2016 AIChE Annual Meeting
(471a) Systematic Process Design Strategies for Efficient and Synergistic Integration of Solar Thermal Hydrogen, Electricity and Fresh Water Production Processes
Authors
Here, we introduce an integrated process design strategy based on the hydricity concept for the coproduction of fresh water, hydrogen and electricity from concentrated solar thermal energy. Process simulations for the proposed integration are performed in an integrated Matlab and Aspen Plus platform [4]. The operating conditions of various units and topological structure of the integrated process are determined via sensitivity analysis and optimization in Matlab. Detailed process simulations of thermal desalination processes are validated by comparison with performance data from the current operating desalination plants. The resultant desalination processes are further integrated with solar thermal electricity and hydrogen processes to coproduce electricity, hydrogen and fresh water. Standalone and integrated solar conversion processes are evaluated based on the process energy efficiency and exergy efficiencythat refers to the fraction of incident solar exergy that is directly recovered as the net exergy output, which is defined as the sum of electricity and the hydrogen exergy output. We have identified exergetically inefficient steps and implemented new process designs to improve the thermal efficiency of standalone solar desalination processes.
The integration of solar thermal power generation, solar thermal hydrogen production and thermal desalination techniques reduces exergy losses associated with each one of the standalone processes and thus provide a synergistic strategy. The implementation of the proposed process synthesis strategy results in efficient solar thermal process designs, which coproduce i) baseload power, ii) fresh water, and iii) hydrogen. Depending on the targeted end-use, hydrogen can be used as an energy career, transportation fuel, feedstock for the production of chemicals, fuels or fertilizers for food production. Coproduced products can supply all FEW needs unveiling a sustainability roadmap.
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