ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion Using Double-Stage Rankine Cycle

Yasuyuki Ikegami    
Takeshi Yasunaga and Takafumi Morisaki    

Resumen

Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC) using non-azeotropic mixtures such as ammonia/water as working fluid and the multistage cycle has been investigated in order to improve the thermal efficiency of the cycle because of small ocean temperature differences. The performance and effectiveness of the multistage cycle are barely understood. In addition, previous evaluation methods of heat exchange process cannot clearly indicate the influence of the thermophysical characteristics of the working fluid on the power output. Consequently, this study investigated the influence of reduction of the irreversible losses in the heat exchange process on the system performance in double-stage Rankine cycle using pure working fluid. Single Rankine, double-stage Rankine and Kalina cycles were analyzed to ascertain the system characteristics. The simple evaluation method of the temperature difference between the working fluid and the seawater is applied to this analysis. From the results of the parametric performance analysis it can be considered that double-stage Rankine cycle using pure working fluid can reduce the irreversible losses in the heat exchange process as with the Kalina cycle using an ammonia/water mixture. Considering the maximum power efficiency obtained in the study, double-stage Rankine and Kalina cycles can improve the power output by reducing the irreversible losses in the cycle.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Jason K. Jolliff, Travis A. Smith, Sherwin Ladner, Ewa Jarosz, Mark David Lewis, Stephanie Anderson, Sean McCarthy and Adam Lawson    
The southward propagation of cold-air frontal boundaries into the Gulf of Mexico region initiates a cascade of coupled air?sea processes that manifests along the coastlines as an apparent brightness anomaly in the ocean color signals. Our hypothesis is t... ver más

 
Wentao Song, Cuibo Yang, Weicheng Cui, Changhui Song, Ping Yang, Jin Hong, Yi Lei, Qimeng Liu and Zhenhua Wang    
Underwater wet-mateable connectors have been widely used to reduce the cost and the time of installation, maintenance and reconfiguration in many fields, such as the oil and gas (O&G) industry, offshore renewable energy (ORE), and undersea observator... ver más

 
Ruichun Dong, Xu Lin, Jie Liu, Mengqi Hu, Zezheng Liu, Jingze Yang and Libin Du    
Miniaturized detection devices in the ocean generally experience problems such as short endurance and unreliable power supplies. This article aimed to develop a dynamic ocean temperature difference energy collection device to capture ocean temperature di... ver más

 
Sergei Soldatenko    
The ocean, one of the five major components of the Earth?s climate system, plays a key role in climate-forming processes, affecting its change and variability. The ocean influences climate over a wide range of time?space scales. To explore the climate, i... ver más

 
Qingchao Xia, Bingzhe Chen, Xiaotong Sun, Canjun Yang, Sheng Zhang and Yanhu Chen    
Marine resources are rich and contain an enormous amount of energy. The exploration of marine resources and the effective use of ocean energy have gradually become the research focus of scholars all over the world. A profiler driven by ocean thermal ener... ver más