International Journal of Energy Research, Vol.41, No.1, 127-138, 2017
Effects of coal characteristics to performance of a highly efficient thermal power generation system based on pressurized oxy-fuel combustion
Because of its fuel flexibility and high efficiency, pressurized oxy-fuel combustion has recently emerged as a promising approach for efficient carbon capture and storage. One of the important options to design the pressurized oxycombustion is to determine method of coal (or other solid fuels) feeding: dry feeding or wet (coal slurry) feeding as well as grade of coals. The main aim of this research is to investigate effects of coal characteristics including wet or dry feeding on the performance of thermal power plant based on the pressurized oxy-combustion with CO2 capture versus atmospheric oxy-combustion. A commercial process simulation tool (gCCS: the general carbon capture and storage) was used to simulate and analyze an advanced ultra-supercritical(A-USC) coal power plant under pressurized and atmospheric oxy-fuel conditions. The design concept is based on using pure oxygen as an oxidant in a pressurized system to maximize the heat recovery through process integration and to reduce the efficiency penalty because of compression and purification units. The results indicate that the pressurized case efficiency at 30 bars was greater than the atmospheric oxy-fuel combustion (base line case) by 6.02% when using lignite coal firing. Similarly, efficiency improvements in the case of subbituminous and bituminous coals were around 3% and 2.61%, respectively. The purity of CO2 increased from 53.4% to 94% after compression and purification. In addition, the study observed the effects of coal-water slurry using bituminous coal under atmospheric conditions, determining that the net plant efficiency decreased by 3.7% when the water content in the slurry increased from 11.12% to 54%. Copyright (C) 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Keywords:oxy-fuel combustion;pressurization;flue gas heat recovery;plant efficiency;process integration;coal characteristics