Cost/Performance Comparisons of Water Conserving Power Plant Cooling Systems

Author(s):  
John S. Maulbetsch

This paper documents the results of a study of alternative cooling systems for electric power generating plants to understand the tradeoffs between wet, dry and hybrid cooling technologies. Results are presented through case studies of a 500 MW coal plant, a 600 MW nuclear plant and a 500 MW gas-fired combined-cycle plant, each at five different sites. Alternative cooling systems are configured and optimized for each site. For optimized designs under nearly all conditions, wet cooling systems are not only the least expensive but result in the highest plant output and efficiency. For both all-dry and hybrid systems, the system using indirect dry cooling has higher capital and operating costs than one using the direct system. The use of either dry or hybrid cooling can result in a large reduction in the amount of water used by a plant. The savings cost approximately $7 to $10 million per year for plants of the specified size, depending on the plant and site implying a breakeven water cost of $3 to $6 per thousand gallons.

Author(s):  
John S. Maulbetsch

Water use by power plant cooling systems has become a critical siting issue for new plants and the object of increasing pressure for modification or retrofit at existing plants. Wet cooling typically costs less and results in more efficient plant performance. Dry cooling, while costing more and imposing heat rate and capacity penalties on the plant, conserves significant amounts of water and eliminates any concerns regarding thermal discharge to or intake losses on local water bodies. Hybrid cooling systems have the potential of combining the advantages of both systems by reducing, although not eliminating, water requirements while incurring performance penalties that are less than those from all-dry systems. The costs, while greater than those for wet cooling, can be less than those for dry. This paper addresses parallel wet/dry systems combining direct dry cooling using a forced-draft air-cooled condenser (ACC) with closed-cycle wet cooling using a surface (shell-and-tube) steam condenser and a mechanical-draft, counterflow wet cooling tower as applied to coal-fired steam plants, gas-fired combined-cycle plants and nuclear plants. A brief summary of criteria used to identify situations where hybrid systems should be considered is given. A methodology for specifying and selecting a hybrid system is described along with the information and data requirements for sizing and estimating the capital costs and water requirements a specified plant at a specified site. The methodology incorporates critical plant and operating parameters into the analysis, such as plant monthly load profile, plant equipment design parameters for equipment related to the cooling system, e.g. steam turbine, condenser, wet or dry cooling system, wastewater treatment system. Site characteristics include a water budget or constraints, e.g. acre feet of water available for cooling on an annual basis as well as any monthly or seasonal “draw rate” constraints and meteorological data. The effect of economic parameters including cost of capital, power, water and chemicals for wastewater treating are reviewed. Finally some examples of selected systems at sites of varying meteorological characteristics are presented.


Author(s):  
R. W. Card

A hybrid wet-dry cooling system can be designed for a large combined-cycle power plant. A well-designed hybrid cooling system will provide reasonable net generation year-round, while using substantially less water than a conventional wet cooling tower. The optimum design for the hybrid system depends upon climate at the site, the price of power, and the price of water. These factors vary on a seasonal basis. Two hypothetical power plants are modeled, using state-of-the-art steam turbines and hybrid cooling systems. The plants are designed for water-constrained sites incorporating typical weather data, power prices, and water prices. The principles for economic designs of hybrid cooling systems are demonstrated.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 2085 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fontina Petrakopoulou ◽  
Marina Olmeda-Delgado

With vast amounts of water consumed for electricity generation and water scarcity predicted to rise in the near future, the necessity to evaluate water consumption in power plants arises. Cooling systems are the main source of water consumption in thermoelectric power plants, since water is a cooling fluid with relatively low cost and high efficiency. This study evaluates the performance of two types of power plants: a natural gas combined-cycle and an integrated solar combined-cycle. Special focus is made on the cooling system used in the plants and its characteristics, such as water consumption, related costs, and fuel requirements. Wet, dry, and hybrid cooling systems are studied for each of the power plants. While water is used as the cooling fluid to condense the steam in wet cooling, dry cooling uses air circulated by a fan. Hybrid cooling presents an alternative that combines both methods. We find that hybrid cooling has the highest investment costs as it bears the sum of the costs of both wet and dry cooling systems. However, this system produces considerable fuel savings when compared to dry cooling, and a 50% reduction in water consumption when compared to wet cooling. As expected, the wet cooling system has the highest exergetic efficiency, of 1 and 5 percentage points above that of dry cooling in the conventional combined-cycle and integrated solar combined-cycle, respectively, thus representing the lowest investment cost and highest water consumption among the three alternatives. Hybrid and dry cooling systems may be considered viable alternatives under increasing water costs, requiring better enforcement of the measures for sustainable water consumption in the energy sector.


