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Optimisation of feedwater heaters and geothermal preheater in fossil-geothermal hybrid power plant

Sufficient energy supply is a fundamental necessity for the stimulation of socio-economic advancement. However, the current rapid rise in urbanisation has resulted in the significant increase in energy demands. Consequently, the current conventional energy supply systems are facing numerous challeng...

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Main Author: Nsanzubuhoro, Christa
Other Authors: Bello-Ochende, Tunde
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Mechanical Engineering 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Nsanzubuhoro, Christa
author2 Bello-Ochende, Tunde
author_browse Bello-Ochende, Tunde
Nsanzubuhoro, Christa
author_facet Bello-Ochende, Tunde
Nsanzubuhoro, Christa
author_sort Nsanzubuhoro, Christa
collection Thesis
description Sufficient energy supply is a fundamental necessity for the stimulation of socio-economic advancement. However, the current rapid rise in urbanisation has resulted in the significant increase in energy demands. Consequently, the current conventional energy supply systems are facing numerous challenges in meeting the world's growing demand for energy sustainably. Thus, there is an urgent and compelling need to develop innovative, more effective ways to integrate sustainable renewable energy solutions into the already existing systems or better yet, create new systems that all together make use of renewable energy. This research aims to investigate and establish the optimum working conditions of a feedwater heater and geothermal preheater in a power plant that makes use of both renewable and non-renewable energy resources, where renewable energy (geothermal energy) is used to boost the power output in an environmentally sustainable way. Henceforth, a simplified model of a Rankine cycle with single reheat and regeneration and another model with a geothermal preheater substituting the low-pressure feedwater heater were designed. The Engineering Equations Solver (EES) software was used to perform an analysis of the thermodynamic performance of the two models designed. The models were used to analyse the energetic and exergetic effects of replacing a low-pressure feedwater heater with a geothermal preheater sourcing heat from a low temperature geothermal resource (temperature generally < 150°C). The results of this research work reveal that the replacement of the low-pressure feedwater heater with a geothermal preheater increases the power generated since less heat is bled from the low-pressure turbine (allowing more heat energy from the steam to be converted into mechanical energy in the turbine). Applying the principle of the Second Law of thermodynamics analysis, the Number of Entropy Generation Units (EGU) and Entropy Generation Minimisation (EGM) analysis were employed to optimise the designed hybrid system. The feedwater heaters and geothermal preheater were modelled as counter-flow heat exchangers and a downhole co-axial heat exchanger, respectively. The feedwater heaters were optimised by means of the method of Number of Entropy Generation Units whereas the geothermal preheater was optimised by means of the Entropy Generation Minimisation analysis method. Owing to the optimisation of these components, the operating conditions of the boiler and turbines were secondarily improved. Overall, this research emphasises the impact renewable energy has on major power plant systems that are in operation and run on non-renewables.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/31128
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:36.207Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
publishDateSort 2020
publisher Department of Mechanical Engineering
publisherStr Department of Mechanical Engineering
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/31128 Optimisation of feedwater heaters and geothermal preheater in fossil-geothermal hybrid power plant Nsanzubuhoro, Christa Bello-Ochende, Tunde Malan, Arnaud Engineering Sufficient energy supply is a fundamental necessity for the stimulation of socio-economic advancement. However, the current rapid rise in urbanisation has resulted in the significant increase in energy demands. Consequently, the current conventional energy supply systems are facing numerous challenges in meeting the world's growing demand for energy sustainably. Thus, there is an urgent and compelling need to develop innovative, more effective ways to integrate sustainable renewable energy solutions into the already existing systems or better yet, create new systems that all together make use of renewable energy. This research aims to investigate and establish the optimum working conditions of a feedwater heater and geothermal preheater in a power plant that makes use of both renewable and non-renewable energy resources, where renewable energy (geothermal energy) is used to boost the power output in an environmentally sustainable way. Henceforth, a simplified model of a Rankine cycle with single reheat and regeneration and another model with a geothermal preheater substituting the low-pressure feedwater heater were designed. The Engineering Equations Solver (EES) software was used to perform an analysis of the thermodynamic performance of the two models designed. The models were used to analyse the energetic and exergetic effects of replacing a low-pressure feedwater heater with a geothermal preheater sourcing heat from a low temperature geothermal resource (temperature generally < 150°C). The results of this research work reveal that the replacement of the low-pressure feedwater heater with a geothermal preheater increases the power generated since less heat is bled from the low-pressure turbine (allowing more heat energy from the steam to be converted into mechanical energy in the turbine). Applying the principle of the Second Law of thermodynamics analysis, the Number of Entropy Generation Units (EGU) and Entropy Generation Minimisation (EGM) analysis were employed to optimise the designed hybrid system. The feedwater heaters and geothermal preheater were modelled as counter-flow heat exchangers and a downhole co-axial heat exchanger, respectively. The feedwater heaters were optimised by means of the method of Number of Entropy Generation Units whereas the geothermal preheater was optimised by means of the Entropy Generation Minimisation analysis method. Owing to the optimisation of these components, the operating conditions of the boiler and turbines were secondarily improved. Overall, this research emphasises the impact renewable energy has on major power plant systems that are in operation and run on non-renewables. 2020-02-17T08:10:42Z 2020-02-17T08:10:42Z 2019 2020-02-17T08:09:03Z Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31128 eng application/pdf Department of Mechanical Engineering Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment
spellingShingle Engineering
Nsanzubuhoro, Christa
Optimisation of feedwater heaters and geothermal preheater in fossil-geothermal hybrid power plant
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Optimisation of feedwater heaters and geothermal preheater in fossil-geothermal hybrid power plant
title_full Optimisation of feedwater heaters and geothermal preheater in fossil-geothermal hybrid power plant
title_fullStr Optimisation of feedwater heaters and geothermal preheater in fossil-geothermal hybrid power plant
title_full_unstemmed Optimisation of feedwater heaters and geothermal preheater in fossil-geothermal hybrid power plant
title_short Optimisation of feedwater heaters and geothermal preheater in fossil-geothermal hybrid power plant
title_sort optimisation of feedwater heaters and geothermal preheater in fossil geothermal hybrid power plant
topic Engineering
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31128
work_keys_str_mv AT nsanzubuhorochrista optimisationoffeedwaterheatersandgeothermalpreheaterinfossilgeothermalhybridpowerplant