Abstract
The development of green and sustainable conversion technologies is imperative to alleviate the current severe energy and environmental crises and to achieve the goal of carbon neutrality. This project presents a novel cogeneration system that integrates a solid oxide fuel cell afterburning system, an energy recovery system, and a parallel heating system equipped with multistage utilization, solar-assisted, and flexible peaking technologies. Following the establishment and validation of the system, power source analysis, parameter sensitivity studies, three-objective optimization, and internal exergy flow investigation are carried out. Subsequently, the positive impacts of multistage utilization, solar-assisted, and flexible peaking technologies, as well as the thermoeconomic and emergoenvironmental operating characteristics of the system, are discussed. The numerical results demonstrate that the emergoenvironmental factor and emergy environmental impact difference of the system are 70.15 % and 82.52 %, and the energy efficiency is improved by 1.41 %∼19.09 %, respectively, compared with similar solid oxide fuel cell systems, confirming its favorable thermodynamic performance and emergoenvironmental impact. The system achieves daily heating savings of 3302 kWh and life cycle economic benefits of $19,310,524, with a repayment of the investment cost in 4.17 years, reflecting considerable economic benefits. This project also demonstrates exergy flow, module defects, and improvement mechanisms from the perspective of emergoenvironmental, providing a valuable reference for the promotion of green energy.
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have