Use of LNG Cold Potential in the Cogeneration Cycle of Ship Power Plants
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Ship Propulsion Plant Environmental Regulations
1.2. Ship Propulsion Decarbonization Technologies
1.3. Use of Secondary Propulsion Plant Heat Sources
- Deep recovery (utilization) system for exhaust gases in a steam turbine for the production of electrical energy and a charge air cooling system for auxiliary requirements of a main power plant (heating of heavy fuel, coolant, lubricating oils);
- Heat recovery system for exhaust gases of 4-stroke powerful engines (power higher than 15,000 kW) with a shaft generator, providing electric movement operation mode;
- A ‘simplified’ heat recovery system for exhaust gases of highly efficient 2-stroke diesel engines (characterized by a low temperature of exhaust gases of ≤275 °C) with a shaft generator and exhaust gas power recovery turbine.
- To create a mathematical model to study the cogeneration cycle technology of an LNG ship power plant and to conduct their adaptation in various calculations.
- From the mathematical model, to create an electronic simulator and perform parametric analysis of the regeneration cycle to increase the energy efficiency indicators by rationally selecting the components of the cogeneration system (turbine, compressor, and heat exchangers).
2. Methodological Aspects
- Energy transformation processes in the system’s equipment are reversible (aerodynamic pressure losses are zero).
- Turbine and compressor analytical connection of parameters and are not desirable: the parameters are independent of and .
- The LNG cold potential is external and unlimited (the LNG flow exceeds the demand of supply energy for the engine).
- After entering the technical and operational parameters (, , etc.), the nitrogen temperatures are calculated at the characteristic angles of the co-generation cycle (). It is assumed that there are no hydrodynamic losses of nitrogen flow in the cycle heat exchangers channels. As a result, and . Thus, the algorithm realizes the equality of the degree of pressure increase in the compressor and the degree of pressure decrease in the turbine .
- The outgoing temperature from the turbine, including thermal efficiency of the heat exchanger, directly affect , which in turn affects the temperatures and after increase in heat exchanger HE3.
- The nitrogen preheat in heat exchanger HE3 is limited by the engine’s exhaust gas heat transfer potential to nitrogen. Depending on the parameters used in the system, the nitrogen temperature is adjusted according to condition .
- The temperature for an alternative supply for diesel engine use was determined based on the potential of the difference between saturated and overheated LNG steam phases.
- Selection of the parameters for the turbo unit TC, assessing their effect on the energy effect power for the generation of electrical energy;
- Evaluation of efficiency rates (EC) that represent the structural improvements of heat exchangers and affect the cogeneration cycle efficiency.
- Evaluation of the relationship between boundary cycle temperature values () and flow rate of nitrogen circulating in a closed-loop cycle; etc.
3. Research Results and Discussion
- ✓
- depends on exhaust gas temperature , exhaust gas flow , circulating flow, and efficiency factors of a heat exchanger ;
- ✓
- depends on the heat transfer balance in the heat exchanger (which are the parameters )
3.1. Limitations of Compared with
Example of Analytical Calculation Application for Medium-Speed Six-Cylinder Four-Stroke Engine
3.2. Determination of Temperature
3.3. Combinations of Optimization
3.4. Factors Defining the Energy Efficiency of the System
3.4.1. Effect of Exhaust Gas Teg
3.4.2. Effect of Turbo Unit Efficiency
3.4.3. Effect of the Efficiency of Heat Exchangers
3.4.4. Effect of Nitrogen Temperature
4. Conclusions
- In the judgment of the authors, the main advantage for the practical use of the completed development, in contrast to a number of similar ones, is an open algorithm that provides for the expansion of the model in accordance with the technological features of the heat recovery systems under study, as well as operating mainly with thermodynamic parameters without concrete definition of the constructive nodes. The latter, including on the basis of the created electric simulator, expands the possibilities of a variant search and justification of rational ways to increase the indicators of the energy efficiency of cogeneration systems.
- With an unlimited ‘external’ cold potential of LNG (for example, an LNG carrier power plant), the energy efficiency of a cogeneration cycle determined by the exhaust gas temperature Teg of the power plant, turbo unit pressure (for practical implementation in a rational range up to 3.0–3.5 units), and flow rate of circulating nitrogen is directly proportional to the implemented Ngen. A turbo unit with high output and average pressure ~ 3.0–3.5 with a high adiabatic efficiency turbine is a more rational selection for a cogeneration cycle assembling by technological units. The effect of selected thermal efficiency rates of the heat exchangers (in range of change 1–0.9) on Ngen does not exceed ~10%.
