4.6 Article

Demonstrating flexible operation of the Technology Centre Mongstad (TCM) CO2 capture plant

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijggc.2019.102879

Keywords

CO2 capture; Dynamic modelling; Flexible operation; Transient operation; Post-combustion capture; Pilot plant; CCGT

Funding

  1. Research Councils UK (RCUK) [EP/M001369/1, EP/M015351/1, EP/N024567/1, NE/P019900/1]
  2. EPSRC [EP/M001369/1, EP/N024567/1, EP/M015351/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  3. NERC [NE/P019900/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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This study demonstrates the feasibility of flexible operation of CO2 capture plants with dynamic modelling and experimental testing at the Technology Centre Mongstad (TCM) CO2 capture facility in Norway. This paper presents three flexible operation scenarios: (i) effect of steam flow rate, (ii) time-varying solvent regeneration, and (iii) variable ramp rate. The dynamic model of the TCM CO2 capture plant developed in gCCS provides further insights into the process dynamics. As the steam flow rate decreases, lean CO2 loading increases, thereby reducing CO2 capture rate and decreasing absorber temperature. The time-varying solvent regeneration scenario is demonstrated successfully. During off-peak mode (periods of low electricity price), solvent is regenerated, reducing lean CO2 loading to 0.16 mol(CO2)/mol(MEA) and increasing CO2 capture rate to 89-97%. The peak mode (period of high electricity price) stores CO2 within the solvent by reducing the reboiler heat supply and increasing solvent flow rate. During peak mode, lean CO2 loading increases to 0.48 mol(CO2)/mol(MEA), reducing CO2 capture rate to 14.5%, which in turn decreases the absorber temperature profile. The variable ramp rate scenario demonstrates that different ramp rates can be applied successively to a CO2 capture plant. By maintaining constant liquid-to-gas (L/G) ratio during the changes, the CO2 capture performance will remain the same, i.e., constant lean CO2 loading (0.14-0.16 mol(CO2)/mol(MEA)) and CO2 capture rate (87-89%). We show that flexible operation in a demonstration scale absorption CO2 capture process is technically feasible. The deviation between the gCCS model and dynamic experimental data demonstrates further research is needed to improve existing dynamic modelling software. Continual development in our understanding of process dynamics during flexible operation of CO2 capture plants will be essential. This paper provides additional value by presenting a comprehensive dynamic experimental dataset, which will enable others to build upon this work.

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