4.6 Article

Thermoeconomic analysis of conventional and recuperative ORC for heat recovery of exothermic reactions

Journal

THERMAL SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING PROGRESS
Volume 33, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.tsep.2022.101347

Keywords

OrganicRankinecycle; Heatexchangerdesign; Wasteheatrecovery; Economicanalysis

Funding

  1. Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) [141396/2018-0]
  2. Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (CAPES)

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This study evaluated the possibility of using medium temperature saturated steam from a reactor cooling system as a heat source for generating electricity. Methanol and ethanol showed the best performance in the ORC configuration, and adding a recuperator improved the performance of dry fluids. Economic analysis revealed that net power generation is crucial for feasibility, with Case 1 achieving economic feasibility and methanol being the best working fluid.
The possibility of using medium temperature (478-506 K) saturated steam from a reactor cooling system as heat source for generating electricity is evaluated in this work. Both usual Organic Rankine Cycle (ORC) and recuperative (RORC) configurations were modeled for 3 different boiler heat loads (Cases 1, 2 and 3) so that the electricity generation capacity effect on the economic performance could be evaluated. From the power cycle simulations, methanol and ethanol had shown the best performance in the ORC configuration with average First and Second Laws' efficiencies of 16% and 44%, respectively. By adding a recuperator, most of the dry fluids have also shown similar performances. In the economic analysis, net power generation plays a major role. For Case 2 (asymptotic to 250 kW net) and Case 3 (asymptotic to 850 kW net), the power generation revenue was insufficient to cover the operational expenses, yielding unfeasible scenarios. However, for Case 1 (asymptotic to 2.5 MW net), economic feasibility was achieved even for low operating pressures. The best power cycle thermoeconomic performance was found for methanol as working fluid. In the best scenario, an attractive internal rate of return of 14.5% was achieved for an specified electricity cost of US$ 0.0671 per kW h.

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