Performance Improvement Overview of the Supercritical Carbon Dioxide Brayton Cycle
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Conventional Method
3. Combined Cycle
- ORC is mainly combined with the recuperated sCO cycle, followed by the recompression and partial cooling cycles. The recuperated sCO-ORC combined cycle is slightly less complex than the other two combined cycles. Moreover, the recuperated sCO cycle has a relatively larger amount of waste heat at high temperatures, which is the ideal source for WHR technologies.
- The performance of the recuperated sCO cycle is significantly improved by the additional ORC cycle. As shown in Figure 7, the gain in efficiency ranges from 6 to 13%, which is achieved by the combined cycle compared to the stand-alone recuperated sCO cycle [42]. The CIT and organic fluid are the main contributors to the diversity of performance enhancement [44]. For the recompression sCO cycle, the efficiency was improved by 4–4.6% at a TIT of 550 °C [48] and 4.2–5% at a TIT of higher than 700 °C [44]. Zhang et al. [47] studied a recompression sCO-ORC combined cycle, having a thermal efficiency of 52.12% when using a liquefied natural gas (LNG) as the heat sink. About 6.8% of additional efficiency was achieved with respect to the stand-alone cycle due to the small power scale, i.e., 297 kWe, of which the bottoming cycle output accounted for 13%. As for the partial cooling sCO cycle, the gain in efficiency ranged from 2–3% [44] depending on organic fluids.
- The recompression sCO-ORC cycle achieves the highest overall efficiency. It can be seen from Figure 6 that most combined recompression cycles have efficiencies that are higher than the reference data at the same TITs, although the cycle boundary conditions are not identical.
- The distinct differences in the organic fluids show limited effects on the performance of the combined cycle. This is true, especially for large-scale sCO-ORC-combined cycles [50]. In the literature, both pure substances and zeotropic mixtures [43,59,60] were investigated. The nature of organic fluids decides the efficiency improvement that rises with TIT, like R245fa [42] and Isopentane [44], or falls, like the isobutane and the n-butane/isopentane mixture [43], as shown in Figure 7.
- For power generation, Yari and Sirousazar [41] first added a tCO cycle to the recompression sCO cycle, showing an efficiency improvement of around 5.1%. They also showed that the performance of the combined cycle was independent of TIT but was strongly affected by the ambient temperature. When increasing the ambient temperature from 15 °C to 25 °C, the gain in efficiency went down from 5.1% to 2.7%. Alsagri and Chiasson [58] reported that the recompression cycle using a split-flow tCO bottoming cycle obtained 2% more efficiency than that with a non-recuperated tCO cycle. As can be seen in Figure 7, the recuperated sCO cycle, for which the heat source is a molten carbonate fuel cell, was improved by 4.8–6.5% in terms of efficiency, depending on the recuperator effectiveness at a CIT of 55 °C [45,46]. When the CIT was lowered to 32 °C, the gain in efficiency for the tCO cycle was up to 7.2% [2].
- For cold production, Akbari and Mahmoudi [54] proposed a recompression sCO cycle combining a tCO refrigeration cycle for both power and refrigeration production. In the combined cycle, a fraction of CO leaving the cooler expends in the refrigeration cycle; after being heated and compressed, it then goes back to the cooler. They showed that the combined cycle produced 240 MW of power and 60 MW of cold simultaneously, or 562 MW of cold only. Manjunath et al. [61] studied a similar combined cycle utilizing the shipboard gas turbine exhaust. The proposed cycle generated a net power output of 3.0 MW (about 14.5% engine power) and a cooling output of 3.1 MW (about 15% engine power).
4. CO Mixture
- The available mixture database is required. The NIST REFPROP is currently used to calculate the thermophysical properties of a CO mixture. Experimental data are quite rare; only the properties of CO/xenon can be used so far [129]. However, the REFPROP program suggests the equation of state (EOS) temperature and pressure limits as follows: 161–750 K and 700 MPa for CO/Xe, 116–750 K and 200 MPa for CO/Kr, 188–760 K and 170 MPa for CO/HS, and 279–700 K and 80 MPa for CO/cyclohexane. In order to estimate the properties at higher temperatures, the temperature range of the REFPROP program has to be extended.
- The critical phenomena of CO mixtures should be considered carefully. The critical line has a continuous or discontinuous form among each critical point of the pure components. As for the discontinuous critical lines, the existence of phase separation could cause instability in the CO mixtures. This could hardly further obtain the optimum design of the compressor.
