Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8073937 Energy 2016 14 Pages PDF
Abstract
This paper investigates the supercritical CO2 cycles performance, from thermodynamic consideration and within realistic industrial modeling hypotheses, for coal power plant application. It proposes a design of such a power cycle for a first step implementation of the technology. Main findings are the following: even with the low temperature heat available in the coal combustion flue gas, a recompression cycle is mandatory for this application: the difference between this option and a standard Brayton cycle is more than 4.5%pt efficiency. Compared to no-reheated cycle, single reheat is an effective configuration with 1.5%pt efficiency increases. Another process improvement such as double reheat cycle, double recompression cycle and an advanced flue gas economizer configuration induce efficiency gain between 0.3 and 0.5%pt. Influence of the heat sink temperature stability has been quantified: 1.5%pt reduction for 5 °C increase with a minimal cycle pressure of 7 MPa; however, performance stability could be improved by adapting the main compressor inlet pressure. As a conclusion, CO2 supercritical coal-fired power plant theoretically offers interesting performances, of 47.8%-LHV efficiency, with existing materials at current operating conditions in a relatively near timeframe.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Energy (General)
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