Techno-economic analysis of natural gas combined cycles with post-combustion CO2 absorption, including a detailed evaluation of the development potential

2007 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
pp. 396-417 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.N.M. Peeters ◽  
A.P.C. Faaij ◽  
W.C. Turkenburg
Author(s):  
Umberto Desideri ◽  
Claudio Belli

Natural gas is usually transferred to consumers through pipelines, which may cover distances of thousands of kilometers. In some cases, however, when the path of the pipelines crosses seas or countries where the politic situation does not ensure a continuous and reliable flow, other means of transportation are preferred. In these cases, the natural gas is liquefied and transported in tankers, which load the tanks at liquefaction plants and discharge them at regasification plants. This gives a considerable chance to differentiate supply sources and allows gas imports from producing countries that are otherwise inaccessible via pipeline. The aim of this paper is the study of systems, which carry out liquefied natural gas (LNG) vaporization using cogenerative solutions. The following configurations were studied in particular: • Gas-steam combined cycles; • Closed gas-gas combined cycles using three different working fluids. Two typical plant sizes and two gas pressure sendout levels (7.3 MPa for long distance pipeline networks and 2.5 MPa for terminals linked to power production plants with combined cycles) have been analyzed. The suggested solutions have been optimized, and performance calculated. The discussion is completed by a simplified economic analysis.


Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (17) ◽  
pp. 4292
Author(s):  
Lidia Lombardi ◽  
Barbara Mendecka ◽  
Simone Fabrizi

Industrial anaerobic digestion requires low temperature thermal energy to heat the feedstock and maintain temperature conditions inside the reactor. In some cases, the thermal requirements are satisfied by burning part of the produced biogas in devoted boilers. However, part of the biogas can be saved by integrating thermal solar energy into the anaerobic digestion plant. We study the possibility of integrating solar thermal energy in biowaste mesophilic/thermophilic anaerobic digestion, with the aim of reducing the amount of biogas burnt for internal heating and increasing the amount of biogas, further upgraded to biomethane and injected into the natural gas grid. With respect to previously available studies that evaluated the possibility of integrating solar thermal energy in anaerobic digestion, we introduce the topic of economic sustainability by performing a preliminary and simplified economic analysis of the solar system, based only on the additional costs/revenues. The case of Italian economic incentives for biomethane injection into the natural gas grid—that are particularly favourable—is considered as reference case. The amount of saved biogas/biomethane, on an annual basis, is about 4–55% of the heat required by the gas boiler in the base case, without solar integration, depending on the different considered variables (mesophilic/thermophilic, solar field area, storage time, latitude, type of collector). Results of the economic analysis show that the economic sustainability can be reached only for some of the analysed conditions, using the less expensive collector, even if its efficiency allows lower biomethane savings. Future reduction of solar collector costs might improve the economic feasibility. However, when the payback time is calculated, excluding the Italian incentives and considering selling the biomethane at the natural gas price, its value is always higher than 10 years. Therefore, incentives mechanism is of great importance to support the economic sustainability of solar integration in biowaste anaerobic digestion producing biomethane.


Author(s):  
R. Yadav ◽  
Priyesh Srivastava ◽  
Samir Saraswati

The paper presents a thermo-economic analysis of gas/steam combined cycle. The stated objective is achieved by optimizing thermo-economic parameters for simple combined cycle (large and medium range) and to apply this to economic model of these cycles. The economic parameters evaluated in the present study include discount cash flow rate of return (DCRR) and gross payout period (GPO), two terms commonly employed in engineering economic analysis. DCRR and GPO are calculated for various electric sale and fuel prices. It has been found that maximum value of DCRR and minimum value of GPO are found with large size plant.


2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Q. S. Yin ◽  
H. Y. Li ◽  
Q. H. Fan ◽  
L. X. Jia ◽  
J. G. Weisend ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 3 (09) ◽  
pp. 64-72
Author(s):  
Ohia N.P. ◽  
Anyadiegwu C.I.C. ◽  
Muonagor C. M.

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document