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  4. Techno-economic analysis of carbon dioxide separation for an innovative energy concept towards low-emission glass melting
 
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Techno-economic analysis of carbon dioxide separation for an innovative energy concept towards low-emission glass melting

Citation Link: https://doi.org/10.15480/882.4958
Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2023-02-22
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Gärtner, Sebastian  
Marx-Schubach, Thomas  
Gaderer, Matthias  
Schmitz, Gerhard  
Sterner, Michael  
Institut
Technische Thermodynamik M-21  
TORE-DOI
10.15480/882.4958
TORE-URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11420/14881
Journal
Energies  
Volume
16
Issue
5
Article Number
2140
Citation
Energies 16 (5): 2140 (2023)
Publisher DOI
10.3390/en16052140
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85149762465
Publisher
MDPI
The currently still high fossil energy demand is forcing the glass industry to search for innovative approaches for the reduction in CO₂ emissions and the integration of renewable energy sources. In this paper, a novel power-to-methane concept is presented and discussed for this purpose. A special focus is on methods for the required CO₂ capture from typical flue gases in the glass industry, which have hardly been explored to date. To close this research gap, process simulation models are developed to investigate post-combustion CO₂ capture by absorption processes, followed by a techno-economic evaluation. Due to reduced flue gas volume, the designed CO₂ capture plant is found to be much smaller (40 m³ absorber column volume) than absorption-based CO₂ separation processes for power plants (12,560 m³ absorber column volume). As there are many options for waste heat utilization in the glass industry, the waste heat required for CO₂ desorption can be generated in a particularly efficient and cost-effective way. The resulting CO² separation costs range between 41 and 42 EUR/t CO₂, depending on waste heat utilization for desorption. These costs are below the values of 50–65 EUR/t CO₂ for comparable industrial applications. Despite these promising economic results, there are still some technical restrictions in terms of solvent degradation due to the high oxygen content in flue gas compositions. The results of this study point towards parametric studies for approaching these issues, such as the use of secondary and tertiary amines as solvents, or the optimization of operating conditions such as stripper pressure for further cost reductions potential.
Subjects
Power-to-Gas
Methanation
Oxyfuel
Glass Industry
CO₂-separation
Economic Evaluation
DDC Class
530: Physik
600: Technik
620: Ingenieurwissenschaften
Publication version
publishedVersion
Lizenz
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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