Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
765642 Energy Conversion and Management 2014 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Explotation of medium temperature geothermal resource with ORC–CHP is investigated.•A new CHP configuration to provide higher temperature to thermal user is proposed.•Several organic fluids and wide range of heat demand are studied.•The system produces higher power (almost 55%) in comparison to typical layouts.•Optimal working fluids vary with the characteristics of the heat demand.

Medium temperature (up to 170 °C), water dominated geothermal resources are the most widespread in the world. The binary geothermal-ORC power plants are the most suitable energy conversion systems for this kind of resource. Specifically, combined heat and power (CHP) systems have the potential to improve the efficiency in exploiting the geothermal resources by cascading the geothermal fluid heat carrier to successively lower temperature users, thus increasing first and second law efficiency of the entire power plant. However, geothermal CHPs usually extract heat from the geofluid either in parallel or in series to the ORC, and usually provide only low temperature heat, which is seldom suitable for industrial use. In this paper, a new CHP configuration, called Cross Parallel CHP, has been proposed and analyzed. It aims to provide higher temperature heat suitable for industrial use, allowing the exploitation of geothermal resources even in areas where district heating is not needed. The proposed CHP allows the reduction of the irreversibilities in the heat exchangers and the loss to the environment related to the re-injection of geofluid, thus producing higher electric power output while satisfying, at the same time, the heat demand of the thermal utility for a wide range of temperatures and mass flow rates (80–140 °C; 3–13 kg/s). Several organic fluids are investigated and the related optimizing working conditions are found by a built in procedure making use of genetic algorithms. The results show that the optimal working fluids and conditions vary with the temperature level and heat load of the thermal utility.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Energy (General)
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