Exergy, Economic, and Life-Cycle Assessment of ORC System for Waste Heat Recovery in a Natural Gas Internal Combustion Engine
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Valencia Ochoa, Guillermo
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In this article, an organicRankine cycle (ORC)was integrated into a 2-MWnatural gas engine to
evaluate the possibility of generating electricity by recovering the engine’s exhaust heat. The operational
anddesignvariableswiththe greatest influence onthe energy, economic, andenvironmentalperformance
of the system were analyzed. Likewise, the components with greater exergy destruction were identified
through the variety of different operating parameters. From the parametric results, it was found
that the evaporation pressure has the greatest influence on the destruction of exergy. The highest
fraction of exergy was obtained for the Shell and tube heat exchanger (ITC1) with 38% of the total
exergy destruction of the system. It was also determined that the high value of the heat transfer area
increases its acquisition costs and the levelized cost of energy (LCOE) of the thermal system. Therefore,
these systems must have a turbine technology with an efficiency not exceeding 90% because, from this
value, the LCOE of the system surpasses the LCOE of a gas turbine. Lastly, a life cycle analysis (LCA)
was developed on the system operating under the selected organic working fluids. It was found that
the component with the greatest environmental impact was the turbine, which reached a maximum
value of 3013.65 Pts when the material was aluminum. Acetone was used as the organic working fluid.
