scholarly journals MORPHOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF BENEFICIAL USES OF WASTE HEAT FROM THERMAL POWER PLANTS.

1971 ◽  
Author(s):  
S R Fields
2013 ◽  
Vol 313-314 ◽  
pp. 759-762
Author(s):  
Yun Feng Ma ◽  
Yan Xiang Liu ◽  
Tao Ji

In order to fully recycle power plant’s circulatingwater heat, improve the thermal efficiency and protect the environment, thispaper designs the comprehensive scheme of heat pumptechnology recycling power plant’s circulating water heat, including theboiler mae-up water pre-heating system, the central heating circulatingsystem and the domestic hot water circulating system, which not only run at thesame time but also function independently. Even in non-heating seasons,the waste heat of circulating water can be utilized fully. It is worthmentioning that this paper puts forward to install climate compensationdevice in the central heating system, which can perform intelligent district timesharing control to meet different users’ needs.


2011 ◽  
Vol 133 (04) ◽  
pp. 42-43 ◽  
Author(s):  
Louis Michaud ◽  
Nilton Renno

This article discusses building a prototype of an atmospheric vortex engine (AVE) to increase the thermodynamic efficiency of a thermal plant. An AVE would look like a natural draft cooling tower with a controlled vortex emerging from its open top. An AVE tower could have a diameter of 300 feet and stand 10 to 20 stories tall. To fully demonstrate the AVE concept, however, it is likely necessary to build and test a prototype at an existing thermal power plant. Building the prototypes at existing thermal power plants would be advantageous because of the availability of a controlled heat source of relatively high temperature. Possessing some 20% or 30% of the capacity of the existing cooling tower, the prototype would be able to accept a fraction of the waste heat from the plant. A small gas-fired power plant in a rural location with a dry cooling tower would be a good candidate site for an AVE prototype, since it could be developed without risk to existing plant operation.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 245
Author(s):  
Andreas P. Weiß ◽  
Dominik Stümpfl ◽  
Philipp Streit ◽  
Patrick Shoemaker ◽  
Thomas Hildebrandt

The energy industry must change dramatically in order to reduce CO2-emissions and to slow down climate change. Germany, for example, decided to shut down all large nuclear (2022) and fossil thermal power plants by 2038. Power generation will then rely on fluctuating renewables such as wind power and solar. However, thermal power plants will still play a role with respect to waste incineration, biomass, exploitation of geothermal wells, concentrated solar power (CSP), power-to-heat-to-power plants (P2H2P), and of course waste heat recovery (WHR). While the multistage axial turbine has prevailed for the last hundred years in power plants of the several hundred MW class, this architecture is certainly not the appropriate solution for small-scale waste heat recovery below 1 MW or even below 100 kW. Simpler, cost-effective turbo generators are required. Therefore, the authors examine uncommon turbine architectures that are known per se but were abandoned when power plants grew due to their poor efficiency compared to the multistage axial machines. One of these concepts is the so-called Elektra turbine, a velocity compounded radial re-entry turbine. The paper describes the concept of the Elektra turbine in comparison to other turbine concepts, especially other velocity compounded turbines, such as the Curtis type. In the second part, the 1D design and 3D computational fluid dynamics (CFD) optimization of the 5 kW air turbine demonstrator is explained. Finally, experimentally determined efficiency characteristics of various early versions of the Elektra are presented, compared, and critically discussed regarding the originally defined design approach. The unsteady CFD calculation of the final Elektra version promised 49.4% total-to-static isentropic efficiency, whereas the experiments confirmed 44.5%.


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