A Novel Hybrid-Fuel Storage System of Compressed Air Energy for China
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. CAES System for the Situation in China
2.1. Development of CAES Technology
2.1.1. The First-Generation CAES System
2.1.2. The Second-Generation CAES System
2.1.3. The Third-Generation CAES System
2.2. Structure of Energy Sources and Technology Characteristics in China
2.2.1. Structure of Fossil Energy Sources in China
2.2.2. Geographical Situation of Wind Energy, Power Load and Water Resource in China
2.3. Design of the Hybrid-Fuel CAES System
3. Performance of the Hybrid-Fuel CAES System
3.1. Evaluation Criteria
3.1.1. Energy Rate (ER)
3.1.2. HR
3.1.3. Overall Efficiency
3.1.4. Efficiency of Electricity Storage
3.2. System Simulation
Category | Parameter | Value |
---|---|---|
Air and gas turbines | Inlet temperature of air turbine (°C) | 540 |
Inlet temperature of gas turbine (°C) | 1,200 | |
Pressure ratio of air turbine | 3 | |
Pressure ratio of gas turbine | 18 | |
Isentropic efficiency of air turbine (%) | 88.00 | |
Isentropic efficiency of gas turbine (%) | 90.00 | |
Compressors | Number of stages | 4 |
Number of intercoolers | 3 | |
Number of after-coolers | 1 | |
Pressure ratio of each stage | 2.84–2.94 | |
Average isentropic efficiency of compressors (%) | 86.00 | |
Fuel information | LHV of coal (MJ/kg) | 29.31 |
LHV of NG (MJ/kg) | 50.03 | |
Other assumptions | Thermal efficiency of external combustion heater (%) | 80.00 |
Efficiency of generators (%) | 99.00 | |
Efficiency of motors (%) | 99.00 | |
Total hybrid-fuel ηsys (%) | 50.00 | |
System efficiency ηsyscoal (%) | 40.00 | |
System efficiency ηsysgas (%) | 55.00 | |
Volume of the cavern (m3) | 400,000 | |
Minimum pressure in the cavern (bar) | 65.18 | |
Maximum pressure in the cavern (bar) | 74.62 | |
Air throttling pressure from the cavern (bar) | 57.00 | |
Operating time | Continuous operation time of the compressor (h) | 8 |
Continuous operation time of the turbine (h) | 2 |
Streams | Temperature (°C) | Pressure (bar) | Mass flow (kg/s) | Mole fraction (%) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
N2 | O2 | CH4 | CO2 | H2O | ||||
S1 | 10.00 | 1.01 | 102.00 | 79.00 | 21.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
S2 | 124.79 | 2.90 | 102.00 | 79.00 | 21.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
S3 | 35.00 | 2.90 | 102.00 | 79.00 | 21.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
S4 | 161.40 | 8.41 | 102.00 | 79.00 | 21.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
S5 | 35.00 | 8.41 | 102.00 | 79.00 | 21.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
S6 | 161.70 | 24.39 | 102.00 | 79.00 | 21.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
S7 | 35.00 | 24.39 | 102.00 | 79.00 | 21.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
S8 | 162.25 | 70.73 | 102.00 | 79.00 | 21.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
S9 | 35.00 | 70.73 | 102.00 | 79.00 | 21.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
S10 | 50.00 | 57.00 | 400.00 | 79.00 | 21.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
S11 | 500.85 | 57.00 | 400.00 | 79.00 | 21.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
S12 | 540.00 | 57.00 | 400.00 | 79.00 | 21.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
S13 | 359.11 | 19.00 | 400.00 | 79.00 | 21.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
S14 | 580.00 | 19.00 | 400.00 | 79.00 | 21.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
S15 | 50.00 | 20.00 | 6.42 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 100.0 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
S16 | 1,200.04 | 19.00 | 406.42 | 76.78 | 14.80 | 0.00 | 2.81 | 5.61 |
S17 | 537.09 | 1.06 | 406.42 | 76.78 | 14.80 | 0.00 | 2.81 | 5.61 |
S18 | 100.00 | 1.06 | 406.42 | 76.78 | 14.80 | 0.00 | 2.81 | 5.61 |
3.3. Performance Evaluation
Category | Parameter | Value |
---|---|---|
Fuel input | Coal input (MW) | 142.91 |
NG input (MW) | 321.19 | |
