Integral fuel and heat sink refrigerant synthesis for prime movers and liquefiers
10384926 ยท 2019-08-20
Inventors
Cpc classification
F25J1/0225
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02E50/10
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F25J2210/80
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2270/0171
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/004
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J2205/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0012
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J2270/908
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0275
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2265/066
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0202
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J2260/30
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0282
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J2210/66
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02E20/14
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F17C2223/033
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C3/34
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0035
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B67D7/0498
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F02C3/28
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2270/0581
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0284
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0045
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J2220/66
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J2260/60
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2221/031
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02E20/16
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F17C2225/046
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0236
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C2223/0161
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C5/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0221
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0022
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F17C9/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0228
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C6/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F25J1/0283
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
B67D7/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F02C3/34
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C3/28
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C6/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A system for renewable energy storage, providing integral synthesis of heat source cryo-fuel and heat sink refrigerant for distributed electric generation and motor vehicle prime movers and refrigerant liquefiers. Fuel synthesis is by gasification and anaerobic digestion of organic feedstock with heat recovery to drive thermo-chemical reactor and air and fuel liquefiers.
Claims
1. An energy system comprising integral heat source fuel and heat sink refrigerant synthesis, said system comprising: a combustor, wherein said combustor is fueled by a fuel; a GT-generator powered by combustion of the fuel by said combustor, wherein said GT-generator produces exhaust comprising exhaust heat; an over-ambient recuperator into which the exhaust flows, wherein said over-ambient recuperator transfers at least a portion of the exhaust heat and discharges the exhaust that has been cooled; an air port that allows atmospheric air to be introduced into said system; a sub-ambient recuperator into which the atmospheric air and at least a portion of the exhaust flows and is regeneratively cooled, wherein said sub-ambient recuperator produces dry ice; a GT-sink that further cools circulating air; a GT-compressor that pressurizes circulating air, wherein said GT-compressor is cooled by the circulating air from said GT-sink, wherein the circulating air that has been pressurized continues back through said sub-ambient recuperator, then said over-ambient recuperator, then said combustor; an air liquefier, comprising: an air liquefier valve that controls a flow of a liquefied syngas mixture entering said air liquefier; a sub-cooler that uses the liquefied syngas mixture that passed through said air liquefier valve to cool air; an air expander through which at least the air that has been cooled by said sub-cooler passes, wherein said air expander expands the air; an air separator that separates liquid air from products of the expansion of said air expander; a liquid air dewar that stores the liquid air separated by said air separator; and an air liquefier compressor that compresses remaining products of the expansion of said air expander; and means for producing fuel.
2. The system as claimed in claim 1, where said means for producing fuel comprises: an air booster compressor that boosts air pressure from said air liquefier compressor of said air liquefier; an air valve that controls a flow of the air from said air liquefier and provides the air to said air booster compressor; an air blown gasifier that receives the air from said air booster compressor and partially combusts feedstock and char, wherein the combustion converts the feedstock into pressurized syngas; a syngas separator that separates the syngas from said air blown gasifier into at least purified syngas; a fuel cooler that cools the purified pressurized syngas; a steam circuit, comprising: a feed-pump that supplies water; a steam generator that uses heat from the char combusted by said air blown gasifier to convert the water from said feed-pump into steam; and a fuel synthesis turbine-generator that is driven by the steam and provides power to at least said air liquefier compressor of said air liquefier; an expansion magnetic liquefier that receives the cooled pressurized syngas from said fuel cooler and liquefies a non-hydrogen portion of the syngas producing at least a liquid methane product and a liquefied syngas mixture; a liquid methane dewar that contains liquid methane; and a liquid methane valve that controls a flow of the liquid methane in and out of said liquid methane dewar, including in from said expansion magnetic liquefier.
3. The system as claimed in claim 2, wherein said fuel synthesis turbine-generator of said steam circuit of said means for producing fuel further provides power to at least one of said feed-pump of said steam circuit, said air valve, said air booster compressor, and said expansion magnetic liquefier.
