Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5444255 | Energy Procedia | 2017 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
To exploit the full thermo-economic potential of an Organic Rankine Cycle (ORC), the process, equipment and working fluid have to be optimized simultaneously. Today, working fluid selection and thermo-economic process optimization are commonly separated. This separation leads to suboptimal solutions if the prior working fluid selection fails. In this work, we present an approach for the integrated thermo-economic design of ORC process, equipment and working fluid using consistent thermodynamic modeling. The approach is based on the Continuous-Molecular Targeting-Computer-aided Molecular Design (CoMT-CAMD) approach. In CoMT-CAMD, the properties of the working fluid are modeled by the physically-based Perturbed-Chain Statistical Associating Fluid Theory (PC-SAFT) equation of state. A CAMD formulation allows the design of novel working fluids during the process optimization. So far, CoMT-CAMD was limited to equilibrium thermodynamics. Some of the authors recently developed models for the transport properties viscosity and thermal conductivity based on entropy scaling and PC-SAFT. The integration of these models allows designing the equipment within the CoMT-CAMD approach. In particular, the heat exchanger of the ORC can be designed using detailed correlations for single phase, evaporation and condensation heat transfer. Based on the equipment sizing, a thermo-economic objective function can be considered in the resulting mixed-integer nonlinear optimization problem. Thereby, the thermo-economically optimal working fluid is identified in a single optimization problem jointly with the corresponding optimal process and equipment. The resulting approach is illustrated for the design of a subcritical ORC for waste heat recovery. We show that the predicted specific purchased-equipment costs are in good accordance with real ORC applications.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Energy
Energy (General)
Authors
Johannes Schilling, Dominik Tillmanns, Matthias Lampe, Madlen Hopp, Joachim Gross, André Bardow,