scholarly journals Externally Fired Combined Cycles (EFCC): Part B — Alternative Configurations and Cost Projections

Author(s):  
Stefano Consonni ◽  
Ennio Macchi

Externally Fired Combined Cycles (EFCC) constitute one of the options allowing the use of “dirty” fuels like coal, biomass or waste in conjunction with modern, high efficiency gas turbines. This two-part paper discusses thermodynamic, technological and economic issues crucial to the successful realization of EFCCs. Part B discusses the cycle arrangement, its implications for the design and the cost of the high temperature heat exchangers, the effects of scale and the economic prospects. An “enhanced” configuration whereby the excess air sent to the combustor is limited to the minimum required for complete combustion can reach net LHV efficiencies above 50%, with relatively low high-temperature heat transfer surface requirements. Cost projections are hindered by the uncertainty on the cost of the high temperature heat exchangers. Estimates based on published and proprietary data collected by the authors indicate that EFCCs should be cost-competitive with IGCCs, especially at medium-low power outputs.

Author(s):  
Stefano Consonni ◽  
Ennio Macchi ◽  
Francesco Farina

Externally Fired Combined Cycles (EFCC) are one of the options allowing the use of “dirty” fuels like coal, biomass or waste in conjunction with modern, high efficiency gas turbines. The plant concept comprises an indirect-contact ceramic heat exchanger where compressed air exiting the gas turbine compressor is heated by hot combustion gases; the combustor is placed downstream the turbine and operates at nearly atmospheric pressure. From a thermodynamic standpoint, the cycle is equivalent to a combined cycle with supplementary firing. Attainable efficiencies are higher than those achievable by steam cycles (even the most advanced ultra-supercritical), as well as those of most other coal-based technologies (PFBC and IGCC). These efficiency advantages must be weighted against the uncertainty (and risk) of the realization of high temperature ceramic heat exchangers, and the challenges for the design of the combustor. This two-part paper discusses thermodynamic, technological and economic issues crucial to the success of EFCCs, both for large scale utility service (3–400 MWe1 and more) and for medium/low scale applications (down to 30–50 MWe1). Part A addresses the most relevant thermodynamic and technological issues, performing comparisons with the technologies which will presumably dominate the coal-based power generation market of the next century.


2007 ◽  
Vol 32 (16) ◽  
pp. 3622-3630 ◽  
Author(s):  
P MAZIASZ ◽  
B PINT ◽  
J SHINGLEDECKER ◽  
N EVANS ◽  
Y YAMAMOTO ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 143 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhiwen Ma ◽  
Janna Martinek

Abstract Concentrating solar power (CSP) development has focused on increasing the energy conversion efficiency and lowering the capital cost. To improve performance, CSP research is moving to high-temperature and high-efficiency designs. One technology approach is to use inexpensive, high-temperature heat transfer fluids and storage, integrated with a high-efficiency power cycle such as the supercritical carbon dioxide (sCO2) Brayton power cycle. The sCO2 Brayton power cycle has strong potential to achieve performance targets of 50% thermal-to-electric efficiency and dry cooling at an ambient temperature of up to 40 °C and to reduce the cost of power generation. Solid particles have been proposed as a possible high-temperature heat transfer or storage medium that is inexpensive and stable at high temperatures above 1000 °C. The particle/sCO2 heat exchanger (HX) provides a connection between the particles and sCO2 fluid in emerging sCO2 power cycles. This article presents heat transfer modeling to analyze the particle/sCO2 HX design and assess design tradeoffs including the HX cost. The heat transfer process was modeled based on a particle/sCO2 counterflow configuration, and empirical heat transfer correlations for the fluidized bed and sCO2 were used to calculate heat transfer area and estimate the HX cost. A computational fluid dynamics simulation was applied to characterize particle distribution and fluidization. This article shows a path to achieve the cost and performance objectives for a particle/sCO2 HX design by using fluidized-bed technology.


2009 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 41-48
Author(s):  
Zheshu Ma ◽  
Zhenhuan Zhu

Indirectly or externally-fired gas-turbines (IFGT or EFGT) are novel technology under development for small and medium scale combined power and heat supplies in combination with micro gas turbine technologies mainly for the utilization of the waste heat from the turbine in a recuperative process and the possibility of burning biomass or 'dirty' fuel by employing a high temperature heat exchanger to avoid the combustion gases passing through the turbine. In this paper, by assuming that all fluid friction losses in the compressor and turbine are quantified by a corresponding isentropic efficiency and all global irreversibilities in the high temperature heat exchanger are taken into account by an effective efficiency, a one dimensional model including power output and cycle efficiency formulation is derived for a class of real IFGT cycles. To illustrate and analyze the effect of operational parameters on IFGT efficiency, detailed numerical analysis and figures are produced. The results summarized by figures show that IFGT cycles are most efficient under low compression ratio ranges (3.0-6.0) and fit for low power output circumstances integrating with micro gas turbine technology. The model derived can be used to analyze and forecast performance of real IFGT configurations.


Author(s):  
Merrill A Wilson ◽  
Raymond Cutler ◽  
Marc Flinders ◽  
Matt Quist ◽  
Darin Ray ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 324 ◽  
pp. 02007
Author(s):  
Gennady A. Ilyn ◽  
Ilya I. Malafeev ◽  
Vladimir B. Sapojnikov

One of the most common and reliable methods of water treatment is the method of thermal distillation. Despite the reliability of the method, its application is constrained by high energy intensity. The most effective way to reduce the cost of production of distillate is the use of thermal transformers, providing regenerate and heat recovery phase transformations of the distillate. The use of working fluid with the most favorable thermodynamic properties is of paramount importance for the creation of high efficiency thermotransformers. The work is considered working fluid for high-temperature heat pumps and the results of the calculation-experimental study of high-temperature vapor compression heat-pumping distiller on natural working substance n-pentan.


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