The layout of an urban waste-fired zero-emission power plant is described in this paper. The principle layout, which is based on similar coal-fired plants retrieved from the literature, integrates gasification with a power-generation section and implements two parallel conversion processes: one relies on the heat developed in the gasifier and consists of a thermoacoustic-magnetohydrodynamic (TA-MHD) generator; the other involves treating syngas to obtain almost pure hydrogen, which is then fed to fuel cells. The CO2 derived from the oxidation of Carbon is stocked in liquid form. The novelty of the proposed layout lies in the fact that the entire conversion is performed using static equipment. The resulting plant prevents the release of any type of emissions in the atmosphere and increases mechanical efficiency, compared to traditional plants—thanks to the absence of moving parts—resolving, nonetheless, the ever-increasing waste-related pollution issue. A case study of a Union of Municipalities in Southern Lebanon is considered. The ideal cycle handles 65 tons/day of urban waste and is capable of generating 7.71 MW of electric power, with a global efficiency of 52.39%.
Process Concept of a Waste-Fired Zero-Emission Integrated Gasification Static Cycle Power Plant
Augusto Montisci
;
2025-01-01
Abstract
The layout of an urban waste-fired zero-emission power plant is described in this paper. The principle layout, which is based on similar coal-fired plants retrieved from the literature, integrates gasification with a power-generation section and implements two parallel conversion processes: one relies on the heat developed in the gasifier and consists of a thermoacoustic-magnetohydrodynamic (TA-MHD) generator; the other involves treating syngas to obtain almost pure hydrogen, which is then fed to fuel cells. The CO2 derived from the oxidation of Carbon is stocked in liquid form. The novelty of the proposed layout lies in the fact that the entire conversion is performed using static equipment. The resulting plant prevents the release of any type of emissions in the atmosphere and increases mechanical efficiency, compared to traditional plants—thanks to the absence of moving parts—resolving, nonetheless, the ever-increasing waste-related pollution issue. A case study of a Union of Municipalities in Southern Lebanon is considered. The ideal cycle handles 65 tons/day of urban waste and is capable of generating 7.71 MW of electric power, with a global efficiency of 52.39%.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
sustainability-17-05816-with-cover.pdf
accesso aperto
Tipologia:
versione editoriale (VoR)
Dimensione
420.18 kB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
420.18 kB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


