4.5 Article

A power plant for integrated waste energy recovery from liquid air energy storage and liquefied natural gas

Journal

CHINESE JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERING
Volume 34, Issue -, Pages 242-257

Publisher

CHEMICAL INDUSTRY PRESS CO LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.cjche.2021.02.008

Keywords

Waste energy recovery; Power plant; Liquid air energy storage; Liquefied natural gas; Integration

Funding

  1. UK EPSRC [EP/V012053/1, EP/S032622/1, EP/P004709/1, EP/P003605/1, EP/N032888/1]
  2. British Council [2020-RLWK12-10478, 2019-RLWK11-10724]
  3. EPSRC [EP/V012053/1, EP/N032888/1, EP/P003605/1, EP/P004709/1, EP/S032622/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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LNG regasification and liquid air energy storage (LAES) processes waste a significant amount of energy, which can be recovered to improve efficiency, although this would require additional capital investment and may not always be economically attractive.
Liquefied natural gas (LNG) is regarded as one of the cleanest fossil fuel and has experienced significant developments in recent years. The liquefaction process of natural gas is energy-intensive, while the regasification of LNG gives out a huge amount of waste energy since plenty of high grade cold energy (-160 degrees C) from LNG is released to sea water directly in most cases, and also sometimes LNG is burned for regasification. On the other hand, liquid air energy storage (LAES) is an emerging energy storage technology for applications such as peak load shifting of power grids, which generates 30%-40% of compression heat (similar to 200 degrees C). Such heat could lead to energy waste if not recovered and used. The recovery of the compression heat is technically feasible but requires additional capital investment, which may not always be economically attractive. Therefore, we propose a power plant for recovering the waste cryogenic energy from LNG regasification and compression heat from the LAES. The challenge for such a power plant is the wide working temperature range between the low-temperature exergy source (-160 degrees C) and heat source (-200 degrees C). Nitrogen and argon are proposed as the working fluids to address the challenge. Thermodynamic analyses are carried out and the results show that the power plant could achieve a thermal efficiency of 27% and 19% and an exergy efficiency of 40% and 28% for nitrogen and argon, respectively. Here, with the nitrogen as working fluid undergoes a complete Brayton Cycle, while the argon based power plant goes through a combined Brayton and Rankine Cycle. Besides, the economic analysis shows that the payback period of this proposed system is only 2.2 years, utilizing the excess heat from a 5 MW/40MWh LAES system. The findings suggest that the waste energy based power plant could be co-located with the LNG terminal and LAES plant, providing additional power output and reducing energy waste. (C) 2021 The Chemical Industry and Engineering Society of China, and Chemical Industry Press Co., Ltd. All rights reserved.

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