>300 yrs, mostly Rankine Gas Brayton cycles catching up last 50 years Organic Rankine Cycles (ORC) relatively recent 2 Why a new power cycle? Steam Good efficiency at lower turbine inlet temperature Low compression work (pumping incompressible liquid) High expansion ratio (large work extraction / unit mass of fluid) 2-phase heat addition limits turbine inlet temperature Expansion into 2-phase region = blade erosion Corrosion, water treatment issues 3 Why a new power cycle? Gas Brayton cycles Good fuel-power conversion efficiency Require high (combustion) turbine inlet temperatures for efficient operation Compression work large fraction of developed power ORC Best solution at low temperatures, dry expansion Working fluids are more difficult to handle generally require secondary transfer loop, limits turbine inlet temperature 4 Characteristics of an ideal power cycle Good utilization of available heat High expansion, low compression work Direct coupling to heat source Benign working fluid Non-corrosive, non-toxic, thermally stable Dry expansion to avoid erosion Low capital cost Low operation & maintenance (O&M) costs 5 Supercritical CO 2 meets these characteristics sCO 2 cycle history 1960s Feher proposes use of a recuperated closed-loop sCO 2 based power cycle Recognized that CO 2 properties allow for Brayton-style cycle, but with Rankine-like compression work 2000s MIT, Sandia, others consider sCO 2 nuclear power cycle Three Supercritical CO 2 Power Cycle Symposia 2008, Sandia builds small sCO 2 test loop for turbomachinery (simple and recompression cycles) 2007 Echogen founded with vision of commercializing a sCO 2 waste heat recovery heat engine 2009, builds ~ 250kWe demonstration simple cycle system 2011, begins construction of 7.5MWe commercial system 6 sCO 2 cycles Simple recuperated cycle Good heat utilization at low heat source temperature Compact equipment set 2-phase Supercritical fluid Superheated vapor Subcooled liquid 7 High density fluid = compact equipment: Heat exchangers 8 >15MW >300m heat transfer area ~13000kg Core ~ 1.5 x 1.5 x 0.5 m Comparable S&T: >850m ~50000kg Shell ~ 1.2m diameter x 12m length High density fluid = compact equipment: Turbomachinery 9 10MW sCO 2 turbine 10MW steam turbine Non-condensing expansion Condensing expansion Simple single-phase exhaust heat exchangers Boiling process in steam systems limits maximum fluid temperature, requires multiple pressures to achieve close approach to exhaust temperature ORC systems require intermediate heat transfer loop, plus boiling heat transfer Constant temperature boiling process Continuous temperature increase 10 CO2 cycles The challenge with a simple recuperated architecture 11 Heat addition Expansion work Compression work Low pressure ratio cycle => recuperation => can limit T of heat addition CO2 cycles Simple cycle limitations Highly recuperated cycle limits performance at higher heat source temperature 12 Heat addition CO2 cycles Cascading can increase available T Heat extraction limitations of simple recuperated cycle mitigated 13 Heat addition CO2 cycles recompression yields high heat to power efficiency, but very low T 14 Heat addition Recompression cycle specifically designed for low T applications (nuclear, CSP) Applications of the sCO 2 cycle Geothermal (Low T, thermosiphon) Concentrated Solar Thermal (CSP) (High T, low DT) Exhaust & waste heat recovery (Moderate T, high DT) Topping cycle (High T, low DT) 250 kW demonstration system: initial field tests completed at American Electric Power (AEP) 16 Designed for full access and ease of maintenance Shop packaged / modular design for ease of installation Commercial size demonstration unit at AEPs test facility Measured performance in line with cycle model predictions 140 hours, 93 turbine starts 250 kW demonstration system: long-term tests at Akron Energy Systems (AES) during 2012 17 Hardware transferred and delivered by truck Cooling tower installation Heat engine delivery and placement System installation now underway First commercial-scale system at ~7.5MW, utilizes commercial technology 18 From Sandia National Laboratory report First 7.5MW system is currently in fabrication 19 Subsystem and component testing planned for 3Q through 4Q 2012 Full system installation and testing in early 2013 System installation comparison: 7.5MW steam vs. sCO2 20 Smaller installation footprint compared to a HRSG/steam system for gas turbine bottom cycling Gas turbine Steam sCO 2 sCO 2 = Higher power at lower CAPEX for CCGT applications 21 High output power + low cost + low O&M = low LCOE sCO 2 the clear solution for gas turbine heat recovery DP HRSG sCO2 sCO 2 + LM2500 DP-HRSG + LM2500 LM2500 Simple Cycle SP-HRSG + LM2500 I n s t a l l e d
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( k W e ) Ambient temperature (C) Levelized Cost of Electricity (LCOE) The Key Performance Metric Lower capex of sCO 2 system provides major advantage Faster startup times (~20min vs 45-90 min for steam) = higher average output in peaking applications Lower footprint, zero water usage in dry-cooled applications 22 Summary sCO 2 cycles have significant advantages in several applications over steam Good thermodynamic performance Low installed capex Favorable LCOE Broad range of applications under consideration Waste heat recovery first commercial application Demonstration system proved feasibility First full-scale application in 2013 23