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Title: Quantity, Quality, and Availability of Waste Heat from United States Thermal Power Generation

Abstract

Secondary application of unconverted heat produced during electric power generation has the potential to improve the life-cycle fuel efficiency of the electric power industry and the sectors it serves. Here this work quantifies the residual heat (also known as waste heat) generated by U.S. thermal power plants and assesses the intermittency and transport issues that must be considered when planning to utilize this heat. Combining Energy Information Administration plant-level data with literature-reported process efficiency data, we develop estimates of the unconverted heat flux from individual U.S. thermal power plants in 2012. Together these power plants discharged an estimated 18.9 billion GJth of residual heat in 2012, 4% of which was discharged at temperatures greater than 90 °C. We also characterize the temperature, spatial distribution, and temporal availability of this residual heat at the plant level and model the implications for the technical and economic feasibility of its end use. Increased implementation of flue gas desulfurization technologies at coal-fired facilities and the higher quality heat generated in the exhaust of natural gas fuel cycles are expected to increase the availability of residual heat generated by 10.6% in 2040.

Authors:
 [1];  [1]
  1. Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA (United States)
Publication Date:
Research Org.:
Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA (United States)
Sponsoring Org.:
USDOE Office of Fossil Energy (FE)
OSTI Identifier:
1185151
Grant/Contract Number:  
FE0024008
Resource Type:
Accepted Manuscript
Journal Name:
Environmental Science and Technology
Additional Journal Information:
Journal Volume: 745; Journal Issue: C; Journal ID: ISSN 0013-936X
Publisher:
American Chemical Society (ACS)
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English
Subject:
29 ENERGY PLANNING, POLICY, AND ECONOMY; 32 ENERGY CONSERVATION, CONSUMPTION, AND UTILIZATION; byproducts; coal; fuel; heat transfer; power

Citation Formats

Gingerich, Daniel B, and Mauter, Meagan S. Quantity, Quality, and Availability of Waste Heat from United States Thermal Power Generation. United States: N. p., 2015. Web. doi:10.1021/es5060989.
Gingerich, Daniel B, & Mauter, Meagan S. Quantity, Quality, and Availability of Waste Heat from United States Thermal Power Generation. United States. https://doi.org/10.1021/es5060989
Gingerich, Daniel B, and Mauter, Meagan S. Wed . "Quantity, Quality, and Availability of Waste Heat from United States Thermal Power Generation". United States. https://doi.org/10.1021/es5060989. https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/1185151.
@article{osti_1185151,
title = {Quantity, Quality, and Availability of Waste Heat from United States Thermal Power Generation},
author = {Gingerich, Daniel B and Mauter, Meagan S},
abstractNote = {Secondary application of unconverted heat produced during electric power generation has the potential to improve the life-cycle fuel efficiency of the electric power industry and the sectors it serves. Here this work quantifies the residual heat (also known as waste heat) generated by U.S. thermal power plants and assesses the intermittency and transport issues that must be considered when planning to utilize this heat. Combining Energy Information Administration plant-level data with literature-reported process efficiency data, we develop estimates of the unconverted heat flux from individual U.S. thermal power plants in 2012. Together these power plants discharged an estimated 18.9 billion GJth of residual heat in 2012, 4% of which was discharged at temperatures greater than 90 °C. We also characterize the temperature, spatial distribution, and temporal availability of this residual heat at the plant level and model the implications for the technical and economic feasibility of its end use. Increased implementation of flue gas desulfurization technologies at coal-fired facilities and the higher quality heat generated in the exhaust of natural gas fuel cycles are expected to increase the availability of residual heat generated by 10.6% in 2040.},
doi = {10.1021/es5060989},
journal = {Environmental Science and Technology},
number = C,
volume = 745,
place = {United States},
year = {Wed Jun 10 00:00:00 EDT 2015},
month = {Wed Jun 10 00:00:00 EDT 2015}
}