Abstract

This article presents the performance analysis of a 700 MW future planned advanced ultra-supercritical (A-USC) coal-fired power plant fitted with post-combustion carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology. The reference A-USC unit without CCS achieves a net efficiency of 47.6% with CO2 emissions of 700 kgCO2/MWh. Relatively to subcritical units, the net efficiency of the A-USC is 8%-pts higher while CO2 emissions are 16.5% lower. For a CO2 removal rate of 90%, the net efficiency of the CCS integrated A-USC unit is 36.8%. The resulting net efficiency loss is 10.8%-pts and the electricity output penalty is 362.3 kWhel/tCO2 for present state CCS technology. The study continues with the assessment of interface quantities between the capture unit and the steam cycle affecting the performance of the A-USC. Improved CO2 absorbents could alleviate the net efficiency loss by 2–3%-pts, and enhanced CO2 compression strategies and advanced heat integration could further reduce the efficiency loss by 0.5–1.2%-pts and 0.4–0.6%-pts, respectively. The total efficiency gain from CCS technology upgrades is estimated at 3.6%-pts, thus bringing down the net efficiency loss to 7.2%-pts and the electricity output penalty to 241.7 kWhel/tCO2.

Highlights

  • IntroductionFossil fuels are still the backbone of power generation

  • Nowadays, fossil fuels are still the backbone of power generation

  • The calculated net efficiency in the reference steam cycle is compared against results found in the literature

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Summary

Introduction

Fossil fuels are still the backbone of power generation. In 2019, fossil fuels generated 62.7% of the total global electricity [1]. 36.4% in the total electricity generation [1]. Due to pressing environmental and climate concerns, decarbonization of the electric power industry has become imperative. The IEA scenarios in the 2020 World Energy Outlook predicts the reduction of CO2 emissions from the power industry by as much as 60% between 2020 and 2030 [2]. Three-fourths of this reduction will be achieved from the rapid decline of conventional coal-fired generation

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