- With a limited potential of LNG cold flow and LNG ‘internal’ use only as fuel for ship engines, a harmonization between the flow rate of the circulating nitrogen and engine load modes is necessary. The temperature T1 of the exiting nitrogen from an LNG- heat exchanger has a significant effect on the energy efficiency Ngen. For each temperature increase of 10 K, the average decrease of Ngen value is 5–8 kW or 5–6%.
- To implement a simulation of the TK compressor and turbine parameters based on the real characteristics of aggregates = (πC, ηC.ad, nTC); = (πT, T3, nTC).
- To apply a mathematical model to determine the operating process parameters of an LNG engine and to ensure its operation together with the cogeneration cycle model.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Nomenclature
HE | Heat exchanger |
C | Compressor |
T | Turbine |
TC | Turbo compressor (turbo unite) |
DE | Diesel engine |
Efficiency coefficient | |
Efficiency coefficient of the heat exchanger | |
Adiabatic efficiency coefficient of compressor | |
Adiabatic efficiency coefficient of turbine | |
Mechanical efficiency coefficient of TC | |
Heat of exhaust gases | |
Heat transfer in heat exchanger number 3 | |
Exhaust gases temperature | |
Nitrogen specific isobaric heat | |
Exhaust gases specific isobaric heat | |
Energy pulse factor | |
Nitrogen flow | |
Exhaust gas flow | |
Fuel consumption | |
Degree of pressure increase of the compressor | |
Degree of pressure decrease of the compressor | |
Adiabatic coefficient | |
Boundary nitrogen flow | |
Compressor power | |
Turbine power | |
n | Engine maximum operating speed |
A | Coefficient of nitrogen flow impulses effect |
λ | excess air ratio |
lT | turbine operation |
lC | compressor operation |
nTC | compressor speed |
ψ | outflow leakage function |
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n (min−1) | Pe (kW) | PC (bar) | Teg (K) | Geg (kg/h) | λ |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
500 | 3500 | 2.6 | 775 | 23,950 | 2.3 |
400 | 1790 | 2.0 | 675 | 14,740 | 2.5 |
300 | 755 | 1.7 | 605 | 9400 | 3.2 |
200 | 225 | 1.5 | 555 | 5530 | 4.3 |
Excess Air Coefficient. | Diesel Fuel | |
---|---|---|
Mode | Nominal | Part Load | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | |
, kg/s | 23.8 | 15.9 | 13.0 | 11.6 | 4.6 | 3.1 | 2.5 | 2.25 |
Mode | Nominal | Part Load | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | |
, kg/s | 3.8 | 2.28 | 1.73 | 1.44 | 0.51 | 0.305 | 0.23 | 0.19 |
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Wang, Z.; Lebedevas, S.; Rapalis, P.; Zaglinskis, J.; Mickeviciene, R.; Djackov, V.; Liu, X. Use of LNG Cold Potential in the Cogeneration Cycle of Ship Power Plants. J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2020, 8, 720. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse8090720
Wang Z, Lebedevas S, Rapalis P, Zaglinskis J, Mickeviciene R, Djackov V, Liu X. Use of LNG Cold Potential in the Cogeneration Cycle of Ship Power Plants. Journal of Marine Science and Engineering. 2020; 8(9):720. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse8090720
Chicago/Turabian StyleWang, Zhongcheng, Sergejus Lebedevas, Paulius Rapalis, Justas Zaglinskis, Rima Mickeviciene, Vasilij Djackov, and Xiaoyu Liu. 2020. "Use of LNG Cold Potential in the Cogeneration Cycle of Ship Power Plants" Journal of Marine Science and Engineering 8, no. 9: 720. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse8090720
APA StyleWang, Z., Lebedevas, S., Rapalis, P., Zaglinskis, J., Mickeviciene, R., Djackov, V., & Liu, X. (2020). Use of LNG Cold Potential in the Cogeneration Cycle of Ship Power Plants. Journal of Marine Science and Engineering, 8(9), 720. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse8090720