- The thermal stability of potential additives should be considered as a key selection criterion besides their thermodynamic performance. Otherwise, decomposition products, like non-condensable gases and deposits, may reduce the heat transfer rates, damage the components, and compromise cycle safety. Additional experiments are needed to identify the real phenomena of CO mixtures at high temperatures.
- The chemical effect on cycle components should be considered in the future.
5. Strengths and Weaknesses Analysis
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
sCO | supercritical carbon dioxide |
tCO | transcritical carbon dioxide |
TIT | turbine inlet temperature |
TIP | turbine inlet pressure |
CIT | compressor inlet temperature |
CSP | concentrating solar power |
WHR | waste heat recovery |
ORC | organic Rankine cycle |
TRC | transcritical Rankine cycle |
EOS | equation of state |
LNG | liquefied natural gas |
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Cycle Layout | Initial Behavior | Improved Behavior | Application | Ref. | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CIT/°C | TIP/MPa | TIT/°C | /% | Method | /% | |||
Intercooled Recuperated | 31 | 22 | 550 | 39 | Recompression, Increase TIT | 41.8–47 | 300 MWe Nuclear power | 2002 [27] |
Recompression | 31 | 20 | 550 | 43.1, 45.8 | Increase TIT | 47, 49.9 | 600 MWth Nuclear power | 2002 [27] |
Recuperated | 32 | 20 | 550 | 40 | Reheating, Intercooling | 40.8–41.5 | 600 MWth Nuclear power | 2004 [9] |
Recompression | 32 | 20 | 550–750 | 45.56–52 | Reheating, Increase TIT, Raise TIP | 46.775–57 | 600 MWth Nuclear power | 2004 [9] |
Recuperated | 35 | 7, 12 | 800 | 45.5, 45.8 | Intercooling, Partial cooling | 47.4–49.7 | Nuclear power | 2004 [20] |
Partial cooling | 35 | 7, 12 | 800 | 49.2, 49.7 | Intercooling | 51.4, 51.9 | Nuclear power | 2004 [20] |
Recompression | 31.25 | 20 | 472 | 39.1 | Condensation, Liquid phase pumping, Raise TIP | 39.5–43.1 | 250 MWth Nuclear power | 2007 [12] |
Recompression | 32, 50 | 20, 30 | 550, 750 | 36.71–49.83 | Reheating | 37.65–50.78 | 600 MWth Nuclear power | 2009 [28] |
Recuperated | 32 | 25 | 550–750 | 40.44–48.2 | Precompression, Recompression, Partial cooling, Increase TIT | 43.49–54.1 | 3600 MWth Nuclear power | 2011 [29] |
Precompression | 32 | 25 | 550 | 43.49 | Increase TIT | 48.8, 52.4 | 3600 MWth Nuclear power | 2011 [29] |
Recompression | 32 | 25 | 550 | 46.48 | Increase TIT | 49.9, 52.7 | 3600 MWth Nuclear power | 2011 [29] |
Partial cooling | 32 | 25 | 550 | 46.12 | Increase TIT | 50.5, 54.1 | 3600 MWth Nuclear power | 2011 [29] |
Recuperated | 32 | 25 | 550–700 | 40.7–45.5 | Reheating, Increase TIT, Recompression, Partial cooling | 42.5–52.8 | CSP | 2012 [30] |
Recompression | 32 | 25 | 550–700 | 47.7–52.8 | Reheating, Increase TIT | 48.9–53.9 | CSP | 2012 [30] |
Partial cooling | 32 | 25 | 550–700 | 46.1–52 | Reheating, Increase TIT | 48.1–53.8 | CSP | 2012 [30] |
Recompression | 32 | 25 | 500–600 | 44.5–46 | Reheating, Increase TIT | 47–49 | 10 MWe CSP | 2012 [31] |
