Rural households in cold regions still rely heavily on coal for cooking and domestic hot water, while single renewable energy sources suffer from intermittency and limited system-level assessment. This study proposes a solar–biogas complementary energy supply system integrating evacuated-tube solar collectors, an above-ground anaerobic digester, thermal storage, and biogas utilization for rural residential applications in Minqin, Northwest China. A dynamic system-wide model was developed by coupling TRNSYS with nonlinear representations of anaerobic fermentation and biogas boilers, enabling hour-by-hour simulation of energy production, conversion, storage, and consumption. Field measurements were used for validation, and the root mean square deviation between simulated and measured temperatures and gas production remained below 10%. During the heating season, the solar subsystem supplied 10% of the digester heating demand and 90% of the domestic hot-water load, while the biogas subsystem contributed 9.29% and 90.71%, respectively. The system delivered 4728.96 MJ of heat against a seasonal demand of 4636.22 MJ, fully meeting user requirements. A comprehensive 3E (energy–environment–economic) assessment shows that, compared with traditional rural energy supply modes, the proposed system reduces CO2 and NOx emissions by 65.85% and 98.13%, respectively, and demonstrates favorable economics with a benefit–cost ratio of 2.41 and a discounted payback period of 3.27 years. The proposed modeling and evaluation framework provides a replicable solution for clean energy substitution and circular waste utilization in rural areas.
Fang et al. (Tue,) studied this question.