
[0053] In the example illustrated in
[0054] In the case of control by set power according to control type I, e.g. a value of a current or an instantaneously available proportion of a surplus power of an energy system 1 or an electricity supply network 6 is written to a register of the heat pump control 8. In the example in
[0055] In the case of the second control type II by set temperature, a desired set-point temperature is written to a set-point temperature register of the heat pump control 8 in correlation with the instantaneous excess power. The set-point temperature relates e.g. to a warm water or hot water storage device 9. In the example in
[0056] In the case of the third control type III, the heat pump control 8 is effected by an SG-Ready specification. In correlation with the current surplus power, a switch is made to the corresponding SG-Ready operating states by means of an SG-Ready specification. In the example according to
[0057] The fourth control type IV can be applied in the case of heat pump controls 8 which, according to the prior art, interrogate a surplus power from a heat pump smart meter specifically adapted to the respective heat pump control 8.
[0058] In the case of the fourth control type IV, the heat pump control 8 interrogates the current surplus power from the system control 10. The system control 10 simulates a heat pump smart meter for the heat pump control 8. In this case, the heat pump control 8 is the MODBUS master. The system control 10 configured as the MODBUS slave takes the place of a heat pump smart meter typically configured as a MODBUS slave and thus replaces the heat pump smart meter.
[0059] Since the system control 10 is connected to the electricity measuring unit 5 via the data line 15, the latter can relay the measured values of the electricity measuring unit 5 to the heat pump control 8 by simulating a heat pump smart meter. In a particularly advantageous embodiment, the energy management system decides whether a current measured value of the electricity measuring unit 5, or another advantageous value determined by the energy management system, is provided by the system control 10 by means of simulation of a heat pump smart meter for the heat pump control 8. In the example according to
[0060] In a further particularly advantageous embodiment, the system control 10 is integrated into an inverter 3 or the system control 10 is functionally implemented by an inverter 3.
[0061] As illustrated in
[0062] In addition to the control parameters, the heat pump configuration file WPK includes various MODBUS parameters, as shown in
[0063] In addition to the control parameters and the MODBUS parameters, the heat pump configuration file WPK includes data point information in the example illustrated in
[0064] In accordance with the invention, heat pump configuration files WPK can be defined for each heat pump brand or each heat pump type. These can differ from each other in terms of content depending upon the type and model of the heat pump 7. However, the structure of the heat pump configuration file WPK remains the same, and so the system control 10 of the energy system 1 or an energy management system can gain access thereto. In this way, the programming of the energy management system or the system control 10 can be carried out in a uniform and simple manner because the necessary adaptations to parameters and control types for the control of various heat pumps 7 are effected by means of the integration of a corresponding heat pump configuration file WPK. The energy management system determines e.g. the currently most favourable energy consumption and provides, via the system control 10, e.g. a corresponding recommendation in a form compatible for the heat pump control 8 of the heat pump 7.
[0065] In one possible embodiment, the heat pump configuration files WPK consist substantially of three parts, namely control parameters, MODBUS parameters and data point information, as illustrated by way of example in
[0066] Moreover, at the user interface 13 each user or operator also has the option of individually configuring the system control 10 or the energy management system of their energy system 1 within a framework specified by the WPK. As
[0067]
[0068] In one possible embodiment, the heat pump configuration file WPK is stored in a unit of the energy system 1. In the case of the example illustrated in
[0069] In the case of the energy system 1 in accordance with the invention, associated heat pump configuration files WPK are used for activating the at least one heat pump 7 of the energy system 1 depending upon the control type of the heat pump 7. This can enable signalling from the inverter 3 to the heat pump 7 to cause the heat pump 7 to use inexpensive energy efficiently. In this case, it can be taken into account that different heat pump manufacturers, heat pump types and heat pump models offer different ways of receiving or taking this momentarily favourably available energy from e.g. surplus power from the inverter 3 or a variable electricity tariff.
[0070] In one possible embodiment, the energy system 1 in accordance with the invention can integrate heat pumps 7 of a different control type.
[0071] A conventional heat pump of control type IV makes it possible to utilise a photovoltaic surplus power, independently of an inverter 3. However, this requires a dedicated heat pump electricity meter or heat pump smart meter provided for the heat pump 7 at the feeding point in order to ensure compatibility between a heat pump control 8 of the heat pump 7 and an electricity meter.