Recompression | 55.5 | 25 | 500–850 | 40–52 | Reheating, Increase TIT | 43.14–52.8 | CSP | 2015 [32] |
Recuperated | 55.5 | 25 | 600 | 38.5 | Reheating, Recompression | 39.5, 42.7 | CSP | 2015 [33] |
Recompression | 55.5 | 25 | 600 | 42.7 | Reheating, Intercooling | 43.2–45.3 | CSP | 2015 [33] |
Recompression | 32 | 25 | 600–800 | 45.1–52.4 | Reheating, Increase TIT | 46.5–53.4 | 2113 MWth Fossil energy | 2016 [34] |
Recompression | 35, 50 | 20 | 500–800 | 39.59–54.58 | Intercooling | 40.82–55.68 | Nuclear power | 2017 [21] |
Recuperated with reheating | 27 | 25 | 827 | 46.3 | Intercooling | 48.7–49.4 | 160 MWe Not specified | 2017 [35] |
Recuperated | - | 25 | 700 | 36.2 | Recompression, Precompression | 43.3 | 104 MWe CSP | 2017 [22] |
Recompression with reheating | 32 | 25 | 500 | 40.98–49.21 | Intercooling | 41.44–49.4 | 50 MWe CSP | 2017 [36] |
Recompression | 51 | 25 | 750 | 47 | Intercooling | 48.6 | 25 MWe CSP | 2017 [37] |
Cycle Layout | Initial Behavior | Improved Behavior | Application | Ref. | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CIT/°C | TIP/MPa | TIT/°C | /% | Cost | Bottoming Cycle | /% | Cost | |||
Recompression | 32 | 22.3 | 550–750 | 40.23–47.82 | - | tCO cycle | 44.25–52.98 | - | 90–165 kWe nuclear power | 2010 [41] |
Recuperated | 35 | 22.5 | 527–727 | 28.5–33.8 | - | ORC (R245fa, isobutane, isopentane, cyclohexane) | 36.4–43.96 | - | 88–115 kWe CSP | 2011 [42] |
Recuperated | 30 | - | 527–827 | 28.1–38.7 | - | ORC (isopentane, isobutane, n-Butane) | 35.3–47.5 | - | 500 kWe CSP | 2013 [43] |
Recuperated | 55 | 25 | 700–850 | 41.9–46.5 | - | ORC (isopentane, n-butene, cis-butene) | 48–53 | - | CSP | 2014 [44] |
Recompression | 55 | 25 | 700-850 | 46.3–50.6 | - | ORC (R236ea, R245fa, isobutane) | 50.5–55.75 | - | CSP | 2014 [44] |
Partial cooling | 55 | 25 | 700–850 | 46.2–51 | - | ORC (R124, R245fa, isobutane) | 48.7–53.95 | - | CSP | 2014 [44] |
Recuperated | 35 | 22.5 | 650 | 33.8, 36.5 | - | tCO cycle | 39.5, 41.3 | - | 326 kWth Fuel cell | 2014 [45] |
Recuperated | 35 | 22.5 | 650 | 39.6 | - | tCO cycle | 46.1 | - | 326 kWth Fuel cell | 2014 [46] |
Recompression | 35 | 20 | 527 | 45.32 | - | ORC (R123) | 52.12 | - | 570 kWth Nuclear power | 2014 [47] |
Recompression | 35 | 22.2 | 550 | 39.59, 38.3 | 11.2 $/GJ, 10.87 $/GJ | ORC (Isopentane, n-butane, isobutane, n-pentane, R123, R114, R141b, RC318) | 43.68–44.22 | 10.73 $/GJ, 10.25 $/GJ | 600 MWth Nuclear power | 2014 [48] |
Recompression | 32 | 20 | 550 | 44.29 | 6.2 $/kW | tCO cycle | 45.92 | 6.6 $/kW | 84 kWe Nuclear power | 2015 [23] |
Recuperated | 32 | 20 | 550 | 37.46 | - | tCO cycle | 44.7 | - | 96 kWe Nuclear power | 2015 [49] |
Recompression | 32 | 20 | 550 | 44.22 | - | tCO cycle | 47.69 | - | 81 kWe Nuclear power | 2015 [49] |
Recompression | 32 | 26.7, 21 | 550 | - | - | tCO cycle | 44.99, 43.89 | 9.98 $/GJ, 9.75 $/GJ | 600 MWth Nuclear power | 2016 [50] |
Recompression | 32 | 28.12–29.53, 20.87–21.16 | 550 | - | - | ORC (R123, R245fa, toluene, isobutane, isopentane, cyclohexane) | 44.77–45.23, 43.78–44.08 | 9.88–9.96 $/GJ, 9.60–9.62 $/GJ | 600 MWth nuclear power | 2016 [50] |