4. The system as claimed in claim 2, wherein the liquefied syngas mixture is provided for coolant in turn to said GT-sink and to said air liquefier via said air liquefier valve.
5. The system as claimed in claim 2, wherein the char that is partially combusted by said air blown gasifier recirculates through at least said steam generator of said steam circuit.
6. The system as claimed in claim 2, wherein slag is discharged from said air blown gasifier.
7. The system as claimed in claim 2, wherein said syngas separator separates the syngas into purified syngas, carbon dioxide gas, and impurities and wherein said syngas separator discharges the carbon dioxide gas and impurities.
8. The system as claimed in claim 2, wherein water is discharged from said over-ambient recuperator.
9. The system as claimed in claim 8, wherein the water discharged from said over-ambient recuperator is provided to said fuel cooler of said means for producing fuel.
10. The system as claimed in claim 2, wherein said fuel cooler is supplied with water.
11. The system as claimed in claim 2, wherein said expansion magnetic liquefier is pre-cooled by dry ice.
12. The system as claimed in claim 2, wherein the dry ice produced by said sub-ambient recuperator is provided to said expansion magnetic liquefier of said means for producing fuel for cooling.
13. The system as claimed in claim 2, wherein the syngas mixture is the fuel that fuels said combustor.
14. The system as claimed in claim 2, further comprising a vehicle that receives liquid methane from said liquid methane dewar.
15. The system as claimed in claim 1, wherein said means for producing fuel comprises: an oxygen blown gasifier that partially combusts feedstock and char, wherein the combustion converts the feedstock into pressurized syngas; a syngas separator that separates the syngas from said oxygen blown gasifier into at least purified syngas and oxygen and discharges carbon dioxide; a fuel cooler that cools the purified pressurized syngas; a thermo-chemical reactor that is heated by char recirculating from said oxygen blown gasifier and that converts sulfuric acid and water into at least reactor oxygen and reactor hydrogen; a hydrogen converter that converts at least a portion of the reactor hydrogen and carbon dioxide discharged from at least said syngas separator into liquid methane; a liquid methane dewar that contains liquid methane and receives the liquid methane from said hydrogen converter; and a liquid methane valve that controls a flow of the liquid methane in and out of said liquid methane dewar, including in from said hydrogen converter.
16. The system as claimed in claim 15, further comprising at least two expansion magnetic liquefiers, wherein: a first expansion magnetic liquefier receives oxygen from said fuel cooler and liquefies the oxygen and the liquefied oxygen is provided to said GT-sink and said oxygen blown gasifier; and a second expansion magnetic liquefier receives syngas from said fuel cooler and liquefies a non-hydrogen portion of the syngas into a liquefied syngas mixture and the liquefied syngas mixture is provided to said GT-sink and to said sub-cooler via said air liquefier valve.
17. The system as claimed in claim 16, wherein said first and second expansion magnetic liquefiers discharge carbon dioxide and the carbon dioxide discharged from said first and second expansion magnetic liquefiers is provided to said hydrogen converter.
18. The system as claimed in claim 16, wherein the syngas mixture is the fuel that fuels said combustor.
19. The system as claimed in claim 15, further comprising a hydrogen valve that controls a flow of the reactor hydrogen from said thermo-chemical reactor, wherein a portion of the reactor hydrogen bypasses said hydrogen converter and travels through said hydrogen valve to enrich the purified syngas flowing between said syngas separator and said fuel cooler.
20. The system as claimed in claim 19, further comprising an oxygen valve, wherein excess oxygen is discharged from said system through said oxygen valve.
21. The system as claimed in claim 15, further comprising a photo-voltaic panel that provides power to at least said air liquefier compressor of said air liquefier.
22. The system as claimed in claim 15, further comprising a steam circuit comprising: a feed-pump that supplies water; a steam generator that uses heat from the char combusted by said oxygen blown gasifier to convert the water from said feed-pump into steam; and a fuel synthesis turbine-generator that is driven by the steam and provides power to at least said air liquefier compressor of said air liquefier.
