Performance analysis of a CO2 near-zero emission integrated system for stepwise recovery of LNG cold energy and GT exhaust heat
•This paper proposes a novel CCHP system that efficiently utilizes GT waste heat and LNG cold energy, while achieving near-zero CO2 emissions.•Compared with several typical systems based on LNG cold energy utilization, the energy efficiency has been improved by approximately 4 to 10 percent.•A casca...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Applied thermal engineering 2024-01, Vol.236, p.121736, Article 121736 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •This paper proposes a novel CCHP system that efficiently utilizes GT waste heat and LNG cold energy, while achieving near-zero CO2 emissions.•Compared with several typical systems based on LNG cold energy utilization, the energy efficiency has been improved by approximately 4 to 10 percent.•A cascaded combination of ORC and TRCC was proposed and significantly improved the energy utilization efficiency, taking into account the temperature ranges of the working fluids in ORC and TRCC systems.
Combined cooling, heating and power (CCHP) system can further improve energy utilization efficiency while meeting diversified energy demands, and the rational use of the CCHP system is an effective way to alleviate the energy crisis. An innovative cascaded CCHP system based on the transcritical carbon dioxide cycle (TRCC) and organic Rankine cycle (ORC) has been proposed, which is designed to recover the cold energy of liquefied natural gas (LNG) and the exhaust heat from the gas turbine (GT), while achieving near-zero CO2 emissions. The simulation result demonstrates that the system achieves energy utilization efficiency, exergy efficiency and net electrical efficiency of 87.3%, 56.9% and 55.39%, respectively, with a CO2 capture rate of 79.2 kg/h under the design condition. Compared to the mentioned cogeneration systems that recover LNG cold energy and GT waste heat, the proposed system exhibits improvements in energy utilization efficiency, exergy efficiency and net electrical efficiency by 9.84%, 4.37% and 3.4%, respectively. The parameter sensitivity analysis reveals that increasing the pressure ratio of the TCO2 turbine and ORC turbine or reducing the air compressor feed temperature can improve the overall performance of the system. If the focus is solely on energy utilization efficiency and exergy efficiency, appropriately increasing the air compressor pressure ratio or reducing the gas turbine pressure ratio would be beneficial. The proposed system in the study is environmentally friendly and energy-saving, which especially suggests a direction for cold energy cascade utilization in LNG stations integrated with CCHP. |
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ISSN: | 1359-4311 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.applthermaleng.2023.121736 |