
@Article{fhmt.2025.072260,
AUTHOR = {Jinyou Qiu, Jiale Liu, Yubing Li, Shaogeng Zhong, Guilong Dai, Wenhua Liu},
TITLE = {Simulation and Performance Analysis of a Photovoltaic-Thermal Heat Pump System},
JOURNAL = {Frontiers in Heat and Mass Transfer},
VOLUME = {23},
YEAR = {2025},
NUMBER = {6},
PAGES = {2025--2049},
URL = {http://www.techscience.com/fhmt/v23n6/65233},
ISSN = {2151-8629},
ABSTRACT = {The growing demand for energy-saving and renewable heating solutions has made photovoltaic/thermal (PV/T) heat pump systems a promising technology. However, their thermal and electrical performance, as well as the overall utilization of solar energy, strongly depend on capacity configuration and operating parameters. To address this issue, this study proposes a PV/T heat pump system featuring a novel rhombic flow channel structure that functions as the collector-evaporator. An experimental test bench was established to evaluate system performance, and a one-dimensional numerical model was developed to investigate the effects of environmental and operating parameters. The simulation results deviated by approximately 10% from the experimental data, indicating good agreement between the two approaches. Analysis shows that hot-water heating time decreases with increasing solar radiation intensity. The system coefficient of performance (COP) rises by 50.9% and 45.9% with higher environmental temperature and collector area, respectively, but decreases by 6.61% and 45% with greater superheat and higher original tank temperature. The photovoltaic (PV) generation efficiency decreases by 6.25%, 2.16%, and 1.63% with increases in environmental temperature, collector-evaporator area, and original tank temperature, respectively, but increases by 0.92% with higher superheat. Sensitivity analysis further reveals that original tank temperature exerts the strongest influence on system COP, with a sensitivity coefficient of 1.159, while environmental temperature most significantly affects PV efficiency, with a sensitivity coefficient of −0.051. Overall, this study provides a pathway to enhance system stability and energy efficiency, offering theoretical and practical contributions to the intelligent control of PV/T heat pump systems.},
DOI = {10.32604/fhmt.2025.072260}
}



