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Industrial test and techno-economic analysis of CO2 capture in Huaneng Beijing coal-fired power station

Author

Listed:
  • Huang, Bin
  • Xu, Shisen
  • Gao, Shiwang
  • Liu, Lianbo
  • Tao, Jiye
  • Niu, Hongwei
  • Cai, Ming
  • Cheng, Jian

Abstract

The first industrial-scale CO2 capture plant in China has been demonstrated at Huaneng Beijing power plant has shown that this technology is a good option for the capture of CO2 produced by commercial coal-fired power plants. The commissioning and industrial tests are introduced in this paper. The tests show that in the early stages of the passivation phase, the concentration variations of amine, anti-oxidant and Fe3+ are in the normal range, and the main parameters achieve the design value. The efficiency of the CO2 capture was about 80-85%, and by the end of January 2009 about 900Â tons of CO2 (99.7%) have been captured. The equipment investment and consumptive costs, including steam, power, solution and others, have been analyzed. The results show: the cost of the absorber and the stripper account for about 50% of main equipment; the consumptive cost is about 25.3Â US$ per metric tons of CO2, of which the steam requirement accounts for about 55%; the COE increased by 0.02Â US$/kWÂ h and the electricity purchase price increased by 29%.

Suggested Citation

  • Huang, Bin & Xu, Shisen & Gao, Shiwang & Liu, Lianbo & Tao, Jiye & Niu, Hongwei & Cai, Ming & Cheng, Jian, 2010. "Industrial test and techno-economic analysis of CO2 capture in Huaneng Beijing coal-fired power station," Applied Energy, Elsevier, vol. 87(11), pages 3347-3354, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:appene:v:87:y:2010:i:11:p:3347-3354
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Rao, Anand B. & Rubin, Edward S. & Keith, David W. & Granger Morgan, M., 2006. "Evaluation of potential cost reductions from improved amine-based CO2 capture systems," Energy Policy, Elsevier, vol. 34(18), pages 3765-3772, December.
    2. Hetland, Jens & Zheng, Li & Shisen, Xu, 2009. "How polygeneration schemes may develop under an advanced clean fossil fuel strategy under a joint sino-European initiative," Applied Energy, Elsevier, vol. 86(2), pages 219-229, February.
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