Recompression | 35 | 21.5 | 550 | 39.57 | 11.2 $/GJ, 10.87 $/GJ | Kalina cycle | 43.55 | 10.73 $/GJ, 10.34 $/GJ | 600 MWth Nuclear power | 2016 [51] |
Recompression | 35 | 22 | 550 | 39.62 | 13.73 $/GJ, 13.64 $/GJ | Kalina cycle | 42.8 | 13.04 $/GJ, 12.88 $/GJ | 600 MWth Nuclear power | 2016 [52] |
Recuperated | 37 | - | 655 | - | - | ORC (R245fa) | - | 0.039 cents/kWh, 0.045 cents/kWh | Fuel cell | 2016 [53] |
Recompression | 33 | - | 550 | - | - | tCO refrigeration | 49.9–50.52 | 10.68–11.05 $/GJ | 600 MWth Nuclear power | 2017 [54] |
Basic | 32.5 | 20 | 385 | 51.41 | - | tCO cycle | 52.53 | - | 9.25 MWe Exhaust gas | 2017 [55] |
Recompression | 31 | 21.2 | 501.8 | 37.68 | - | tCO cycle | 50.06 | 0.046 $/kWh | 41.45 MWe Exhaust gas | 2017 [56] |
Recompression | 32 | 20 | 550 | 41.47 | - | tCO cycle | 43.75 | 11,243.15 $/h | 600 MWth Nuclear power | 2017 [57] |
Recompression | 32 | - | 600–850 | 44.5–51.9 | - | tCO cycle | 47.6–57.1 | - | 2.7–4.2 MWe Not specified | 2018 [58] |
Recompression | 32 | - | 750 | - | - | ORC (10 zeotropic mixtures) | - | 10.93 $/GJ | 600 MWth nuclear power | 2018 [59] |
Recuperated | 31 | 31.06 | 450.6 | - | - | ORC (cyclopentane/R365mfc) | - | 3.95–4.34 cents/kWh | Exhaust gas | 2018 [60] |
Recuperated | 40 | 20 | 550 | - | - | tCO refrigeration | 42.3–44.5 | - | 2.4–3.0 MWe Exhaust gas | 2018 [61] |
Recuperated | - | 25 | 380 | - | - | ORC (R407c, R134a, R245fa, R1234yf, R1234ze) | 40.5–41.92 | - | 3.4–3.7 MWe CSP | 2018 [62] |
Recuperated, recompression | 36 | 16.4 | 300 | - | - | ORC (R123, R245fa, R600) | 17.7–19.1 | - | 200 kWe Not specified | 2018 [63] |
Basic | 52–55 | 20 | 385 | - | - | tCO cycle | 49.39–51.44 | 0.042–0.0486 $/kWh | 8.886–9.255 MW Exhaust gas | 2018 [64] |
Cycle Layout | Initial Behavior | Improved Behavior | Application | Ref. | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CIT/°C | TIP/MPa | TIT/°C | /% | Additives | /% | |||
Recompression | 32 | 20 | 508 | 43.27 | He, Ar, N, O | 41–45.2 | 1529 MWth Nuclear power | 2011 [92] |
Full-scale compressor test | 27–50 | - | - | - | SF, n-Butane, Neon | - | 50 kW Compressor | 2011 [85] |
Recompression | 32 | 20 | 550 | 45.37 | He, Ar, N, O | 44.02–47.1 | 600 MWth Nuclear power | 2011 [87] |
Recompression | 32 | 20 | 550 | 45.37 | Xe, Ar, N, O | 44.02–46.65 | 600 MWth nuclear power | 2011 [86] |
Recuperated | 40 | 30 | 400 | 21.5 | Benzene | 23.5–26.1 | Not specified | 2012 [93] |
Recuperated | 32 | 20 | 550 | 39.77 | Xe, Kr, Ar, N, O | 39.75–41.46 | 600 MWth Nuclear power | 2013 [18] |
Recompression | 32 | 20 | 550 | 45.37 | Xe, Kr, Ar, N, O | 44–46.69 | 600 MWth nuclear power | 2013 [18] |
Recuperated | 44 | 20 | 550 | 37.97 | HS, Cyclohexane | 37.88, 38.01 | 600 MWth nuclear power | 2013 [18] |
Recompression | 44 | 20 | 550 | 41.36 | HS, Cyclohexane | 42.61, 43.23 | 600 MWth nuclear power | 2013 [18] |
Recuperated | 32 | 20 | 600 | 37.9 | N, O, Ar, Air, He | 37.3–37.6 | Not specified | 2014 [94] |
