Abstract

To provide a higher energy conversion efficiency for gas turbines (GT), this paper proposes a novel two-stage cascaded supercritical CO2 and transcritical CO2 (sCO2-tCO2) power cycle for waste heat recovery (WHR) of GT exhaust. A comparative study on system design and off-design performance is conducted between the typical GT-sCO2 cycles and the novel GT-cascaded CO2 (GT-CCO2) cycles based on the detailed steady-state mathematical models and self-built simulation platform. The simple layout (SSBC) and recompression layout (RSBC) are chosen to represent the typical sCO2 Brayton cycle configurations. The simulation results show that the SSBC-tCO2 cycle is more suitable than the RSBC-tCO2 cycle to work as the bottoming cycle for GT since the SSBC-tCO2 cycle can produce higher power with a simpler configuration. Compared with the traditional GT-RSBC and GT-SSBC, the optimal GT-CCO2 cycle (GT-SSBC-tCO2) gains an improvement of 5.32% and 4.32% for the thermal efficiency, and a decrement by 4.08% and 2.42% for the Levelized cost of electricity respectively. The combined GT-CCO2 cycles show superior performance with the variable inlet guide vane modulation during the off-design conditions because this control strategy increases the GT exhaust gas temperature and thus brings about a large improvement of the bottoming cycle output power. These findings could provide references for high efficiently utilizing gas turbine exhaust and verify the commercial viability of the CO2 system.

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