23. The system as claimed in claim 15, further comprising a station that receives liquid methane from said liquid methane dewar.
24. The system as claimed in claim 1, further comprising a vehicle that receives liquid air from said liquid air dewar.
25. The system as claimed in claim 1, further comprising a station that receives liquid air from said liquid air dewar.
26. The system as claimed in claim 1, further comprising a station that receives dry ice from said sub-ambient recuperator.
27. The system as claimed in claim 1, further comprising a vehicle that receives dry ice from said sub-ambient recuperator.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(5) As a preface, it should be noted that all physical system components are referred to with an even reference number and all fluid compounds that move amongst the physical components are referred to with an odd reference number. Regardless of reference number, features with the same name are substantially the same features throughout the Figures. In addition, similar features that include reference numbers in some but not all Figures should be considered to be substantially similar features. Dashed lines illustrate electric connection between controllable generators, motors, compressors and valves. Finally, it is noted that when a specific model or distributor of a system component is included, this inclusion is merely exemplary and comparable components may be substituted.
(6) Referring first to
(7) Recuperators 114, 116 are heat exchangers. Heat is recovered from the atmospheric flow path to the compressed flow path through the recuperators. The over-ambient recuperator 116 recovers exhaust heat to the over-ambient compressed flow. The sub-ambient recuperator 114 recovers heat of intake air to the sub-ambient compressed flow. The sub-ambient recuperator 114 is an innovation that utilizes liquid air to provide sub-ambient cooling, which reduces compression work due to the increased density of the colder flow. With a sub-ambient recuperator, compression work is reduced from about 55% of GT output to 15%. Accordingly, fuel consumption is reduced by over 300%. The challenge is then to find renewable energy means to efficiently liquefy air. The present invention does this by utilizing fuel synthesis energy from an organic (non-wood) fueled anaerobic digester and from a wood fueled gasifier. In the former, dry ice provides pre-cooling of an air liquefier and of a photo-voltaic panel. In the latter, gasifier (air or oxygen blown) pressure reduces air liquefier work input.
(8) Liquid methane 103 is provided to combustor 118 from liquid methane dewar 112 via liquid methane valve 122, which controls the flow of methane 103. Liquid methane 103 may be transferred to methane dewar 112 from external sources, such as those described with reference to
(9) Air liquefaction system 108 includes vehicle draft cooler 124, air liquefaction compressor 126, and magnetic liquefier 128. Atmospheric intake air 107b (referred to as second air in the claims) is cooled in vehicle draft cooler 124 and then compressed by an air liquefaction compressor 126. It is noted that air 107a discussed with respect to core GT system 98 above and air 107b discussed here are both ambient air around system 100, but as air 107a and 107b enter system 100 through different channels, they have been labeled slightly differently in
(10) As shown in
(11) The design point is assumed for a 1600 kg (3500 lb) compact hybrid car with drag coefficient of 0.29, frontal area of 2.2 m.sup.2 (24 ft.sup.2), requiring 8 kW (10.7 HP) to overcome wind and rolling resistance. Gas turbine efficiency is 50% at 50,000 rpm with turbine compression ratio of 1.3; turbine inlet gas temperature of 825 C. (1515 F.); air compressor inlet temperature of 173 C. (280 F.); and heat exchanger effectiveness of 90%. Under these conditions fuel consumption is 0.8 kg/hr (1.8 lb/hr) and liquid air consumption is 16 kg/hr (35 lb/hr). Approximately 2.2 kg/day (5.0 lb/day) of exhaust carbon dioxide is deposed to dry ice by the evaporating air and extracted for supplementary cooling of the on-vehicle liquefier. Gasoline equivalent fuel consumption is estimated at 61 km/L (145 mpg). For comparison, a typical reciprocating engine in the same application has a cycle efficiency of 18% at 5,000 rpm and compression ratio of 10.