Subtotal (MW) | 464.10 | |
Power generation | Air turbine (MW) | 79.54 |
Gas turbine (MW) | 329.72 | |
Subtotal (MW) | 409.26 | |
Internal power consumption | Compressors (MW) | 51.21 |
Subtotal (MW) | 51.21 | |
Evaluation criteria | Coal/NG_ratio | 0.44 |
ER | 0.50 | |
HR | 1.13 | |
ηee | 61.18% | |
ηes | 93.67% |
Name | The first-generation CAES [10] | The second-generation CAES [13] | The third-generation CAES [35] | Hybrid-fuel CAES |
---|---|---|---|---|
Location | Huntorf, Germany | No practical plant | No practical plant | No practical plant |
Output | 290 MW (about 2 h) | 420 MW | 114.5 MW | 410 MW |
Compressor power | 60 MW (about 8 h) | 71 MW | 157.6 MW | 52 MW |
Commission date | 1,978 | - | - | - |
Pressure tolerance | 50–70 bar | - | - | - |
HR | 1.6 kW∙h/kW∙h | 1.08–1.11 kW∙h/kW∙h | 0 | 1.13 kW∙h/kW∙h |
Cavern capacity | 310,000 m3 | - | - | Assumed 400,000 m3 |
Energy ratio | 0.82 kW∙h/kW∙h | 0.70–0.75 kW∙h/kW∙h | 0.727 kW∙h/kW∙h | 0.50 kW∙h/kW∙h |
Fuel | NG | NG | No fuel | Coal and NG |
4. Discussion
4.1. Exergy Analysis
Components | Schematic view | Exergy destruction |
---|---|---|
Compressor | ΔEX(Com) = EX(1) + W − EX(2) | |
Cooler | ΔEX(Co) = EX(1) + EX(3) − EX(2) − EX(4) | |
Storage cavern | ΔEX(SC) = EX(1) − EX(2) | |
Combustion chamber | ΔEX(CC) = EX(1) + EX(2) − EX(3) | |
Recuperator or heat exchanger | ΔEX(Re) = EX(1) + EX(3) − EX(2) − EX(4) ΔEX(HE) = EX(1) + EX(3) − EX(2) − EX(4) | |
Turbine | ΔEX(T) = EX(1) − EX(2) − W | |
External combustion heater | ΔEX(ECH) = EX(1) + EX(3) + EX(5) − EX(2) − EX(4) − EX(6) |
Category | Hybrid-fuel CAES system | Huntorf CAES system | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Value (MW∙h) | Proportion (%) | Value (MW∙h) | Proportion (%) | |||
Exergy input | Air | 1.87 | 0.14 | 1.98 | 0.14 | |
Power consumption by compressors | 409.71 | 29.95 | 463.22 | 31.71 | ||
Thermal energy input of coal | 285.81 | 20.90 | - | - | ||
Thermal energy input of NG | 670.44 | 49.01 | 995.54 | 68.15 | ||
Subtotal | 1,367.84 | 100.00 | 1,460.75 | 100.00 | ||
Exergy output | Generation of electricity power | 818.52 | 59.84 | 590.97 | 40.46 | |
Exergy destruction | Sub-system of energy storage | Compressors | 40.98 | 3.00 | 63.95 | 4.38 |
Coolers | 72.50 | 5.30 | 97.45 | 6.67 | ||
Air storage room | 20.38 | 1.49 | 35.78 | 2.45 | ||
Subtotal | 133.86 | 9.79 | 197.18 | 13.50 | ||
Sub-system of electricity generation | High-pressure turbine | 10.44 | 0.76 | 18.31 | 1.25 | |
Low-pressure turbine | 28.35 | 2.07 | 36.65 | 2.51 | ||
Recuperator | 19.92 | 1.46 | - | - | ||
Subtotal | 58.71 | 4.29 | 54.97 | 3.76 | ||
Combustion sub-system | External combustion heater | 148.55 | 10.86 | - | - | |
Combustion chamber | 190.94 | 13.96 | 458.72 | 31.40 | ||
Subtotal | 339.49 | 24.82 | 458.72 | 31.40 | ||
Exergy of exhaust stream | 15.89 | 1.16 | 153.29 | 10.49 | ||
Total exergy output | 1,366.48 | 99.90 | 1,455.13 | 99.62 | ||
Error of exergy input and output (%) | 0.10 | 0.38 | ||||
Exergy efficiency (%) | 59.84 | 40.46 |
4.2. Techno-Economic Analysis
4.2.1. Fundamental Parameters of a CAES Plant
Name | Value and unit | Name | Value and unit |
---|---|---|---|
Generation range per unit | 205–410 MW | Overnight cost—above ground equipment | $500/kW |
Compression range per unit | 26–52 MW | Overnight cost—cavern development | $100/kW |
Cavern storage capacity | 2,050 MW∙h | Total overnight cost | $600/kW |
ER (kW∙h in/(kW∙h out) | 0.50 | Annual VOM cost | 2% of total investment cost |
HR (kW∙h in/(kW∙h out) | 1.13 | Annual FOM cost | 2% of total investment cost |
LHV of NG | 36 MJ/Nm3 | Price of NG | $0.38/N∙m3 |
LHV of coal | 29.31 MJ/kg | Price of coal | $123.08/ton |
Equivalent base-load time | 1,200 h | Price of off-peak electricity | $30.77/MW∙h |
4.2.2. Economic Data
Name | Value and unit | Name | Value and unit |
---|---|---|---|
Total investment cost | $246 million | CRF | 0.12 |
NG fuel rate | 2.83 MJ/kW∙h | NG cost | $30.15/MW∙h |
Coal fuel rate | 1.26 MJ/kW∙h | Coal cost | $5.28/MW∙h |