Recompression | 32 | 20 | 600 | 42.6 | N, O, Ar, Air, He | 42.4–42.5 | Not specified | 2014 [94] |
Recompression | 32 | 20 | 650 | 47.82 | O, He, Ar, Kr | 45.9–50.5 | 600 MWth nuclear power | 2015 [95] |
Recompression | 52 | 20 | 650 | 41.1 | n-Butane, Cyclohexane | 42.55–43.4 | 600 MWth nuclear power | 2015 [95] |
Recompression | 34 | 24 | 550 | 32.45 | He, CO, O, N, Ar, H, CH, HS | 31.39–32.49 | 12.5 MWe Not specified | 2016 [89] |
Precompression | 34 | 24 | 550 | 29.45 | He, CO, O, N, Ar, H, CH, HS | 28.12–29.48 | 16.6 MWe Not specified | 2016 [89] |
Split expansion | 34 | 24 | 550 | 29.03 | He, CO, O, N, Ar, H, CH, HS | 28.1–29.06 | 11.2 MWe Not specified | 2016 [89] |
Recompression | 34 | 24 | 550 | 32.45 | Air, M-I, M-II, M-H, Air-H, M-IH | 29.74–32.31 | 12.5 MWe Not specified | 2017 [90] |
Precompression | 34 | 24 | 550 | 29.45 | Air, M-I, M-II, M-H, Air-H, M-IH | 25.83–29.29 | 16.6 MWe Not specified | 2017 [90] |
Split expansion | 34 | 24 | 550 | 29.03 | Air, M-I, M-II, M-H, Air-H, M-IH | 26.62–28.91 | 11.2 MWe Not specified | 2017 [90] |
Recompression | 34 | 27 | 550 | 33.44 | He, H, CO, O, Ar, N, CH, HS, Xe, Kr, SO | 32.54–33.6 | 38 MWth not specified | 2018 [91] |
Precompression | 34 | 27 | 550 | 44.44 | He, H, CO, O, Ar, N, CH, HS, Xe, Kr, SO | 43.14–44.69 | 38 MWth not specified | 2018 [91] |
Split expansion | 34 | 27 | 550 | 29.83 | He, H, CO, O, Ar, N, CH, HS, Xe, Kr, SO | 28.83–30.03 | 38 MWth not specified | 2018 [91] |
Basic | 40 | 20 | 300 | 13.15 | SF, R32, R22, R123, R134a, Toluene | 13.86–14.49 | 1 MWth not specified | 2018 [88] |
Recuperated | 40 | 25 | 551 | 31.3 | TiCl | 36 | CSP | 2018 [96] |
Recuperated | 40 | 25 | 800 | 40.7 | TiCl | 44.7 | CSP | 2018 [96] |
Recompression | 40 | 25 | 551 | 38.4 | TiCl | 40.1 | CSP | 2018 [96] |
Recompression | 40 | 25 | 800 | 47 | TiCl | 49.9 | CSP | 2018 [96] |
Recuperated | 51 | 25 | 550, 700 | 40.4, 47.4 | NO | 40.8, 46.7 | 100 MWth CSP | 2019 [97] |
Recuperated | 51 | 25 | 550, 700 | 40.44, 47.4 | NO, TiCl | 40.63–49.11 | 33–38 MWe CSP | 2019 [98] |
Recuperated, recompression, partial cooling | 36 | 25 | 550 | 27.5–30.6 | Xe, n-Butane | 27.7–30.9 | 1 MWe CSP | 2019 [99] |
TRC | 15 | 10, 12 | 175, 155 | - | SF | 13, 15 | Geothermal water | 2013 [100] |
TRC | 25 | 10 | 120–240 | 6.8–15.6 | R32, R1270, R161, R1234yf, R134a, R152a, R1234ze | 7.5–16.85 | 20–45 kWe WHR | 2014 [81] |
TRC | 23 | 11–17 | 170 | 8.97 | R32, R161, R290, R1234yf, R1234ze | 7.54–9.54 | 112 kWe WHR | 2017 [82] |
TRC | 20 | - | 150 | 6.6 | R152a, R161, R290, R1270, R1234yf, R1234ze | 6.3–9 | 223 kWe geothermal water | 2017 [101] |
TRC | 20 | - | 180 | 5.79 | Propane, n-Butane, isobutane, n-pentane, iso-pentane, neo-pentane | 7.25–7.61 | 20 kWe Not specified | 2017 [102] |
TRC | 26 | 9 | 277 | 6.55 | R290, R152a, R41, R32, R134a, R161, R1234yf, R1234ze | 8.7–11.5 | 13 kWe WHR | 2018 [83] |
TRC | 30 | - | 200 | - | R134a, R32, R152a, R41, R161, R1270, R1234ze(E), R1234yf | - | 20–60 kWe WHR | 2018 [84] |
