J.R. Geschwindt, L.J. Lommers, F.H. Southworth, F. Shahrokhi
Nuclear Engineering and Design, Volume 251, October 2012, Pages 297-300
Abstract
This paper assesses performance of a high temperature reactor (HTR) coupled with a Rankine cycle cogeneration plant which simultaneously produces moderate temperature steam and electricity for a process heat application. Understanding the trade-offs of configurations on the performance and complexity of an HTR cogeneration application will help further HTR commercialization.
Results indicate that the trade-off between process steam and electricity production is nearly linear. For a 300 °C process steam production temperature every 1 kg/s increase in steam production leads to a 1 MWe reduction in electricity production. For pure electricity production an acceptable cycle efficiency of 46% is achieved. When steam-to-steam reheat is added, cycle efficiency marginally improves to 46.2%, but low pressure turbine exhaust quality dramatically improves from 78% to 95%.
The application of an HTR for a cogeneration plant appears feasible, but a more detailed extension of this analysis is required. Future work should include a more complete cogeneration plant with additional feedwater heaters, moisture separators, and high pressure and low pressure reboilers.
Go to Journal
Advances in Engineering Advances in Engineering features breaking research judged by Advances in Engineering advisory team to be of key importance in the Engineering field. Papers are selected from over 10,000 published each week from most peer reviewed journals.