Everything about Combined Heat And Power totally explained
Cogeneration (also
combined heat and power,
CHP) is the use of a
heat engine or a
power station to simultaneously generate both
electricity and useful
heat.
Conventional power plants emit the heat created as a byproduct of
electricity generation into the environment through
cooling towers,
flue gas, or by other means. CHP or a bottoming cycle captures the byproduct heat for domestic or industrial
heating purposes, either very close to the plant, or —especially in
Scandinavia and eastern
Europe—for distribution through pipes to
heat local housing.
In the
United States,
Con Edison produces 30 billion pounds of steam each year through its seven cogeneration plants (which boil water to 1,000
°F/538
°C before pumping it to 100,000 buildings in
Manhattan—the biggest commercial steam system in the world.
Byproduct heat at moderate temperatures (212-356°F/100-180°C) can also be used in
absorption chillers for cooling. A plant producing electricity, heat and cold is sometimes called
trigeneration or more generally:
polygeneration plant.
Cogeneration is a
thermodynamically efficient use of
fuel. In separate production of electricity some energy must be rejected as
waste heat, but in cogeneration this
thermal energy is put to good use.
Overview
Thermal power plants (including those that use
fissile elements or burn
coal,
petroleum, or
natural gas), and
heat engines in general, don't convert all of their available energy into electricity. In most heat engines, a bit more than half is wasted as excess heat (see:
Second law of thermodynamics). By capturing the excess heat, CHP uses heat that would be wasted in a conventional
power plant, potentially reaching an
efficiency of up to 89%, compared with 55% for the best conventional plants. This means that less fuel needs to be consumed to produce the same amount of useful energy. Also, less pollution is produced for a given economic benefit.
Some tri-cycle plants have utilized a
combined cycle in which several thermodynamic cycles produced electricity, and then a heating system was used as a condenser of the power plant's
bottoming cycle. For example, the RU-25
MHD generator in
Moscow heated a boiler for a conventional steam powerplant, whose condensate was then used for space heat. A more modern system might use a
gas turbine powered by
natural gas, whose exhaust powers a steam plant, whose condensate provides heat. Tri-cycle plants can have thermal efficiencies above 80%.
An exact match between the heat and electricity needs rarely exists. A CHP plant can either meet the need for heat (
heat driven operation) or be run as a
power plant with some use of its waste heat.
CHP is most efficient when the heat can be used on site or very close to it. Overall efficiency is reduced when the heat must be transported over longer distances. This requires heavily insulated pipes, which are expensive and inefficient; whereas electricity can be transmitted along a comparatively simple wire, and over much longer distances for the same energy loss.
A car engine becomes a CHP plant in winter, when the reject heat is useful for warming the interior of the vehicle. This example illustrates the point that deployment of CHP depends on heat uses in the vicinity of the heat engine.
Cogeneration plants are commonly found in
district heating systems of big towns, hospitals, prisons, oil refineries, paper mills, wastewater treatment plants, thermal
enhanced oil recovery wells and industrial plants with large heating needs.
Thermally
enhanced oil recovery (TEOR) plants often produce a substantial amount of excess electricity. After generating electricity, these plants pump leftover steam into heavy oil wells so that the oil will flow more easily, increasing production. TEOR cogeneration plants in
Kern County, California produce so much electricity that it can't all be used locally and is transmitted to
Los Angeles.
Types of plants
Topping cycle plants produce electricity first, then the exhausted steam is used for heating. Flames naturally produce heat suitable for a boiler. The hot water from condensed steam is well-suited for space and water heating.
Bottoming cycle plants produce high heats for an industrial process, then a waste heat recovery boiler feeds an electrical plant. Bottoming cycle plants are only used when the industrial process requires very high temperatures, such as furnaces for glass and metal manufacturing, so they're rarer.
Large cogeneration systems provide heating water and power for an industrial site or an entire town. Common CHP plant types are:
Smaller cogeneration units may use a
reciprocating engine or
Stirling engine. The heat is removed from the exhaust and the radiator. These systems are popular in small sizes because small gas and diesel engines are less expensive than small gas- or oil-fired steam-electric plants.
Some cogeneration plants are fired by
biomass, or industrial and
municipal waste (see
incineration).
MicroCHP
"Micro cogeneration" is a so called
distributed energy resource (DER). the installation is usually less than 5 kWe in a house or small business
(External Link
). Instead of burning fuel to merely heat space or water, some of the energy is converted to electricity in addition to heat. This electricity can be used within the home or business, or (if permitted by the grid management) sold back into the electric power grid.
MiniCHP
"Mini cogeneration" is a so called
distributed energy resource (DER). the installation is usually more than 5 kWe and less than 500 kWe in a building or medium sized business
(External Link
).
Current (2007) Micro- andMiniCHP installations use five different technologies:
microturbines,
internal combustion engines,
stirling engines, closed cycle
steam engines and
fuel cells.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Combined Heat And Power'.
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