Exergoeconomic analysis of cascaded organic power plant for the Port Harcourt climatic zone, Nigeria

This paper presents the exergoeconomic analysis of a 100 kW solar driven organic Rankine cycle (ORC) power plant for the Port Harcourt climatic zone, latitude 4.5–5.5°N and longitude 6.5–7.5°E, at an ambient temperature range of 23–31°C. A cascade cycle of R134a and R290 working fluids was considere...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: C.O.C. Oko, M.M. Deebom, E.O. Diemuodeke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2016-12-01
Series:Cogent Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311916.2016.1227127
id doaj-e363c05782314937bb3bd7fdb5d6885b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e363c05782314937bb3bd7fdb5d6885b2021-01-15T14:43:43ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Engineering2331-19162016-12-013110.1080/23311916.2016.12271271227127Exergoeconomic analysis of cascaded organic power plant for the Port Harcourt climatic zone, NigeriaC.O.C. Oko0M.M. Deebom1E.O. Diemuodeke2College of Engineering, University of Port HarcourtCollege of Engineering, University of Port HarcourtCollege of Engineering, University of Port HarcourtThis paper presents the exergoeconomic analysis of a 100 kW solar driven organic Rankine cycle (ORC) power plant for the Port Harcourt climatic zone, latitude 4.5–5.5°N and longitude 6.5–7.5°E, at an ambient temperature range of 23–31°C. A cascade cycle of R134a and R290 working fluids was considered for the proposed plant. The relationships between thermodynamic properties and characteristics were formulated and numerical solutions obtained in the Microsoft Excel and MATLAB environments for the assessment of the performance of the plant. The size and mass flow rate of water through the flat plate solar collector, mass flow rates, efficiencies, and other relevant parameters of the cycles were determined. The energy and exergy efficiencies of the proposed plant, at the optimal collector operation, are 18.92 and 21.61%, respectively. The total capital investment, levelized cost of energy, payback time and the earning power of the investment were estimated to be 352 US$/kW, 0.0072 US$/kWh, 2 years 7 months, and 14.3%, respectively. The unit cost of electricity obtained did not consider energy storage, which would have significantly increase the unit cost of electricity. The component exergoeconomic factors, the relative cost difference and the average specific cost of revenue of the plant were also determined. These results might be particularly useful to researchers and energy engineers who might wish to optimize the system for effective electricity generation. From simulations performed, it is viable to install an ORC power plant in the climatic zone considered in this study.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311916.2016.1227127renewable energyflat plate solar collectorrefrigerationorganic rankine cycle power generationexergoeconomic analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author C.O.C. Oko
M.M. Deebom
E.O. Diemuodeke
spellingShingle C.O.C. Oko
M.M. Deebom
E.O. Diemuodeke
Exergoeconomic analysis of cascaded organic power plant for the Port Harcourt climatic zone, Nigeria
Cogent Engineering
renewable energy
flat plate solar collector
refrigeration
organic rankine cycle power generation
exergoeconomic analysis
author_facet C.O.C. Oko
M.M. Deebom
E.O. Diemuodeke
author_sort C.O.C. Oko
title Exergoeconomic analysis of cascaded organic power plant for the Port Harcourt climatic zone, Nigeria
title_short Exergoeconomic analysis of cascaded organic power plant for the Port Harcourt climatic zone, Nigeria
title_full Exergoeconomic analysis of cascaded organic power plant for the Port Harcourt climatic zone, Nigeria
title_fullStr Exergoeconomic analysis of cascaded organic power plant for the Port Harcourt climatic zone, Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Exergoeconomic analysis of cascaded organic power plant for the Port Harcourt climatic zone, Nigeria
title_sort exergoeconomic analysis of cascaded organic power plant for the port harcourt climatic zone, nigeria
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Engineering
issn 2331-1916
publishDate 2016-12-01
description This paper presents the exergoeconomic analysis of a 100 kW solar driven organic Rankine cycle (ORC) power plant for the Port Harcourt climatic zone, latitude 4.5–5.5°N and longitude 6.5–7.5°E, at an ambient temperature range of 23–31°C. A cascade cycle of R134a and R290 working fluids was considered for the proposed plant. The relationships between thermodynamic properties and characteristics were formulated and numerical solutions obtained in the Microsoft Excel and MATLAB environments for the assessment of the performance of the plant. The size and mass flow rate of water through the flat plate solar collector, mass flow rates, efficiencies, and other relevant parameters of the cycles were determined. The energy and exergy efficiencies of the proposed plant, at the optimal collector operation, are 18.92 and 21.61%, respectively. The total capital investment, levelized cost of energy, payback time and the earning power of the investment were estimated to be 352 US$/kW, 0.0072 US$/kWh, 2 years 7 months, and 14.3%, respectively. The unit cost of electricity obtained did not consider energy storage, which would have significantly increase the unit cost of electricity. The component exergoeconomic factors, the relative cost difference and the average specific cost of revenue of the plant were also determined. These results might be particularly useful to researchers and energy engineers who might wish to optimize the system for effective electricity generation. From simulations performed, it is viable to install an ORC power plant in the climatic zone considered in this study.
topic renewable energy
flat plate solar collector
refrigeration
organic rankine cycle power generation
exergoeconomic analysis
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311916.2016.1227127
work_keys_str_mv AT cocoko exergoeconomicanalysisofcascadedorganicpowerplantfortheportharcourtclimaticzonenigeria
AT mmdeebom exergoeconomicanalysisofcascadedorganicpowerplantfortheportharcourtclimaticzonenigeria
AT eodiemuodeke exergoeconomicanalysisofcascadedorganicpowerplantfortheportharcourtclimaticzonenigeria
_version_ 1724336770935422976