Annual VOM cost | $4.92 million | VOM cost | $10/MW∙h |
Annual FOM cost | $4.92 million | FOM cost | $10/MW∙h |
AOEC | $7.68 million | Cost of off-peak electricity | $15.61/MW∙h |
Total electricity output of CAES annually | 4.92 × 105 MW∙h | COE | $131.07/MW∙h |
Price of off-peak electricity | $30.77/MW∙h | - | - |
4.2.3. Sensitivity Analysis
- (1)
- If the proposed CAES system is close to the gas source field, the NG cost is relatively low, which ensures the COE of CAES is relatively low;
- (2)
- If wind power takes a large proportion in the grid, part of the electric power required by the CAES charging process can be replaced by the power from wind curtailment, and then it is of great importance to reduce the COE of CAES;
- (3)
- When the peak valley fluctuations of the grid is rather large, indicating there is a huge load demand, then the annual peak-shaving power generation duration of CAES will be increased, as a result, the COE of CAES is reduced.
4.2.4. Further Discussion
- (1)
- The Chinese government encourages using NG as the fuel for electricity generation. More NG is being introduced from other countries, and more NG transmission engineering projects are carried out to improve the conditions of the NG transport [41]. The NG price is likely to fall predictably; it is beneficial to reduce the fuel cost of CAES.
- (2)
- More wind power will be connected to the power grids, bringing in a huge market space for CAES systems which contribute to balance grid wind power. There is a cost reduction in the charging process when CAES use the energy from wind curtailment to compress the air. Thus, the COE of CAES system is decreased accordingly.
- (3)
- The proposed CAES is similar with PHS systems in storing off-peak electricity or wind power. As the government regards CAES as an emerging strategic key industry [42], there should be a compensation mechanism based on the capacity of CAES, thus the price of electricity generated by CAES is expected to rise. The hybrid-fuel CAES power plant is competitive in the Chinese energy market if the on-peak energy price exceeds $153.85/MW∙h.
- (4)
- As mentioned above, the hybrid-fuel CAES, which use coal to replace part of NG, is more suitable for China’s conditions. If the hybrid-fuel CAES can be widely launched in China, more efforts and funds can be introduced to improve the equipment performance, which is bound to reduce the construction cost of CAES and improve the market competitiveness to CAES.
5. Conclusions
Nomenclature
ER | Energy rate (kW∙h/kW∙h) |
HR | Heat rate (kW∙h/kW∙h) |
Wc | Compressor work (kW∙h) |
Wt | Turbine work (kW∙h) |
Qf | Total fuel energy (kW∙h) |
LHV | Lower heating value (MJ/kg) |
AOEC | Annual off-peak electricity cost ($) |
CRF | Capital recovery factor |
ηee | Overall efficiency |
ηes | Efficiency of Electricity storage |
ηsyscoal | System efficiency for coal-fired power plant |
ηsys | System efficiency |
ηsysgas | System efficiency for Gas turbine power plant |
AFC | Annual fuel cost ($) |
COE | Levelized cost of electricity ($/MW∙h) |
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Liu, W.; Liu, L.; Xu, G.; Liang, F.; Yang, Y.; Zhang, W.; Wu, Y. A Novel Hybrid-Fuel Storage System of Compressed Air Energy for China. Energies 2014, 7, 4988-5010. https://doi.org/10.3390/en7084988
Liu W, Liu L, Xu G, Liang F, Yang Y, Zhang W, Wu Y. A Novel Hybrid-Fuel Storage System of Compressed Air Energy for China. Energies. 2014; 7(8):4988-5010. https://doi.org/10.3390/en7084988
Chicago/Turabian StyleLiu, Wenyi, Linzhi Liu, Gang Xu, Feifei Liang, Yongping Yang, Weide Zhang, and Ying Wu. 2014. "A Novel Hybrid-Fuel Storage System of Compressed Air Energy for China" Energies 7, no. 8: 4988-5010. https://doi.org/10.3390/en7084988
APA StyleLiu, W., Liu, L., Xu, G., Liang, F., Yang, Y., Zhang, W., & Wu, Y. (2014). A Novel Hybrid-Fuel Storage System of Compressed Air Energy for China. Energies, 7(8), 4988-5010. https://doi.org/10.3390/en7084988