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- Institut für Nachhaltige Chemie und Umweltchemie (INUC) (12) (entfernen)
Air quality models are important tools which are utilized for a large field of application. When combined with data from observations, models can be employed to create a comprehensive estimation of the past and current distribution of pollutants in the atmosphere. Moreover, projections of future concentration changes due to changing emissions serve as an important decision basis for policymakers. For the determination of atmospheric concentrations of air pollutants by means of numerical modelling it is essential to possess a model which is able to create anthropogenic and biogenic emissions with a temporally and spatially high resolution. The emission data is needed as input for a chemistry transport model which calculates transport, deposition, and degradation of air pollutants. To evaluate the impact of changing emissions on the environment a flexible emission model with the capability to create diverse emission scenarios is needed. Further, it is important to always take into account a variety of different species to properly represent the major chemical reactions in the atmosphere (e.g. ozone chemistry, aerosol formation). Currently there are only a few high resolution emission datasets available for Europe. The amount of substances included in these datasets, however, is limited. Moreover, they can not be used as basis for the creation of new emission scenarios. To enable the creation of emission scenarios in the course of this doctoral thesis the American emission model SMOKE was adopted and modified. On the basis of a multitude of different georeferenced datasets, official statistics, and further model results the newly created emission model “SMOKE for Europe” is capable of creating hourly emission data for the European continent with a spatial resolution of up to 5x5km2. In order to demonstrate the universal applicability of the emission model the carcinogenic species benzo[a]pyrene (BaP) was exemplarily implemented into the model. BaP belongs to the group of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. Because of its high toxicity the European Union introduced an annual target value of 1 ng/m3 in January 2010. SMOKE for Europe was used to create a variety of emission scenarios for the years 1980, 2000, and 2020. These emission scenarios were then used to determine the impact of emission changes on atmospheric concentrations of BaP and to identify regions which exceed the European target value. Additionally the impact of different legislation and fuel use scenarios on the projected atmospheric concentrations in 2020 was investigated. Furthermore, additional use cases for a flexible emission model are pointed out. The SMOKE for Europe model was used to simulate the transport of volcanic ash after the eruption of the Icelandic volcano Eyjafjallajokull in March 2010. By comparison of modelled concentrations for different emission scenarios with observations from remote sensing and air plane flights distribution and concentration of the volcanic ash over Europe was estimated. The results of this thesis have been presented in four scientific papers published in international peerreviewed journals. The papers are reprinted at the end of this thesis.
Heating is most important part of thermal energy demand, and accounts for large amounts ofenergy consumption in cold regions. Renewable energy sources will be of great importance inorder to cover future energy demands. However, their intermittency is rightly considered asinconvenient. Thus, a more effective management of demand, coupled with efficient storagesystems is required. Based on this perception, thermal systems coupled with electricityproduction have been efficiently designed, they are the so called “combined heat and power”(micro-CHP). Nonetheless, heat losses from the thermal part of their system lead to electricityfluctuation. Therefore, the use of micro-CHP in combination with a volume-efficient and nearlylossless heat storage system to counteract electricity fluctuations is a viable solution.The heat storage system in this work is based on reversible thermochemical reactions, suchas dehydration and hydration of inorganic salts, which exhibits very high energy density (up to628 kWh·m-3 of storage material). The chosen inorganic salt (SrBr2·6H2O) reacting with purewater vapour operates within a closed system. The objective of this work is to design a systemthat thermodynamically matches the combination with micro-CHP. Therefore, investigationshave been performed from the material at micro-scale to the system at lab-scale. Models weredeveloped on the basis of heat and mass transfer with chemical reaction and were done in orderto numerically analyse the system. Experiments were additionally performed to consolidate thenumerical tools for future studies. Characterization experiments have been designed and tested.Thermo-physical properties (thermal conductivity, specific heat capacity, permeability, chemicalkinetics) of the reactive salt were then determined to be used as parameters into the sodeveloped models.The numerical simulations lead to the time-space evolution of heating fluid, reactive bedtemperatures and reactor pressure. The originality of this study is to model the coupled heat andmass transfer with chemical reaction on a 3D geometry to be close to the reality. Results help tonumerically and experimentally analyse the thermochemical heat storage performances. Thebed energy density is experimentally found to be 531 kWh·m-3 of salt hydrate. Based on thecondensation temperature during the experimentation, a reactor energy density of 140 kWh·m-3and a storage capacity of 65 kWh with a thermal efficiency of 0.78 are obtained. This systemproves the recovery capacity of more than 2/3 of the input energy. Various aspects of design andrecommendation for optimisation aspect that could help during prototype development aretaken into account and addressed. Comparison simulation-experiment is then performed anddiscussed, showing encouraging results, even if limited at lab-scale.