Heat Recovery Aspects of Importance for the Product Mix and GHG Emission Reductions in a Bio-SNG System

This paper presents the impact of adjusted operating parameters (superheating temperature and backpressure or condensing mode) for the heat recovery steam cycle (HRSC) by external conditions on the product mix (SNG; power and heat) in a commercial scale gasification-based bio-SNG (biomass derived sy...

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Main Authors: K.M. Holmgren, T.S. Berntsson, E. Andersson, T. Rydberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIDIC Servizi S.r.l. 2014-08-01
Series:Chemical Engineering Transactions
Online Access:https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/5364
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spelling doaj-314c1f7829a34899b7950c241dc0eee42021-02-21T20:59:22ZengAIDIC Servizi S.r.l.Chemical Engineering Transactions2283-92162014-08-013910.3303/CET1439063Heat Recovery Aspects of Importance for the Product Mix and GHG Emission Reductions in a Bio-SNG SystemK.M. HolmgrenT.S. BerntssonE. AnderssonT. RydbergThis paper presents the impact of adjusted operating parameters (superheating temperature and backpressure or condensing mode) for the heat recovery steam cycle (HRSC) by external conditions on the product mix (SNG; power and heat) in a commercial scale gasification-based bio-SNG (biomass derived synthetic natural gas) production system. The GHG reduction potentials for a case with a condensing HRSC and for a case with the HRSC in backpressure mode producing heat for CO2 separation of the flue gases are evaluated. Pinch technology was used to identify the potential for heat recovery and process integration. Small changes in the operational parameters of the HRSC can result in significant changes of the conversion efficiencies of heat and power. With an HRSC in back-pressure mode, reducing the power production by 4 MW compared to the condensing case, it is possible to produce ~60 MW of heat for district heating. This study shows that approximately one third of the carbon input to the gasifier ends up in the SNG, whereas one third is separated prior to methanation and one third is emitted as CO2 in the flue gases from the combustor of the indirect gasifier. If infrastructure for CO2 storage is available, and CO2 separated from the process and from the flue gases is stored, the GHG emission reductions from the bio-SNG system can be doubled compared to a case without CO2 storage possibility.https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/5364
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author K.M. Holmgren
T.S. Berntsson
E. Andersson
T. Rydberg
spellingShingle K.M. Holmgren
T.S. Berntsson
E. Andersson
T. Rydberg
Heat Recovery Aspects of Importance for the Product Mix and GHG Emission Reductions in a Bio-SNG System
Chemical Engineering Transactions
author_facet K.M. Holmgren
T.S. Berntsson
E. Andersson
T. Rydberg
author_sort K.M. Holmgren
title Heat Recovery Aspects of Importance for the Product Mix and GHG Emission Reductions in a Bio-SNG System
title_short Heat Recovery Aspects of Importance for the Product Mix and GHG Emission Reductions in a Bio-SNG System
title_full Heat Recovery Aspects of Importance for the Product Mix and GHG Emission Reductions in a Bio-SNG System
title_fullStr Heat Recovery Aspects of Importance for the Product Mix and GHG Emission Reductions in a Bio-SNG System
title_full_unstemmed Heat Recovery Aspects of Importance for the Product Mix and GHG Emission Reductions in a Bio-SNG System
title_sort heat recovery aspects of importance for the product mix and ghg emission reductions in a bio-sng system
publisher AIDIC Servizi S.r.l.
series Chemical Engineering Transactions
issn 2283-9216
publishDate 2014-08-01
description This paper presents the impact of adjusted operating parameters (superheating temperature and backpressure or condensing mode) for the heat recovery steam cycle (HRSC) by external conditions on the product mix (SNG; power and heat) in a commercial scale gasification-based bio-SNG (biomass derived synthetic natural gas) production system. The GHG reduction potentials for a case with a condensing HRSC and for a case with the HRSC in backpressure mode producing heat for CO2 separation of the flue gases are evaluated. Pinch technology was used to identify the potential for heat recovery and process integration. Small changes in the operational parameters of the HRSC can result in significant changes of the conversion efficiencies of heat and power. With an HRSC in back-pressure mode, reducing the power production by 4 MW compared to the condensing case, it is possible to produce ~60 MW of heat for district heating. This study shows that approximately one third of the carbon input to the gasifier ends up in the SNG, whereas one third is separated prior to methanation and one third is emitted as CO2 in the flue gases from the combustor of the indirect gasifier. If infrastructure for CO2 storage is available, and CO2 separated from the process and from the flue gases is stored, the GHG emission reductions from the bio-SNG system can be doubled compared to a case without CO2 storage possibility.
url https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/5364
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