[0072] The energy system 1 in accordance with the invention permits the inclusion of a heat pump 7 of the fourth control type IV without having to install an additional heat pump electricity meter, e.g. a heat pump smart meter, in the energy system 1 for this purpose. In the case of the energy system 1 in accordance with the invention, for the fourth control type IV such a heat pump electricity meter or heat pump smart meter for the heat pump control 8 is simulated or emulated by the system control 10 of an inverter 3 via a control interface 12, and so the installation and configuration of an additional heat pump electricity meter can be omitted.
[0073] In one possible embodiment, the inverter 3 or the system control 10 as well as the heat pump 7 or the heat pump control 8 of the energy system 1 have a MODBUS interface as the interface or control interface 12. In this embodiment, the energy management system of the inverter 3 determines a current power surplus value at the feeding point and communicates the current or a modified power surplus value to the heat pump 7 of the energy system 1 via the control interface 12. In addition to saving a heat pump electricity meter, this variant offers the advantage that, deviating from the current power surplus value, any power surplus value can be communicated to the heat pump 7. Thus, it is e.g. possible, if there is currently no available power surplus of an energy system 1, to still communicate a power surplus value to the heat pump 7. In this way, the system control 10 of the inverter 3 can cause the heat pump 7 to draw energy from the supply network, in particular when favourably priced energy tariffs are available.
[0074] In a possible embodiment of the energy system 1 in accordance with the invention, the control type of the heat pump 7 comprises one type from a specified group of control types. In one possible embodiment, the first control type I is a control type, in which the heat pump 7 is controlled by a set power. In the case of a further second control type II, the heat pump 7 is controlled by a set temperature. In a further possible embodiment, the heat pump 7 can be controlled according to a third control type III by an SG-Ready specification. Furthermore, in one possible embodiment the heat pump 7 can be controlled according to a fourth control type IV by simulation of a heat pump electricity meter. Other control types are possible.
[0075] In one possible embodiment, the energy system 1 in accordance with the invention uses a MODBUS communication protocol. The MODBUS communication protocol is based upon a master/slave architecture. In this case, each bus participant has a unique address. Each participant is permitted to send messages via the common communication bus or the interface. Communication is generally initiated by the master and answered by an addressed slave. Possible interfaces include e.g. RS485, RS232, WiFi or Ethernet. Registers are used for writing and reading data values. In the case of the heat pumps 7 which can be controlled via control types I, II, III, the available registers of the respective heat pump control 8 are important. At least the registers of the heat pump control 8 required for the control of a heat pump 7 are stored with their register addresses in the WPK.
[0076] With control type IV, the registers of the saved smart meter are simulated by the system control 10 or the inverter 3 for the heat pump control 8.
[0077] The heat pump 7 can be a Smart-Grid-Ready-enabled heat pump. The system control 10 can give the Smart-Grid-Ready-enabled heat pump 7 a power or feed power-related switch-on recommendation. As a result, the heat pump control 8 of the heat pump 7 is informed at which times the heat pump 7 is to charge the thermal storage device 9 such that e.g. as much as possible of the photovoltaic current generated by the photovoltaic system 2 is consumed by the energy system 1, thus achieving so-called own-consumption optimisation. In this case, the heat pump 7 can be switched to operation with increased power by an increase in a set-point temperature of the heat pump 7, which results in an increase in energy consumption and an actual temperature of the heat pump 7. The prerequisite for Smart-Grid-Ready activation is that the heat pump 7 is connected to the same feeding or metering point as the inverter 3. This also applies to the remaining stated control types of heat pumps.
[0078] A Smart-Grid-Ready-enabled heat pump 7 typically has four activatable SG Ready operating states. In accordance with the prior art, these are controlled via an SG Ready interface. The SG Ready interface of the heat pump control 8 consists of at least two logical inputs (SGPin1, SGPin2), via which one of the four operating states can be specified by a system control 10 of an energy management system. Common “SG Ready” specifications usually describe the following four SG Ready operating states for heat pumps 7:
[0079] In a first SG Ready operating state SGMIN, the heat pump 7 is prevented from operating, i.e. the heat pump 7 is in a blocked operating state.
[0080] In a second SG Ready operating state SGNORMAL, the heat pump 7 is operated normally. In this operating state, the heat pump 7 runs in an energy-efficient normal operation with proportional heat storage device filling.
