Overview
FrançaisABSTRACT
In the framework of the ecological transition towards very low greenhouse gas emission by 2050, this paper deals with the CO2 capture technologies in the industrial installations of energy production from fossil fuels. Three options are considered : the CO2 removal from flue gas or post-combustion capture, removal of carbon from the fuel itself or pre-combustion capture and oxy-fuel combustion technologies using pure oxygen as fuel oxydizer and CO2 itself as working fluid. Capture results in a loss of efficiency at a given power output and consequently an increase in fuel consumption and CO2 emision. Oxy-combustion systems will be presented in more details since they are the nearest to « zero emission technologies ».
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Philippe MATHIEU: Honorary Professor, University of Liège, Belgium
INTRODUCTION
Following COP21 in Paris and then COP24, countries around the world agreed to limit the rise in the planet's average temperature to 1.5°C by 2050 by cancelling greenhouse gas emissions, particularly CO 2 emissions. That leaves a good ten years to reach such a target, if it's still realistic under current political conditions with coal use either maintained by extending the operation of existing power plants (USA, China, India, Poland....), or stepped up by replacing nuclear power plants (Germany). In any case, the strategy of a massive and rapid reduction in CO 2 emissions implies the implementation of CO 2 capture and storage in power plants, mainly coal-fired but also natural gas-fired, according to one of the COP24 recommendations.
The three technologies examined in this article are post-combustion carbon capture (in the flue gas), pre-combustion carbon capture (fuel decarbonization) and oxy-combustion. The latter applies to pure-oxygen combustion in boilers and combined-cycle gas turbines, and is highly attractive as the closest thing to "zero emissions".
Currently, the most mature carbon capture technique used in industry is amine absorption of the CO 2 present in post-combustion fumes. It is the most suitable for the scale of power plants of several hundred MW.
To separate CO 2 , derived from the use of fossil fuels (in this case coal and natural gas), from one or more other components in a gas mixture, energy (thermal or electrical) must be used, which depends on the molar mass of the components and their concentration. This separation energy will therefore reduce the net energy produced by the power plant and for a fixed power output, reduce efficiency and increase fuel consumption, and therefore paradoxically increase the amount of CO 2 generated
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KEYWORDS
CO2 capture | pulverized coal plant | NGCC plant | oxy-fuel combustion | IGCC plant
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Physics of energy
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