Rotary Adsorption: Selective Recycling of CO2 in Combined Cycle Gas Turbine Power Plants

A conceptual design assessment shows that the use of structured adsorbents in a regenerative adsorption wheel is technically feasible for the application of selective exhaust gas recirculation (SEGR) in combined cycle gas turbine (CCGT) power plants. As the adsorber rotates, CO2 is selectively trans...

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Main Authors: Laura Herraiz, Erika Palfi, Eva Sánchez Fernández, Mathieu Lucquiaud
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Energy Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fenrg.2020.482708/full
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spelling doaj-0a769a077e9c49be81b17cd3e05824452020-12-11T11:42:57ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Energy Research2296-598X2020-12-01810.3389/fenrg.2020.482708482708Rotary Adsorption: Selective Recycling of CO2 in Combined Cycle Gas Turbine Power PlantsLaura Herraiz0Erika Palfi1Eva Sánchez Fernández2Mathieu Lucquiaud3School of Engineering, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United KingdomSchool of Engineering, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United KingdomInstitute of Petroleum Engineering, Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, United KingdomSchool of Engineering, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United KingdomA conceptual design assessment shows that the use of structured adsorbents in a regenerative adsorption wheel is technically feasible for the application of selective exhaust gas recirculation (SEGR) in combined cycle gas turbine (CCGT) power plants. As the adsorber rotates, CO2 is selectively transferred from a flue gas stream to an ambient air stream fed to the gas turbine compressor, increasing the CO2 concentration and reducing the flow rate of the fraction of the flue gases treated in a post-combustion CO2 capture system. It imposes an estimated pressure drop of 0.25 kPa, unlike a pressure drop of 10 kPa reported for selective CO2 membrane systems, preventing a significant derating of the gas turbine. An equilibrium model of a rotary adsorber with commercially available activated carbon evaluates the inventory of the adsorbent and sizes the wheel rotor. Two rotary wheels of 24 m diameter and 2 m length are required per gas turbine—heat recovery steam generator train to achieve an overall CO2 capture level of 90% in a CCGT power plant (ca. 820 MWe) with SEGR “in parallel” to the capture plant. Two to five rotary wheels are required for a configuration with SEGR “in series” to the capture plant. A reduction of 50% in the mass of the adsorbent would be possible with Zeolite 13X instead of activated carbon, yet the hydrophilicity of zeolites are detrimental to the capacity and upstream dehydration of the flue gases is required. A parametric analysis of the equilibrium properties provides guidelines for adsorbent development. It suggests the importance of balancing the affinity for CO2 to allow the regeneration of the adsorbent with air at near ambient pressure and temperature, to minimise the inventory of the adsorbent within practical limits. An adsorbent with a saturation capacity of 8 mol/kg, a heat of adsorption from 24 to 28 kJ/mol CO2 and a pre-exponential factor of the equilibrium constant from 2 × 10–6 to 9 × 10–6 kPa−1 would result in an inventory below 200 kg, i.e., approximately the limit for the use of a single rotary wheel system.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fenrg.2020.482708/fullselective exhaust gas recirculationrotary wheelselective CO2 transfercombined cycle gas turbinerotary adsorptionpost-combustion carbon capture
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laura Herraiz
Erika Palfi
Eva Sánchez Fernández
Mathieu Lucquiaud
spellingShingle Laura Herraiz
Erika Palfi
Eva Sánchez Fernández
Mathieu Lucquiaud
Rotary Adsorption: Selective Recycling of CO2 in Combined Cycle Gas Turbine Power Plants
Frontiers in Energy Research
selective exhaust gas recirculation
rotary wheel
selective CO2 transfer
combined cycle gas turbine
rotary adsorption
post-combustion carbon capture
author_facet Laura Herraiz
Erika Palfi
Eva Sánchez Fernández
Mathieu Lucquiaud
author_sort Laura Herraiz
title Rotary Adsorption: Selective Recycling of CO2 in Combined Cycle Gas Turbine Power Plants
title_short Rotary Adsorption: Selective Recycling of CO2 in Combined Cycle Gas Turbine Power Plants
title_full Rotary Adsorption: Selective Recycling of CO2 in Combined Cycle Gas Turbine Power Plants
title_fullStr Rotary Adsorption: Selective Recycling of CO2 in Combined Cycle Gas Turbine Power Plants
title_full_unstemmed Rotary Adsorption: Selective Recycling of CO2 in Combined Cycle Gas Turbine Power Plants
title_sort rotary adsorption: selective recycling of co2 in combined cycle gas turbine power plants
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Energy Research
issn 2296-598X
publishDate 2020-12-01
description A conceptual design assessment shows that the use of structured adsorbents in a regenerative adsorption wheel is technically feasible for the application of selective exhaust gas recirculation (SEGR) in combined cycle gas turbine (CCGT) power plants. As the adsorber rotates, CO2 is selectively transferred from a flue gas stream to an ambient air stream fed to the gas turbine compressor, increasing the CO2 concentration and reducing the flow rate of the fraction of the flue gases treated in a post-combustion CO2 capture system. It imposes an estimated pressure drop of 0.25 kPa, unlike a pressure drop of 10 kPa reported for selective CO2 membrane systems, preventing a significant derating of the gas turbine. An equilibrium model of a rotary adsorber with commercially available activated carbon evaluates the inventory of the adsorbent and sizes the wheel rotor. Two rotary wheels of 24 m diameter and 2 m length are required per gas turbine—heat recovery steam generator train to achieve an overall CO2 capture level of 90% in a CCGT power plant (ca. 820 MWe) with SEGR “in parallel” to the capture plant. Two to five rotary wheels are required for a configuration with SEGR “in series” to the capture plant. A reduction of 50% in the mass of the adsorbent would be possible with Zeolite 13X instead of activated carbon, yet the hydrophilicity of zeolites are detrimental to the capacity and upstream dehydration of the flue gases is required. A parametric analysis of the equilibrium properties provides guidelines for adsorbent development. It suggests the importance of balancing the affinity for CO2 to allow the regeneration of the adsorbent with air at near ambient pressure and temperature, to minimise the inventory of the adsorbent within practical limits. An adsorbent with a saturation capacity of 8 mol/kg, a heat of adsorption from 24 to 28 kJ/mol CO2 and a pre-exponential factor of the equilibrium constant from 2 × 10–6 to 9 × 10–6 kPa−1 would result in an inventory below 200 kg, i.e., approximately the limit for the use of a single rotary wheel system.
topic selective exhaust gas recirculation
rotary wheel
selective CO2 transfer
combined cycle gas turbine
rotary adsorption
post-combustion carbon capture
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fenrg.2020.482708/full
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AT evasanchezfernandez rotaryadsorptionselectiverecyclingofco2incombinedcyclegasturbinepowerplants
AT mathieulucquiaud rotaryadsorptionselectiverecyclingofco2incombinedcyclegasturbinepowerplants
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