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Realistic estimate of water hold-up, circulation and consumption in solar concentrating thermal power plants


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1 Additional Director, Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy Division,Central Power Research Institute, Bangalore - 560080, India
     

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This paper presents a comprehensive analysis of water utilization in concentrating solar thermal (CST) thermal power stations (TPS) keeping in mind the experience of operating coal plants. The water utilization is divided into three modes: water hold-up, water circulation and water consumption. The water hold-up and circulation represent the minimum quantity of water required for running a power plant with a few days autonomy. The water consumption represents the extent of replenishment required on a continuous basis. On the basis of quality, the consumption can be classified into: raw water, soft water and demineralized (DM) water. The reserve hold-up in a CST station of 1 GW is around 0.95 to 1.05 million m3 per GW which corresponds to 9-10 days consumption. The working hold-up inside the plant is 0.27 million m3 per GW. The water circulation rate for a 1 GW CST station is 7500 m3/h or 0.18 million m3/day. The major water consumption which is not generally tracked or measured is conveyance loss between the raw water intake source and the power station intake point which can be as high as 30 %. Loss of DM water directly affects the energy efficiency as it mostly represents the high quality steam lost from the system and has a high cost of production.

Keywords

Water consumption, water hold-up, circulation flow, specific water consumption,conveyance loss.
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  • Realistic estimate of water hold-up, circulation and consumption in solar concentrating thermal power plants

Abstract Views: 234  |  PDF Views: 0

Authors

M. Siddhartha Bhatt
Additional Director, Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy Division,Central Power Research Institute, Bangalore - 560080, India

Abstract


This paper presents a comprehensive analysis of water utilization in concentrating solar thermal (CST) thermal power stations (TPS) keeping in mind the experience of operating coal plants. The water utilization is divided into three modes: water hold-up, water circulation and water consumption. The water hold-up and circulation represent the minimum quantity of water required for running a power plant with a few days autonomy. The water consumption represents the extent of replenishment required on a continuous basis. On the basis of quality, the consumption can be classified into: raw water, soft water and demineralized (DM) water. The reserve hold-up in a CST station of 1 GW is around 0.95 to 1.05 million m3 per GW which corresponds to 9-10 days consumption. The working hold-up inside the plant is 0.27 million m3 per GW. The water circulation rate for a 1 GW CST station is 7500 m3/h or 0.18 million m3/day. The major water consumption which is not generally tracked or measured is conveyance loss between the raw water intake source and the power station intake point which can be as high as 30 %. Loss of DM water directly affects the energy efficiency as it mostly represents the high quality steam lost from the system and has a high cost of production.

Keywords


Water consumption, water hold-up, circulation flow, specific water consumption,conveyance loss.



DOI: https://doi.org/10.33686/prj.v11i3.189416