Clean fossil fuel heat and power plants - General information
Thermal efficiency
Thermal efficiency has a direct impact on the cost of electricity for fossil fuel power production. It is defined as heat supplied over total work output.
The characteristic of thermal efficiency of a power cycle can be illustrated by the Carnot principle. In a Carnot process, the power cycle undergoes a series of four reversible part processes.
1-2: Heat is supplied at a temperature level, Th.
2-3: Work is generated by isothermal expansion.
3-4: Heat is rejected at a temperature level, Tc.
4-1: Work is supplied by isothermal compression.
Figure 1 illustrates the Carnot process. The total power output W equals the green area shown while the heat supply Q equals the complete hatched area.
1.

2.
From equation (1) and (2), the thermal efficiency of a Carnot process can be expressed by:
3.
Equation (3) shows that to achieve a high thermal efficiency, it is desirable to have a high temperature level for heat supply and a low temperature level for heat rejection.
Figure 1: The Carnot process
The temperature level for heat supply (Th) is nomally much higher for a gas turbine power cycle (Brayton Cycle) compared to a steam turbine power cycle (Rankine Cycle), as illustrated in Figure 2. In a combined cycle power plant, the heat from the gas turbine exhaust gas is utilized in a steam cycle. Then the temperature level of heat rejection (Tc) may be the same for the steam power cycle and for the combined cycle configuration. The Carnot efficiency is given by:
3.
As Th is higher for the combined cycle, and Tc is the same, the efficiency is higher for a combined cycle gas turbine based power production compared to a steam turbine based power production.
Figure 2: Temperature-entropy diagram
To separate steam turbine based power production from gas turbine based power production we use the thermology 1st generation- and 2nd generation oxyfuel. 1st generation oxyfuel is steam turbine based power production with a relative low efficiency potential and 2nd generation oxyfuel is gas turbine based power production with a relative high efficiency potential.
An oxygen fired gas turbine is not mature technology and 2nd generation oxyfuel requires a gas turbine development to become commercial technology. Nebb focus mainly on 2nd generation oxyfuel and we believe this is a promising technology for future zero emission power generation.
|
1st generation oxyfuel |
2nd generation oxyfuel |
Main energy production unit |
Steam turbine |
Gas turbine |
Temperature level of heat supply |
low |
high |
Thermal efficiency potential |
low |
high |
| Technical maturity |
Requires boiler redesign |
Requires gas turbine development |
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