Type | Substance | Physical Data | Safety | Environmental Data [116] | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
/g·mol | /MPa | /°C | /°C | ODP | GWP | |||
Inorganics | HS | 34.08 | 9 | 99.95 | <444.6 [107,108] | Highly Flammable | 0 | - |
SO | 64.06 | 7.884 | 157.49 | 2000 [110] | B1 | 0 | - | |
TiCl | 189.7 | 4.661 | 364.85 | >500 [113] | Non Flammable | 0 | - | |
NO | 92.01 | 9.976 | 158.2 | 30 [115] | Non Flammable | 0 | - | |
HC | Propane | 44.10 | 4.251 | 96.74 | 525 [117] | Highly flammable | 0 | 3.3 |
n-Butane | 58.12 | 3.80 | 152 | 300–320 [118] | A3 | 0 | ~20 | |
Pentane | 72.15 | 3.37 | 196.55 | 280–300 [118] | A3 | 0 | ~20 | |
Cyclohexane | 84.16 | 4.08 | 280.45 | 700–800 [119] | Flammable | 0 | 20 | |
Benzene | 78.11 | 4.907 | 288.87 | <500 [120] | Highly flammable | 0 | 20 | |
Toluene | 92.14 | 4.126 | 318.6 | 350–400 [121,122] | Flammable | 0 | 3.35 | |
HCFC | R123 | 152.931 | 3.662 | 183.68 | 200–220 [123] | B1 | 0.01 | 77 |
R125 | 120.02 | 3.6177 | 66.023 | 396 [124] | A1 | 0 | 3420 | |
R1270 | 42.08 | 4.66 | 92.4 | - | A3 | 0 | ~20 | |
R134a | 102.032 | 4.06 | 101.1 | 350–370 [122] | A1 | 0 | 1430 | |
R143a | 84.04 | 3.761 | 72.71 | >350 [125] | A2 | 0 | 4400 | |
HFC | R152a | 66.051 | 4.52 | 113.3 | 160–180 [123] | A2 | 0 | 133 |
R161 | 48.06 | 5.01 | 102.1 | 427 [126] | A3 | 0 | 12 | |
R22 | 86.468 | 4.99 | 96.145 | - | A1 | 0.055 | 1700 | |
R227ea | 170.03 | 2.925 | 101.75 | >425 [125] | A1 | 0 | 3300 | |
R236fa | 152.04 | 3.2 | 124.92 | 380–400 [123] | A1 | 0 | 9820 | |
R32 | 52.024 | 5.782 | 78.1 | 570–590 [127] | A2 | 0 | 675 | |
R404a | 97.60 | 3.735 | 72.12 | - | - | 0 | 3700 | |
R407c | 86.20 | 4.632 | 86.2 | - | A1 | 0 | 1530 | |
R41 | 34.03 | 5.897 | 44.13 | - | - | 0 | 107 | |
R410a | 72.58 | 4.901 | 71.34 | - | A1 | 0 | 1730 |
Method | Strengths | Weaknesses |
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Conventional method |
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Combined cycle |
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CO mixture |
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Wang, X.; Zhang, L.; Zhu, Z.; Hu, M.; Wang, J.; Fan, X. Performance Improvement Overview of the Supercritical Carbon Dioxide Brayton Cycle. Processes 2023, 11, 2795. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr11092795
Wang X, Zhang L, Zhu Z, Hu M, Wang J, Fan X. Performance Improvement Overview of the Supercritical Carbon Dioxide Brayton Cycle. Processes. 2023; 11(9):2795. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr11092795
Chicago/Turabian StyleWang, Xurong, Longwei Zhang, Zhenhua Zhu, Mingjiang Hu, Jing Wang, and Xiaowei Fan. 2023. "Performance Improvement Overview of the Supercritical Carbon Dioxide Brayton Cycle" Processes 11, no. 9: 2795. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr11092795
APA StyleWang, X., Zhang, L., Zhu, Z., Hu, M., Wang, J., & Fan, X. (2023). Performance Improvement Overview of the Supercritical Carbon Dioxide Brayton Cycle. Processes, 11(9), 2795. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr11092795