[0081] In a third SG Ready operating state SGFORCED, the heat pump 7 operates in an amplified mode for hot water preparation and/or room heating. This is not a direct start-up command, but a switch-on recommendation.
[0082] In a fourth SG Ready operating state SGMAX, the heat pump control 8 receives a definitive start-up command.
[0083] A heat pump control 8 can be activated by the system control 10 or the energy management system for own-consumption optimisation with a predefined electrical power take-up. According to one embodiment in accordance with the invention, a Smart-Grid-Ready-enabled heat pump 7 is activated by an inverter 3 via a control interface 12, preferably a Modbus interface, instead of via the SG Ready interface. For example, one of four SG Ready operating states of the heat pump 7 is specified via the Modbus interface or control interface 12.
[0084] The energy system 1 in accordance with the invention illustrated in
[0085]
[0086]
[0087] In a step S16 “RECOMMENDATION FROM EM”, a recommendation is from the energy management system EM is provided. In the next step S17, a check is carried out to establish whether control type IV. is present and thus control is effected by simulating a heat pump electricity meter. If this is the case (“T” TRUE), in step S18 the system control 10 scales the recommendation from step S16 according to the heat pump configuration file WPK and provides it to the heat pump control 8 via the register “EnergyMeterE1” of the system control 10. The register address of the EnergyMeterE1 register corresponds to the register address, at which the heat pump control 8 as MODBUS master interrogates a value of a heat pump electricity meter. In
[0088] If step S20-1 provides the result “F” (FALSE) because control type I is not specified, a check is carried out in step S20-2 to establish whether the heat pump 7 is controlled according to control type II. If control type II is specified (“T” TRUE), the heat pump 7 is controlled by set temperature and in step S22 a set-point temperature for the heat pump 7 is determined by the system control 10. The set-point temperature is determined such that it corresponds to a desired power take-up of the heat pump 7. For example, the desired increase of an actual temperature of the heat storage device 9 can be calculated by dividing the set power Psoll by one power jump per Kelvin of a heat pump 7. The sum of actual temperature and desired increase then preferably corresponds to the determined set-point temperature of the heat storage device 9. This must not exceed a maximum temperature of the heat storage device, for which reason a corresponding interrogation is effected in step S23. If the determined set-point temperature is below the maximum temperature “T” (TRUE), the value of the set-point temperature is not changed further. If the determined set-point temperature is above the maximum temperature “F” (FALSE), the value of the set-point temperature in step S25 is set equal to the value of the maximum temperature. In step S24, the set-point temperature is sent or transmitted, via the control interface 12, to the heat pump control 8 of the heat pump 7 in a manner scaled according to the heat pump configuration file WPK. According to the example in
[0089] If step S20-2 provides the result “F” (FALSE) because control type II is not specified, a check is carried out in step S20-3 to establish whether the heat pump 7 is controlled according to control type III. If control type III is specified (“T” TRUE), the heat pump 7 is controlled by SG-Ready specification and a check can be carried out by the system control 10 in step S26 to establish whether the set power is greater than or equal to a specified switch-on threshold. (A corresponding switch-on threshold is indicated in
[0090] In order to set an SG Ready operating state, the system control 10 uses the pattern specified in the heat pump configuration file WPK for an SG Ready operating state, e.g. a pattern of SGPin1 and SGPin2, as illustrated in
[0091] The patterns for the various SG Ready operating states are generally not uniform for heat pumps of different manufacturers.
[0092] Steps S27 and S29 are followed by the waiting step S30 already described above.
[0093]
[0094]
[0095] In a first step S.sub.A, a heat pump configuration file WPK is loaded in a data memory 11 of a system control 10 of an energy management system 1. Then, in step S.sub.B, a communication of the system control 10 of the energy system 1 with a heat pump control 8 provided for the heat pump 7 is effected according to a control type indicated in the heat pump configuration file WPK. As a result, the heat pump 7 is incorporated into an energy management system of the energy system 1. The communication SB between the heat pump control 8 and the system control 10 is effected preferably bidirectionally. The communication is effected via the control interface 12, as illustrated in
[0096] With the inventive energy management system or system control 10 of an energy system 1, the control or regulation of the heat pump 7 can be effected for different heat pump types which are activated differently. Heat pumps 7 of a different type can thus be easily incorporated into the energy system 1 in accordance with the invention. Furthermore, it is possible to easily replace an existing heat pump 7 with another heat pump of a different control type.