January-February 2008

From Waste Heat to Power

Closed-loop, organic Rankine-cycle plants are adding multimegawatts—without additional fuel.

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By David Engle

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Combined heating and power is a mantra of distributed energy efficiency, but how about capturing the heat to yield more power?

When the waste heat itself isn’t directly needed for warmth, using it to boil water for steam-cycle generation does make sense, provided the gain in electricity will be enough—say, 10 MW or more—to justify the capital cost, operational overhead, and maintenance.

But even in this case, suppose the given heat source is in a remote locale, as undoubtedly many thousands are—for example, at compressor stations along North America’s natural-gas network? Although lots of potentially valuable heat is roaring up those stacks, harnessing it would not be easy, and making steam wouldn’t often make sense. For one thing, abundant water would be needed—not always easy to find in the boondocks. For another, getting wastewater permits might be tough. And what if a mishap occurs in winter?

“When a steam unit goes down,” observes Ron Rebenitsch, whose job entails evaluating and developing such out-of-the-way energy projects, “parts begin to freeze up, and this will damage a lot of equipment.”

Rebenitsch, of the Basin Electric Power Cooperative (BEPC) in Bismarck, ND, is far more comfortable with four newly arriving power plants being provided by Ormat Technologies’ heat recovery generator: the Ormat Energy Converter, or OEC. Since their development in Israel several decades ago and entry into the US in 1972, OECs now boast a diverse portfolio of successful geothermal and heat-recovery projects worldwide. About 70 patents are applied in this unique system, which optimizes a closed-loop, organic Rankine cycle. The OEC design offers a range of benefits for a select power niche, covering a surprisingly broad range of applications, as the following discussion shows.

No Steam Needed
At BEPC, for example, each of Rebenitsch’s four plants with single-digit megawatt output eliminates the need for steam conversion, thus avoiding attendant water-handling problems.

As a working fluid in lieu of water, several options are available, depending on local conditions and needs. At the BEPC’s plants on the frigid northern plains, the choice was pentane. Aside from its desirable thermodynamic properties, pentane eliminates problems associated with boiler turbine plants, such as corrosion, burdensome water-conditioning, potential freezing, excessive pressures, and operator oversight. And in Rebenitsch’s case, it means “no wells to dig or maintain, no blowdown, no makeup water, and no chemical pretreatment,” he says.

Along with these advantages, the OEC can run, says one Connecticut-based proponent, on “simple waste heat, such as engine exhaust, of much lower temperature than is needed for boilers,” notes Carl Nett, an independent consulting engineer who is assisting Ormat in finding and developing new niche applications, mainly in the northeastern US. Even very modest available temperatures of, say, 300°F can be harnessed and transformed into “clean electric power without additional fuel,” he adds.

No fuel means, of course, no air emissions and typically minuscule operating costs-"on average about 0.3 to 0.4 cents per kilowatt-hour," he says.

More specifically, in order to operate, the OEC plant requires both a heating and a cooling-cycle source (water or, for the latter, air), with a temperature differential (delta-T) of about 125°F or more. With this minimal requirement, a range of sources is available—as noted, for example, the most obvious perhaps being engine exhaust heat and ambient cooling air. Other good candidates might include heat from industrial processes like cement or lime plants—or even natural hot springs.

A geothermal version of the OEC taps warm spots in the earth: Worldwide, to date, the installed base of these systems alone comes to about 900 MW, with 350 MW installed in the US.

Rather amazingly, modest heat in sufficient quantity from any of these or other sources can be directly transformed to electricity.

Ormat Vice President Dan Schochet, based at the company’s corporate headquarters in Reno, NV, explains that when the OEC unit receives liquid heat flow from any source, “it doesn’t know the difference between geothermal and something that’s been heated by gaseous waste heat,” and so, whatever the input, “it just generates electricity.”

Due to a design that minimizes “wear and tear” (for example, turbine speeds of only 1,800 rpm or so), a closed loop, and few moving parts, maintenance costs per kilowatt-hour are only a fraction of comparably powered fueled generators; and the equipment’s proven lifespan without major overhauls, notes Schochet, can exceed 20 years.

How it Works, What it Costs, How it Pays
When the OEC is tapping a higher temperature source of, say, gaseous waste heat in a recovered energy generation (REG) application, its remarkable feat begins by first using this heat to warm thermal oil to temperatures ranging (depending on the application) from 400°F to 550°F.

In designs based on lower-temperature, liquid waste heat, this first step can be bypassed.

Next, the hot fluid is pumped through piping to the OEC, where it transfers its heat to an organic working fluid, such as pentane, causing rapid evaporation.

As the pentane flashes to its inherently dry vapor phase, its pressure surges rapidly, driving a turbine.

In this closed loop, the spent vapor is then gathered and condensed back to liquid form, usually by air cooling, in a way that often further contributes heat energy to be captured and added to the turbine output.

Once in liquid phase, the working fluid cycles back to the heat-exchangers, and the process continuously repeats.

What determines the eventual power output are two things: first, the amount of available heat and its temperature (not surprisingly); and, second, the condenser cooling temperature. As Nett explains, “In an organic Rankine-cycle, the higher the temperature differential and the lower the condensing temperature, the more efficient the cycle gets.”

He illustrates by describing a very early (if uncharacteristically exotic) OEC project built in El Paso, TX, where the delta-T was provided by a salt-gradient solar pond. Nett recounts of this plant, built over two decades ago: “Solar rays heated salt water at the bottom of the pond to 160°F to 200°F—sufficient to flash the motive fluid even at 160°F.”

Then, matched against this was “much cooler, nearly salt-free water at the pond’s surface, with near-ambient air temperature,” he says.

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The resulting delta-T averaged around  100°F—“allowing the OEC to successfully generate power,” he notes. “The pond stored energy from day through night and even into colder cloudy periods,” and the system ran for 15 years.

This example also illustrates that, designwise, OECs are customized and site-specific in matching available heat and cooling sources. Next Page >

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