(12) Assumed deceleration recovery of the hybrid transmission is 33% at 80 km/hr (50 mph). Thus, the liquefier will deliver 8 kg/day (17.5 lb/day) of liquid air, requiring import of an equal quantity to meet the average daily requirement.
(13) A small [e.g., 28 kWe (21 HP) peak] recuperated gas turbine, which can be modified to incorporate cryogenic compression features of the present invention, is available from the Capstone Corporation of Chatsworth, Calif. A small magneto-caloric liquefier is available from Cooltech Applications of Strasbourg, France.
(14) The following
(15) Referring now to
(16) A photo-voltaic panel 230 provides electric output, while powering bio-gas condenser 232 fed bio-gas from anaerobic digester 234, and powering the liquefier compressor 246 of vapor-compression air liquefier 236. Dry ice 217 from condenser 232 and supplemental dry ice 219 from external sources provide heat sink cooling of panel 230, as well as pre-cooling of liquefier 236 via a dry ice valve 238.
(17) Digester 234 converts organic feedstock 221 to product bio-gas 223, while discharging impurities 225. Feedstock 221 is non-wood organic material, such as leaves and grass. The bio-gas, a typical mixture of 30% methane and 70% carbon dioxide by weight, is condensed to product liquid methane 203 and dry ice 217 in condenser 232. The liquid methane 203 is drawn off to dewar 212 via a methane valve 222 and the dry ice 217 is circulated for cooling. Condenser 232 operates by circulation of methane gas 227, which cools the carbon dioxide portion to dry ice 217 and separates it in a separating heat exchanger 242, while a portion of separated carbon dioxide 213 pre-cools the entering bio-gas in a bio-gas pre-cooler 244. Condenser 232 may be the bio-mass cryo-condensing system proposed by Nachtmann, as disclosed above. The liquid methane 203 is discharged to dewar 212 for motor vehicle and other use.
(18) Air liquefier 236 is a vapor-compression machine, in which circulating air 205 from a liquefier compressor 246 is pre-cooled by dry ice 217 in an air sub-cooler 248. The circulating air 205 entering the compressor 246 is also cooled by circulating air 205 coming from a liquid air separator 254, where it is sub-cooled before re-entering compressor 205 via air chiller 250, as discussed below. Air 205 then discharges through an air expander 252 that liquefies the cooled air 205 through expansion cooling to enter separator 254. Air expander 252 is a two-phase turbine expander designed to handle cavitating flow. A liquid product portion 201 is drawn off from separator 254 to an air dewar 210 via a liquid air valve 220. The non-liquid air portion 205 from separator 254 sub-cools air 205 before re-entering compressor 246. Pressurized make-up atmospheric intake air 207 is introduced to liquefier 236 through an air port 256 and combines with air 205 to enter expander 252.
(19) As shown in
(20) The design point is assumed for 40 kWh capacity, equally divided between input from the local grid and the photo-voltaic panel.
(21) Performance of the air liquefaction circuit operating in conjunction with the bio-gas separation and condensation circuit of the on-grid station is further exemplified. The example assumes that liquid air and fuel output is sufficient to supply one motor vehicle and to provide 32 kWh/day on-site power.
(22) Operation of the air liquefaction circuit is described as follows:
(23) 1. Quasi-isentropic compression of circulating air to 65 C. (85 F.) at 1.5 MPa (15 atm);
(24) 2. Pre-cooling of circulating air to 160 C. (255 F.) in the air sub-cooler by sublimating dry ice recirculating to the digester;
(25) 3. Cooling of combined circulating air and make-up air in the air chiller by return of circulating air entering the liquefier compressor;
(26) 4. Expansion cooling of combined circulating air and make-up air through the expander to form liquid air at 190 C. (310 F.) in the liquefier separator and;
(27) 5. Discharge of liquid air to the dewar while the recirculating vapor portion enters the air chiller.
(28) The station air liquefier delivers up to 13.6 kg/day (30 lb/day) with estimated work input of 1750 kJ/kg (750 Btu/lb) of liquid air, about one-half as compared to an air liquefier without pre-cooling.
