Abstract

This paper describes the availability analysis of a generic, post-combustion carbon capture plant. The analysis first establishes the minimum work input required in an ideal plant with a flue gas inlet temperature equal to the sink temperature. The analysis shows that the ideal work input is surprisingly low and that, roughly equal amounts of work are required to first separate and then compress the CO2 contained in a typical flue gas stream. The analysis is then extended to include the effects of variable inlet temperature and extraction efficiency. This extended analysis shows that there is a considerable quantity of available energy in the flue gas of a normal power station. Indeed, in principle, carbon capture is theoretically possible without any external work input for fuels of low carbon/hydrogen ratio such as heavy fuel oil and natural gas. When burning coal, the minimum work input would be significantly reduced if the flue gases' availability were utilized. The final section of the paper compares the actual work input of a variety of carbon capture schemes found in the literature, with the minimum work input for an ideal process. This comparison shows that the techniques presently found in the literature have a low second-law efficiency.

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