This study investigates the potential of trigeneration systems utilizing CO2-based power cycles to harness hightemperature excess heat. Various CO2-based cycles are proposed, comprising pure CO2 and CO2-mixture, emphasizing integration into district heating and cooling networks. Given the non-isothermal heat rejection of CO2-based cycles, performance maps for absorption chillers at different thermal levels and temperature drop of the heat source are generated. These maps are beneficial not only for the current study but also for generic applications. Various cycle layouts are studied, employing strategies to maximize overall electrical efficiency, electrical power output, or thermal production, starting from available high-grade heat above 500 degrees C. Depending on the specific cycle layout and strategy, the optimal cycle-thermal user coupling is evaluated. The economic and environmental viability of the proposed solution is evaluated in comparison to an existing case-study in northern Italy where the exhaust gases of 10 MWel gas turbines are currently exploited for district heating purposes and centralized vapour-compression chillers meet the residential cooling demand. Compared to the case-study, the adoption of a simple recuperative CO2-mixture bottoming cycle, at a minimum cycle temperature of 70 degrees C, allows not only a primary energy saving of 16 % but also an 8 % reduction of levelized cost of electricity.
Small scale CO2 based trigeneration plants in heat recovery applications: A case study for residential sector in northern Italy
Morosini, Ettore;Alfani, Dario;Di Marcoberardino, Gioele;Giulio Iora, Paolo;Manzolini, Giampaolo;Astolfi, Marco
2024-01-01
Abstract
This study investigates the potential of trigeneration systems utilizing CO2-based power cycles to harness hightemperature excess heat. Various CO2-based cycles are proposed, comprising pure CO2 and CO2-mixture, emphasizing integration into district heating and cooling networks. Given the non-isothermal heat rejection of CO2-based cycles, performance maps for absorption chillers at different thermal levels and temperature drop of the heat source are generated. These maps are beneficial not only for the current study but also for generic applications. Various cycle layouts are studied, employing strategies to maximize overall electrical efficiency, electrical power output, or thermal production, starting from available high-grade heat above 500 degrees C. Depending on the specific cycle layout and strategy, the optimal cycle-thermal user coupling is evaluated. The economic and environmental viability of the proposed solution is evaluated in comparison to an existing case-study in northern Italy where the exhaust gases of 10 MWel gas turbines are currently exploited for district heating purposes and centralized vapour-compression chillers meet the residential cooling demand. Compared to the case-study, the adoption of a simple recuperative CO2-mixture bottoming cycle, at a minimum cycle temperature of 70 degrees C, allows not only a primary energy saving of 16 % but also an 8 % reduction of levelized cost of electricity.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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