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Low temperature difference electricity generation using ORC

conference contribution
posted on 2024-10-31, 09:35 authored by Matthew Bryson, Christopher Dixon, Simon St Hill, Vikram Joshi
Many geothermal sites in Australia have low temperature water as an available heat source. Often this temperature is under 75°C, in conditions where ambient temperatures can climb into the mid 30°s on a regular basis. These heat sources have often been considered to have an insufficient temperature difference, with respect to the atmospheric heat sink, to be worthwhile for driving a heat engine. As the temperature difference reduces, the maximum achievable efficiency must also reduce as demonstrated by classical thermodynamics. Thus, as the temperature difference drops, it is a matter of improving component efficiencies while reducing costs to make such systems viable. Lower temperature systems frequently use an Organic Rankine Cycle (ORC) heat engine. As the temperatures drop, the key parameters in the design of such systems become cost and efficiency. Of prime importance is the cost of the expander, efficiency of the heat exchangers, and the precision of the control system. The main investigations presented are: The reduction in system cost through selection of alternatives to turbine expanders. The selection of an optimised working fluid for low temperature operation.

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    ISBN - Is published in 9781921672286 (urn:isbn:9781921672286)
  2. 2.

Start page

1

End page

6

Total pages

6

Outlet

Proceedings of the 2009 Australian geothermal energy conference

Editors

A. Bud, H. Gurgenci

Name of conference

2009 Australian geothermal energy conference

Publisher

Geoscience Australia

Place published

Canberra, Australia

Start date

2009-11-10

End date

2009-11-13

Language

English

Former Identifier

2006017959

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2011-12-08