(29) Operation of the bio-gas condenser circuit is described as follows:
(30) 1. Pre-cooling of purified gas to 80 C. (112 F.) in a bio-gas pre-cooler while sublimating 20% of product dry ice to atmosphere;
(31) 2. Separation of methane and carbon dioxide at 82 C. (115 F.) in the dry ice separating recuperator, from which carbon dioxide is removed;
(32) 3. Liquefaction of methane at 150 C. (238 F.) while a vapor portion recirculates to the dry ice separating recuperator to form dry ice. The snow like dry ice is extracted and stored while the remaining carbon dioxide vapor recirculates to cool a compressed portion combined with make-up carbon dioxide gas; and
(33) 4. Expansion of the cooled and compressed methane gas in the bio-gas condenser.
(34) Cooling the photo-voltaic panel to 80 C. (110 F.) with dry ice increases its conversion efficiency by an estimated 30% [Liebert, C. et-al, Solar-Cell Performance at Low Temperatures & Simulated Solar Intensities, NASA 1969]. Accordingly, potential efficiency of the non-concentrating panels is estimated at 60%. Import of recovered dry ice deposed from stationary and motor vehicle prime movers will supplement dry ice disposed from the anaerobic digester. Estimated power required by the fuel and dry ice condenser is 2100 kJ/kg (900 Btu/lb) of liquid methane product.
(35) A 5 m.sup.2 (54 ft.sup.2) non-concentrating fixed panel provides required liquid methane and dry ice for one day based on bio-gas with two parts carbon dioxide to one part methane, and solar insolation of 6.3 kWh/daym.sup.2 (2000 Btu/dayft.sup.2). Panel area must be increased to store fuel and dry ice, as required for overcast days.
(36) Now referring to
(37) Fuel synthesis system 360 of generating station 300 includes air blown gasifier 362, air booster compressor 368, air valve 370, steam circuit 364, syngas separator 372, and cooler 380. Injected air 347 is introduced to fuel synthesis system 360 through air valve 370 and passes through air booster compressor 368. Air booster compressor 368 reduces compression work for air delivery to the gasifier 362 by boosting air pressure from liquefier compressor 326. Booster compression ratio is approximately 4. This air 347 flows to gasifier 362, where it supports incomplete combustion of wood feedstock 329 and recirculating char 343. Feedstock 329 is thus converted into raw pressurized syngas 331. Slag 349 is discharged from the bottom of gasifier 362. Syngas separator 372 separates raw syngas 331 into refined syngas 333, carbon dioxide gas 313, and impurities 325. Carbon dioxide 313 and impurities 325 are discharged from separator 372. Refined syngas 333 is then cooled in water-fed fuel cooler 380. Cooled refined syngas 333 is then provided to expansion magnetic liquefier 328, while liquid methane 303, with a higher boiling point than carbon monoxide 337, is extracted via a methane valve 322 to a methane dewar 312 for vehicle use. Fuel synthesis system 360 is a means for producing fuel. A similar means for producing fuel will be disclosed with reference to
(38) Expansion magnetic liquefier 328 liquefies the carbon monoxide, methane, and nitrogen portions of refined syngas 333, (collectively the non-hydrogen portion of the syngas) while the hydrogen portion remains a gas dissolved within the liquid portions. The liquid methane 303 is drawn off to methane dewar 312. This liquefied form of refined syngas is mixture 335.
(39) Liquefier 328 provides sensible cooling by turbine expansion followed by magneto-caloric absorption of latent heat. Liquefier 328 is pre-cooled by dry ice 317, which may be from bio-gas condensation and air liquefaction system 200, discussed in
(40) Steam gas circuit 364 of fuel synthesis system 360 includes heat recovery steam generator 374, feed-pump 376, and a fuel synthesis turbine-generator 378. In circuit 364, heat from recirculating char 343 is transferred to raise steam 345 in a heat recovery steam generator 374. Generator 374 is fed water by a feed-pump 376 and discharges steam 345 through a condensing turbine-generator 378. Condensing turbine-generator 378 provides power to air liquefier compressor 326 of station air liquefier 336, as well as to other components of fuel synthesis system 360, such as feed-pump 376, valve 370, booster compressor 368, and magnetic liquefier 328, as required. Turbine 378 also supplies water to feed-pump 376.
