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Journal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power-transactions of The Asme | 2015

Organic Rankine Cycle Power Systems: From the Concept to Current Technology, Applications, and an Outlook to the Future

Piero Colonna; Emiliano Casati; Carsten Trapp; Tiemo Mathijssen; Jaakko Larjola; Teemu Turunen-Saaresti; Antti Uusitalo

The cumulative global capacity of organic Rankine cycle (ORC) power systems for the conversion of renewable and waste thermal energy is undergoing a rapid growth and is estimated to be approx. 2000 MWe considering only installations that went into operation after 1995. The potential for the conversion of the thermal power coming from liquid-dominated geothermal reservoirs, waste heat from primary engines or industrial processes, biomass combustion, and concentrated solar radiation into electricity is arguably enormous. ORC technology is possibly the most flexible in terms of capacity and temperature level and is currently often the only applicable technology for the conversion of external thermal energy sources. In addition, ORC power systems are suitable for the cogeneration of heating and/or cooling, another advantage in the framework of distributed power generation. Related research and development is therefore very lively. These considerations motivated the effort documented in this article, aimed at providing consistent information about the evolution, state, and future of this power conversion technology. First, basic theoretical elements on the thermodynamic cycle, working fluid, and design aspects are illustrated, together with an evaluation of the advantages and disadvantages in comparison to competing technologies. An overview of the long history of the development of ORC power systems follows, in order to place the more recent evolution into perspective. Then, a compendium of the many aspects of the state of the art is illustrated: the solutions currently adopted in commercial plants and the main-stream applications, including information about exemplary installations. A classification and terminology for ORC power plants are proposed. An outlook on the many research and development activities is provided, whereby information on new high-impact applications, such as automotive heat recovery is included. Possible directions of future developments are highlighted, ranging from efforts targeting volume-produced stationary and mobile mini-ORC systems with a power output of few kWe, up to large MWe base-load ORC plants.


Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research | 2017

Dynamics of Postcombustion CO2 Capture Plants: Modeling, Validation, and Case Study

Adam van de Haar; Carsten Trapp; Kai Wellner; Robert de Kler; Gerhard Schmitz; Piero Colonna

The capture of CO2 from power plant flue gases provides an opportunity to mitigate emissions that are harmful to the global climate. While the process of CO2 capture using an aqueous amine solution is well-known from experience in other technical sectors (e.g., acid gas removal in the gas processing industry), its operation combined with a power plant still needs investigation because in this case, the interaction with power plants that are increasingly operated dynamically poses control challenges. This article presents the dynamic modeling of CO2 capture plants followed by a detailed validation using transient measurements recorded from the pilot plant operated at the Maasvlakte power station in the Netherlands. The model predictions are in good agreement with the experimental data related to the transient changes of the main process variables such as flow rate, CO2 concentrations, temperatures, and solvent loading. The validated model was used to study the effects of fast power plant transients on the capture plant operation. A relevant result of this work is that an integrated CO2 capture plant might enable more dynamic operation of retrofitted fossil fuel power plants because the large amount of steam needed by the capture process can be diverted rapidly to and from the power plant.


Energy Procedia | 2011

Developments in the pre-combustion CO2 capture pilot plant at the Buggenum IGCC

Kay Damen; Radoslaw Gnutek; Joost Kaptein; Nawin Ryan Nannan; Bernardo Oyarzún; Carsten Trapp; Piero Colonna; Eric van Dijk; Joachim Gross; André Bardow


International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control | 2015

Dynamic modelling and validation of pre-combustion CO2 absorption based on a pilot plant at the Buggenum IGCC power station

Carsten Trapp; Carlo De Servi; Francesco Casella; André Bardow; Piero Colonna


Journal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power-transactions of The Asme | 2013

Efficiency Improvement in Precombustion CO2 Removal Units With a Waste–Heat Recovery ORC Power Plant

Carsten Trapp; Piero Colonna


Fuel | 2015

Design optimization of a pre-combustion CO2 capture plant embedding experimental knowledge

Carsten Trapp; Timon Thomaser; H.A.J. van Dijk; Piero Colonna


Energy Procedia | 2014

Performance and Modelling of the Pre-combustion Capture Pilot Plant at the Buggenum IGCC

K. Damen; Richard Faber; R. Gnutek; H.A.J. van Dijk; Carsten Trapp; L. Valenz


international modelica conference | 2014

Interfacing Models for Thermal Separation Processes with Fluid Property Data from External Sources

Kai Wellner; Carsten Trapp; Gerhard Schmitz; Francesco Casella


Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research | 2014

Dynamic Modeling and Validation of a Precombustion CO2 Capture Plant for Control Design

Carsten Trapp; Francesco Casella; Piero Colonna


international modelica conference | 2014

Use of External Fluid Property Code in Modelica for Modelling of a Pre-combustion CO2 Capture Process Involving Multi-Component; Two-Phase Fluids

Carsten Trapp; Francesco Casella; Teus van der Stelt; Piero Colonna

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Piero Colonna

Delft University of Technology

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H.A.J. van Dijk

Energy Research Centre of the Netherlands

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Emiliano Casati

Delft University of Technology

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Tiemo Mathijssen

Delft University of Technology

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Antti Uusitalo

Lappeenranta University of Technology

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Jaakko Larjola

Lappeenranta University of Technology

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Teemu Turunen-Saaresti

Lappeenranta University of Technology

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Gerhard Schmitz

Hamburg University of Technology

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