Author(s):  
Abdul Ahad Iqbal ◽  
Ali Al-Alili

Abstract The performance of air conditioning systems is highly dependent on the environmental conditions of the high pressure side, where heat is rejected to the environment. Air conditioning systems utilize dry cooling systems which often don’t provide adequate cooling during peak cooling periods, or wet cooling systems which consume a lot of water. In this study, a novel hybrid cooling system that can provide both wet and dry cooling was modelled in TRNSYS, and used to provide cooling to closed sorption air conditioning systems. The performance of these systems with the hybrid cooling system was compared to the performance of a standard vapor compression cooling system being cooled by a dry cooling system. The COPsol of the vapor compression cooling system exhibited a decrease of almost 26% during the summer period, whereas the COPsol of the sorption systems increased by around 30%. Similarly, the cooling capacity of the vapor compression cooling system dropped by almost 5%, and for the sorption systems, it increased by around 20% during the summer period.


Author(s):  
Geoffrey Short ◽  
Addison K. Stark ◽  
Daniel Matuszak ◽  
James F. Klausner

Fresh water withdrawal for thermoelectric power generation in the U.S. is approximately 139 billion gallons per day (BGD), or 41% of total fresh water draw, making it the largest single use of fresh water in the U.S. Of the fresh water withdrawn for the power generation sector, 4.3 BGD is dissipated to the atmosphere by cooling towers and spray ponds. Dry-cooled power plants are attractive and sometimes necessary because they avoid significant withdrawal and consumption of freshwater resources that could otherwise be used for other purposes. This could become even more important when considering the potential effects of climate change (1). Additional benefits of dry-cooling include power plant site flexibility, reduced risk of water scarcity, and faster permitting (reducing project development time and cost). However, dry-cooling systems are known to be more costly and larger than their wet-cooling counterparts. Additionally, without the benefit of additional latent heat transfer through evaporation, the Rankine cycle condensing (cold) temperature for dry-cooling is typically higher than that for wet-cooling, affecting the efficiency of power production and the resultant levelized cost of electricity (LCOE). The Advanced Research Projects Agency - Energy (ARPA-E) has developed a technoeconomic analysis (TEA) model for the development of indirect dry-cooling systems employing steam condensation within a natural gas combined cycle power plant. The TEA model has been used to inform the Advanced Research in Dry-Cooling (ARID) Program on the performance metrics needed to achieve an economical dry-cooling technology. In order to assess the relationship between air-cooled heat exchanger (ACHX) performance, including air side heat transfer coefficient and pressure drop, and power plant economics, ARPA-E has employed a modified version of the National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL) model of a 550 MW natural gas combined cycle (NGCC) plant employing an evaporative cooling system. The evaporative cooling system, including associated balance of system costs, was replaced with a thermodynamic model for an ACHX with the desired improved heat transfer performance and supplemental cooling and storage systems. Monte Carlo simulation determined an optimal ACHX geometry and associated ACHX cost. Allowing for an increase in LCOE of 5%, the maximum allowable additional cost of the supplemental cooling system was determined as a function of the degree of cooling of the working fluid required. This paper describes the methodologies employed in the TEA, details the results, and includes related models as supplemental material, while providing insight on how the open source tool might be used for thermal management innovation.


Author(s):  
A. G. Howell

Combined cycle power plants fueled with natural gas have been increasingly preferred by regulatory agencies for new power generation projects, compared with traditional coal-fired plants. With growing concerns about water resource availability and the environmental impact of wet cooling systems, there has been an increasing trend for new combined cycle projects to incorporate dry cooling, often as a mandate for regulatory approval of the project. There appears to be little consideration given to the impact of less efficient dry cooling systems on unit efficiency, and particularly on increased fuel requirements and therefore carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions for a given power generating output. The trade-off between reduction of water use and increased fuel requirements with dry cooling should be included as part of the decision on the selection of cooling systems for new fossil plant construction.


Author(s):  
Driek Rouwenhorst ◽  
Robert Widhopf-Fenk ◽  
Jakob Hermann ◽  
Matthias Häringer ◽  
Julius Becker ◽  
...  

In a test campaign to lower the minimum part-load of a combined cycle plant, a series of turndown tests on two GE Frame 9E gas turbines with DLN1 combustor technology were carried out under premix operation by Stadtwerke München (SWM). It has been found that the load can be reduced significantly compared to the conventional turndown ratio, before either CO emissions or combustion dynamics form the limiting factor of the turndown test. To exploit this potential safely and operate the gas turbines close to these physical limits, emissions and combustion dynamics must be monitored online. The azimuthal thermoacoustic mode that is observed in the can-annular machines is monitored with the IfTA PreCursor, based on the online determination of the modal decay rate. For this method, the acoustic pressure is measured at the cans around the gas turbine circumference to observe the azimuthal acoustic propagation that is enabled by the cross-firing tubes between the cans. Using this strategy to monitor CO emissions and thermoacoustic stability in real-time, a reduction of the minimal part-load limit by approximately 20% is achieved for the considered gas turbines. In must-run situations without demand for electricity generation, the operating costs can be directly reduced by the fuel savings. As an additional benefit, SWM can offer a broader power reserve for grid stabilization on the energy market. This monitoring strategy has been fully implemented in the control system and first experiences of the extended part-load limit are currently being gathered.


2021 ◽  
Vol 238 ◽  
pp. 114134
Author(s):  
Mohamed G. Gado ◽  
Tamer F. Megahed ◽  
Shinichi Ookawara ◽  
Sameh Nada ◽  
Ibrahim I. El-Sharkawy

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