(41) Station air liquefier 336 of generating station 300 includes air liquefier valve 386, sub-cooler 348, air liquefier compressor 326, air expander 388, air separator 390, and air dewar 310. Station air liquefier 336 is a vapor-compression machine. Air liquefier compressor 326 compresses recirculating air 347. This compressed recirculating air 347 is combined with compressed atmospheric make-up air 307 and cooled in air sub-cooler 348 by a portion of mixture 335 under pressure of a syngas mixture pump 384 to fire combustor 318 of core GT system 98. Circulating air 395 discharges through an air expander 388 into a liquid air separator 390. A liquid air product portion 301 from separator 390 is drawn off to an air dewar 310.
(42) As disclosed with reference to
(43) As shown in
(44) Design point of the gas turbine-generator is assumed for 4 kW output. Gas turbine efficiency is 55% at 100,000 rpm with turbine compression ratio of 1.7; turbine inlet gas temperature of 894 C. (1640 F.); air compressor inlet temperature of 175 C. (280 F.) and recuperator effectiveness of 90%. Under these conditions syngas consumption is 2.3 kg/hr (5.1 lb/hr). Gas turbine compression work is about one-third, as with ambient air intake. Power to the air liquefier from the gas turbine-generator is about one-third as with a similar air liquefier due to sub-cooling by liquid fuel. Power to the syngas liquefier from the steam turbine-generator is about one-fourth as with a similar liquefier due to upstream gasifier pressure and pre-cooling by dry ice.
(45) Operation of the air blown wood gasifier at 3 MPa (30 atm) is described as follows:
(46) 1. During combustion stage, feedstock and recycled char are burned with essentially complete conversion of carbon to syngas at about 850 C. (1560 F.), while discharging molten slag, which is quenched;
(47) 2. In the final gasification stage, combustion gases provide heating of added feedstock before recirculating to the combustor at about 450 C. (840 F.), while volatile matter is extracted and residual char turns into syngas;
(48) 3. Formation of primarily liquid syngas mixture by cooling and expansion through the turbine of the expansion magnetic liquefier followed by magneto-caloric transfer of latent heat. In the magnetic liquefier, a controlled magnetic field applies cyclical magnetization-demagnetization cycles across a magneto-caloric alloy due to motion of a magneto-caloric wheel, driven by the condensing turbine-generator.
(49) 4. The syngas mixture divides and circulates, as required, to provide cooling of GT-compressor and air liquefier discharge air, while deposed dry ice from GT-generator exhaust pre-cools circulating syngas in the magnetic liquefier;
(50) 5. Liquid methane is simultaneously extracted from the magnetic liquefier.
(51) Now referring to
(52) As in
(53) Station 400 includes a fuel synthesis system 460 powered by a GT-generator 402. In system 400, air entrained wood feedstock 429, is converted to raw pressurized syngas 431 in an oxygen blown gasifier 462 and heat recovered from recirculated char 443 in conjunction with electric input drives an exemplary thermo-chemical reactor 440 to convert sulfuric acid 455 and water 411 to reactor oxygen 451 and reactor hydrogen 441. Refined syngas 433 is partially liquefied into a fuel mixture 435 including carbon monoxide, supplementary nitrogen 415, and dissolved hydrogen 441. Supplementary nitrogen 415 includes nitrogen for feedstock entertainment and for abatement of oxides of nitrogen. Reactor hydrogen 441 and carbon dioxide 413 is converted in a hydrogen converter 494 to liquid methane 403 for export, however a portion may bypass converter 494 via a hydrogen valve 496 to enrich syngas 433. The carbon dioxide 413 may be provided from discharge from syngas separator 472 or expansion magnetic liquefiers 428. Mixture 435 provides cooling of air liquefier 436 and heat sink cooling and firing of GT-generator 402. Reactor oxygen 451 supplements heat sink cooling of GT-generator 402 and supports combustion in gasifier 462, while excess oxygen 451 is discharged via an oxygen valve 498.
