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Spot the difference! : On the way towards automated fault handling in district heating buildings

Månsson, Sara LU (2021)
Abstract
This thesis focuses on how district heating utilities may work with fault handling in customer installations as a tool to reduce their return temperature levels. Reduced return temperatures would make it possible to improve the efficiency of the district heating systems and decrease their environmental impact. Faults in the customer installations cause high return temperatures that increase the return temperature of the entire district heating system. Thus, to reduce the system return temperatures, such faults must be detected, diagnosed, and corrected. The focus of the thesis has been to understand and identify the specific challenges that arise when integrating data analysis of district heating customer data as a natural part of the... (More)
This thesis focuses on how district heating utilities may work with fault handling in customer installations as a tool to reduce their return temperature levels. Reduced return temperatures would make it possible to improve the efficiency of the district heating systems and decrease their environmental impact. Faults in the customer installations cause high return temperatures that increase the return temperature of the entire district heating system. Thus, to reduce the system return temperatures, such faults must be detected, diagnosed, and corrected. The focus of the thesis has been to understand and identify the specific challenges that arise when integrating data analysis of district heating customer data as a natural part of the utilities’ fault handling processes and find (parts of) the solutions to these challenges. The reason for this is that faults in the customer installation manifest themselves in district heating customer data. Thus, it is possible to analyse this data to detect faults.

The results show that a multitude of different faults may occur in a customer installation. However, some faults are more common than others, and these faults should be prioritized when developing fault detection methods using data analysis. There is also a need to develop a mutual way to name faults that occur in the installation. Today, the district heating utilities use different words when talking about the same faults, making it hard to compare results from different district heating systems. It also makes it hard to create labelled data sets, which are needed to develop and validate successful fault detection tools based on data analysis. However, two different data analysis methods for fault detection have been developed without access to labelled data. Both methods show that it is possible to utilize customer data analysis to detect faults in customer installations.

To realize the full potential of the fault detection tools, the utilities need to utilize them on a larger scale within their organization. Important organizational aspects include identifying a clear stakeholder in the fault handling process and calculating the economic value of eliminating faults. There is also a need to change the current fault handling processes to better align with automated fault detection tools. Therefore, an important result in this thesis is a suggestion for how a fault handling process based on data analysis may be designed.

District heating utilities may use the results of this thesis to improve their fault handling processes of customer installations, thereby reducing their return temperatures and improving the possibilities of district heating being part of the future energy systems. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
supervisor
opponent
  • Prof. Svendsen, Svend, DTU, Denmark.
organization
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Customer installations, Customer data, Data analysis, District heating, Experience from industry, Fault detection, Fault handling, Fault labelling, Return temperatures, Substation performance, Taxonomy
pages
99 pages
publisher
Energy Sciences, Lund University
defense location
Lecture hall KC:A, Kemicentrum, Naturvetarvägen 14, Faculty of Engineering LTH, Lund University, Lund. Zoom: https://lu-se.zoom.us/j/68916430484
defense date
2021-08-20 09:00:00
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
2790c204-12a8-496f-a1ed-3034e13b3cce
date added to LUP
2021-05-27 11:24:04
date last changed
2021-05-31 09:23:56
@phdthesis{2790c204-12a8-496f-a1ed-3034e13b3cce,
  abstract     = {{This thesis focuses on how district heating utilities may work with fault handling in customer installations as a tool to reduce their return temperature levels. Reduced return temperatures would make it possible to improve the efficiency of the district heating systems and decrease their environmental impact. Faults in the customer installations cause high return temperatures that increase the return temperature of the entire district heating system. Thus, to reduce the system return temperatures, such faults must be detected, diagnosed, and corrected. The focus of the thesis has been to understand and identify the specific challenges that arise when integrating data analysis of district heating customer data as a natural part of the utilities’ fault handling processes and find (parts of) the solutions to these challenges. The reason for this is that faults in the customer installation manifest themselves in district heating customer data. Thus, it is possible to analyse this data to detect faults.<br/><br/>The results show that a multitude of different faults may occur in a customer installation. However, some faults are more common than others, and these faults should be prioritized when developing fault detection methods using data analysis. There is also a need to develop a mutual way to name faults that occur in the installation. Today, the district heating utilities use different words when talking about the same faults, making it hard to compare results from different district heating systems. It also makes it hard to create labelled data sets, which are needed to develop and validate successful fault detection tools based on data analysis. However, two different data analysis methods for fault detection have been developed without access to labelled data. Both methods show that it is possible to utilize customer data analysis to detect faults in customer installations.<br/><br/>To realize the full potential of the fault detection tools, the utilities need to utilize them on a larger scale within their organization. Important organizational aspects include identifying a clear stakeholder in the fault handling process and calculating the economic value of eliminating faults. There is also a need to change the current fault handling processes to better align with automated fault detection tools. Therefore, an important result in this thesis is a suggestion for how a fault handling process based on data analysis may be designed.<br/><br/>District heating utilities may use the results of this thesis to improve their fault handling processes of customer installations, thereby reducing their return temperatures and improving the possibilities of district heating being part of the future energy systems.}},
  author       = {{Månsson, Sara}},
  keywords     = {{Customer installations; Customer data; Data analysis; District heating; Experience from industry; Fault detection; Fault handling; Fault labelling; Return temperatures; Substation performance; Taxonomy}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Energy Sciences, Lund University}},
  school       = {{Lund University}},
  title        = {{Spot the difference! : On the way towards automated fault handling in district heating buildings}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/98293188/Sara_M_nsson_final_210517.pdf}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}