scholarly journals NEGATIVE ANTHROPOGENIC INFLUENCE OF COOLING SYSTEMS OF POWER PLANTS AND WAYS OF ITS OVERCOMING

2020 ◽  
pp. 193-201 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nadezhda K. Fedorovskaya

The issues of the impact of the cooling systems of ship power plants on the fish resources of the seas and continental reservoirs are considered. Widespread open cooling systems consume intake water. The filters used are not capable of trapping plankton and fish juveniles. As a result, when passing through the system, they die almost completely. Consequently food chains are destroyed and the fish resources of the seas are reduced. Numerical estimates of the damage are given. It is shown that the problem can be solved by introducing closed cooling systems. The necessary methods for increasing the heat sink of systems have been developed. As a result, it becomes possible to significantly reduce the weight and dimensions of the systems, which contributes to their implementation in practice.

2005 ◽  
Vol 127 (2) ◽  
pp. 397-403 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rattan Tawney ◽  
Zahid Khan ◽  
Justin Zachary

This paper is a guideline to selecting the most appropriate technology for the power plant heat sink based on water availability, site location, and wastewater disposal requirements. The paper discusses wet as well as dry cooling systems and evaluates the impact of the heat sink technology on the performance and cost of combined cycle power plants. Cogeneration applications and cycling plant operations are also considered. For each proposed option, the performance, relative costs, and noise issues will be presented.


Author(s):  
Tianyi Gao ◽  
Bahgat G. Sammakia ◽  
James Geer ◽  
Bruce Murray ◽  
Russell Tipton ◽  
...  

The heat dissipated by electronic equipment inside data centers is increasing at a rapid rate due to the increasing of performance requirement and package density. This ever increasing power leads to critical challenges of thermal management for these high power density data centers. Energy consumption is also a key issue for high density data centers. Roughly 1.5% of all U.S. electricity consumption in the year 2006 was related to data centers, while that number increased to 2% by the year 2010. In 2013, U.S. data centers consumed approximately 91 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity. This amount of the electricity equals the annual output of 34 500-megawatt coal-fired power plants [1]. Cooling systems constitute a significant portion of the energy consumption of data centers, being approximately 25%∼35% of the total energy usage. Therefore, there is a large potential to save energy by optimizing current existing cooling systems and investigating new cooling technologies, and, at the same time, improving the overall cooling capacity and efficiency. This paper describes and investigates a hybrid cooling technology which utilizes in row coolers in existing raised floor air cooled data centers. The in row cooler functions as a liquid-to-air heat exchanger. In addition to the traditional raised floor cold aisle-hot aisle arrangements, the in row cooler is installed between the IT equipment to enable delivering the liquid coolant medium closer to the IT equipment. The in row coolers intake the hot air from the hot aisle, condition it, and supply the chilled air to the cold aisle. Thus, by extracting a large portion of the heat more directly into the cooling liquid through the in row coolers compared with the perimeter CRAH unit, the overall cooling performance and efficiency can potentially be improved. CFD models for an in row cooler and a representative data center room are developed. Experimentally characterized performance data are used to calibrate and validate the models. The models are then used to conduct a detailed computational analysis to assess the effectiveness of different arrangement configurations of in row cooler units in two rows of racks along one cold aisle. The detailed performance of the entire cold aisle is characterized using the rack inlet air temperature and a temperature nonuniformity factor. The impact of CRAH location and room layout are also investigated. This study is based on a practical problem and the corresponding results and analysis provide basic installation and design guidelines for future equipment upgrading in certain parts of the data center.


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):  
Rattan Tawney ◽  
Zahid Khan ◽  
Justin Zachary

Because of the current environmental requirements for zero discharge from power plants and scarcity of water, the cooling tower—a proven and industry-recognized conventional option for combined cycle application heat sinks—is being scrutinized by designers, developers, operators, and regulatory agencies. This paper is a guideline to selecting the most appropriate solution for the plant heat sink based on water availability, site location, and wastewater disposal requirements. The paper discusses wet as well as dry cooling systems and evaluates the impact of heat sink selection for cogeneration applications and merchant power plant cycling operation mode. For each proposed option, the performance, relative costs, and noise issues will be presented.


Author(s):  
Konstantin Yu. Fedorovskiy ◽  
◽  
Nadezhda K. Fedorovskaya ◽  
Valeriy V. Yenivatov ◽  
◽  
...  

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