Techno-economic optimization of a new waste-to-energy plant for electricity, cooling, and desalinated water using various biomass for emission reduction

A newly developed waste-to-energy system using a biomass combined energy system designed and taken into account for electricity generation, cooling, and freshwater production has been investigated and modeled in this project. The investigated system incorporates several different cycles, such as a b...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Chemosphere
Main Author: Hai T.; Ma X.; Singh Chauhan B.; Mahmoud S.; Al-Kouz W.; Tong J.; Salah B.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier Ltd 2023
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85165060650&doi=10.1016%2fj.chemosphere.2023.139398&partnerID=40&md5=b3ee03696a4eecd4095581d128f3e012
id 2-s2.0-85165060650
spelling 2-s2.0-85165060650
Hai T.; Ma X.; Singh Chauhan B.; Mahmoud S.; Al-Kouz W.; Tong J.; Salah B.
Techno-economic optimization of a new waste-to-energy plant for electricity, cooling, and desalinated water using various biomass for emission reduction
2023
Chemosphere
338

10.1016/j.chemosphere.2023.139398
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85165060650&doi=10.1016%2fj.chemosphere.2023.139398&partnerID=40&md5=b3ee03696a4eecd4095581d128f3e012
A newly developed waste-to-energy system using a biomass combined energy system designed and taken into account for electricity generation, cooling, and freshwater production has been investigated and modeled in this project. The investigated system incorporates several different cycles, such as a biomass waste integrated gasifier-gas turbine cycle, a high-temperature fuel cell, a Rankine cycle, an absorption refrigeration system, and a flash distillation system for seawater desalination. The EES software is employed to perform a basic analysis of the system. They are then transferred to MATLAB software to optimize and evaluate the impact of operational factors. Artificial intelligence is employed to evaluate and model the EES software's analysis output for this purpose. By enhancing the flow rate of fuel from 4 to 6.5 kg/s, the cost rate and energy efficiency are reduced by 51% and increased by 6.5%, respectively. Furthermore, the maximum increment in exergetic efficiency takes place whenever the inlet temperature of the gas turbine rises. According to an analysis of three types of biomasses, Solid Waste possesses the maximum efficiency rate, work output, and expense. Rice Husk, in contrast, has the minimum efficiency, work output, and expense. Additionally, with the change in fuel discharge and gas turbine inlet temperature, the system behavior for all three types of biomasses will be nearly identical. The Pareto front optimization findings demonstrate that the best mode for system performance is an output power of 53,512 kW, a cost of 0.643 dollars per second, and a first law efficiency of 42%. This optimal value occurs for fuel discharge of 5.125 and the maximum inlet temperature for a gas turbine. The rates of water desalination and cooling in this condition are 18.818 kg/s and 2356 kW, respectively. © 2023
Elsevier Ltd
456535
English
Article

author Hai T.; Ma X.; Singh Chauhan B.; Mahmoud S.; Al-Kouz W.; Tong J.; Salah B.
spellingShingle Hai T.; Ma X.; Singh Chauhan B.; Mahmoud S.; Al-Kouz W.; Tong J.; Salah B.
Techno-economic optimization of a new waste-to-energy plant for electricity, cooling, and desalinated water using various biomass for emission reduction
author_facet Hai T.; Ma X.; Singh Chauhan B.; Mahmoud S.; Al-Kouz W.; Tong J.; Salah B.
author_sort Hai T.; Ma X.; Singh Chauhan B.; Mahmoud S.; Al-Kouz W.; Tong J.; Salah B.
title Techno-economic optimization of a new waste-to-energy plant for electricity, cooling, and desalinated water using various biomass for emission reduction
title_short Techno-economic optimization of a new waste-to-energy plant for electricity, cooling, and desalinated water using various biomass for emission reduction
title_full Techno-economic optimization of a new waste-to-energy plant for electricity, cooling, and desalinated water using various biomass for emission reduction
title_fullStr Techno-economic optimization of a new waste-to-energy plant for electricity, cooling, and desalinated water using various biomass for emission reduction
title_full_unstemmed Techno-economic optimization of a new waste-to-energy plant for electricity, cooling, and desalinated water using various biomass for emission reduction
title_sort Techno-economic optimization of a new waste-to-energy plant for electricity, cooling, and desalinated water using various biomass for emission reduction
publishDate 2023
container_title Chemosphere
container_volume 338
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2023.139398
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85165060650&doi=10.1016%2fj.chemosphere.2023.139398&partnerID=40&md5=b3ee03696a4eecd4095581d128f3e012
description A newly developed waste-to-energy system using a biomass combined energy system designed and taken into account for electricity generation, cooling, and freshwater production has been investigated and modeled in this project. The investigated system incorporates several different cycles, such as a biomass waste integrated gasifier-gas turbine cycle, a high-temperature fuel cell, a Rankine cycle, an absorption refrigeration system, and a flash distillation system for seawater desalination. The EES software is employed to perform a basic analysis of the system. They are then transferred to MATLAB software to optimize and evaluate the impact of operational factors. Artificial intelligence is employed to evaluate and model the EES software's analysis output for this purpose. By enhancing the flow rate of fuel from 4 to 6.5 kg/s, the cost rate and energy efficiency are reduced by 51% and increased by 6.5%, respectively. Furthermore, the maximum increment in exergetic efficiency takes place whenever the inlet temperature of the gas turbine rises. According to an analysis of three types of biomasses, Solid Waste possesses the maximum efficiency rate, work output, and expense. Rice Husk, in contrast, has the minimum efficiency, work output, and expense. Additionally, with the change in fuel discharge and gas turbine inlet temperature, the system behavior for all three types of biomasses will be nearly identical. The Pareto front optimization findings demonstrate that the best mode for system performance is an output power of 53,512 kW, a cost of 0.643 dollars per second, and a first law efficiency of 42%. This optimal value occurs for fuel discharge of 5.125 and the maximum inlet temperature for a gas turbine. The rates of water desalination and cooling in this condition are 18.818 kg/s and 2356 kW, respectively. © 2023
publisher Elsevier Ltd
issn 456535
language English
format Article
accesstype
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
_version_ 1809678016156008448