(54) In gasifier 462, injected oxygen 451 from liquid oxygen pump 466 supports partial combustion of feedstock 429 and recirculated char 443, while slag 449 is discharged and carbon dioxide 413 and impurities 425 are discharged from a syngas separator 472. Nitrogen entrained feedstock 429 is injected into gasifier 462 by a pressurized feedstock supply (not shown). A water fed fuel-oxygen cooler 480 cools refined syngas 433 and oxygen 451 before expansion through two magnetic liquefiers 428 in parallel arrangement, which provide liquefaction of mixture 435 and oxygen 453, respectively. Like magnetic liquefier 328, shown in
(55) Station air liquefier 436 is a vapor-compression machine similar to liquefier 336 of
(56) In GT-generator 402, make-up air 407 with circulating air 405 is regeneratively cooled, in turn, in multi-refrigerant GT-sink 482 by a portion of mixture 435 and in a sub-ambient recuperator 414 by circulating air 405 from a GT-compressor 404. Air 405 continues from recuperator 414, as described for the GT-generator of
(57) As described above, fuel cooler 480, syngas separator 472, oxygen blown gasifier 462, thermo-chemical reactor 440, and hydrogen converter 494 also comprise a means for producing fuel.
(58) Operation of the highway distributed electric, liquid air and fuel cogeneration station of
(59) Operation of the oxygen blown wood gasifier at 6 MPa (60 atm) is described as follows:
(60) 1. During combustion stage, feedstock and recycled char are burned with essentially complete conversion of carbon to syngas at about 800 C. (1470 F.), while discharging molten slag, which is quenched;
(61) 2. In the final gasification stage, combustion gases provide heating of added feedstock before recirculating to the combustor at about 450 C. (840 F.), while volatile matter is extracted and residual char turns into syngas;
(62) 3. Formation of primarily liquid syngas mixture, containing 76% carbon monoxide, 8% carbon dioxide and 3% dissolved hydrogen, by sensible cooling and expansion through the turbine of the expansion magnetic liquefier followed by magneto-caloric transfer of latent heat. In the magnetic liquefier, a controlled magnetic field applies cyclical magnetization-demagnetization cycles across a magneto-caloric alloy due to motion of a magneto-caloric wheel, driven by the GT-generator.
(63) 4. The syngas mixture divides and circulates, as required, to provide cooling of GT-compressor and air liquefier discharge air, while deposed dry ice from GT-generator exhaust pre-cools circulating syngas in the magnetic liquefier;
(64) 5. Liquid methane, formed by methanation, is simultaneously extracted from the hydrogen converter while reprocessing carbon dioxide.
(65) A gas turbine for local application is available from Capstone Corp. of Chatsworth, Ca. and a highway station size gas turbine is available from Solar Turbines of San Diego, Ca. Both of these can be modified to incorporate sub-ambient heat sink features of the present invention. Anaerobic digester and gasifier technologies are evolving, as represented by several hundred global suppliers. A home size anaerobic digester is available from Homebiogas of Los Angeles, Ca. Engineering for a commercially available highway station size gasifier is available from Gammel Engineering of Abensberg, Germany. A station size mag-liquefier from Cooltech Applications of Strasbourg, France is projected to be scaled-up from a small commercially available module prior to 2020. Thermo-chemical reactor technology is not commercially available, primarily due to difficulties with nuclear and concentrated solar heat source options. Research and development is strongly funded world-wide, and the present invention provides a promising heat source alternative.
(66) Although the present invention has been described in considerable detail with reference to certain preferred versions thereof, other versions would be readily apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art. Therefore, the spirit and scope of the description should not be limited to the description of the preferred versions contained herein.