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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Evaluation of the Economic and Environmental Performance of Low-Temperature Heat to Power Conversion using a Reverse Electrodialysis – Multi-Effect Distillation System
Bartolomé Ortega-delgadoF. GiacaloneAlessandro TamburiniAndrea CipollinaGiorgio MicaleG. KosmadakisMichael Papapetrousubject
Energy storageControl and Optimizationreverse electrodialysisCost020209 energyEnergy Engineering and Power Technology02 engineering and technologylcsh:Technology7. Clean energyEnergy storagelaw.inventionEnvironmental impactLife cycle assessment020401 chemical engineeringlawWaste heatReversed electrodialysisReverse electrodialysi0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringOsmotic powerSalinity gradient power0204 chemical engineeringElectrical and Electronic EngineeringCost of electricity by sourceProcess engineeringEngineering (miscellaneous)DistillationHeat engineLCOElcsh:TRenewable Energy Sustainability and the Environmentbusiness.industryreverse electrodialysis; multi-effect distillation; cost; LCOE; waste heat; energy storage; life cycle assessment; environmental impacts; salinity gradient powerenvironmental impactsMulti-effect distillation6. Clean water13. Climate actionMultiple-effect distillationEnvironmental scienceWaste heatbusinessEnergy (miscellaneous)description
In the examined heat engine, reverse electrodialysis (RED) is used to generate electricity from the salinity difference between two artificial solutions. The salinity gradient is restored through a multi-effect distillation system (MED) powered by low-temperature waste heat at 100 °C. The current work presents the first comprehensive economic and environmental analysis of this advanced concept, when varying the number of MED effects, the system sizing, the salt of the solutions, and other key parameters. The levelized cost of electricity (LCOE) has been calculated, showing that competitive solutions can be reached only when the system is at least medium to large scale. The lowest LCOE, at about 0.03 €/kWh, is achieved using potassium acetate salt and six MED effects while reheating the solutions. A similar analysis has been conducted when using the system in energy storage mode, where the two regenerated solutions are stored in reservoir tanks and the RED is operating for a few hours per day, supplying valuable peak power, resulting in a LCOE just below 0.10 €/kWh. A life-cycle assessment has been also carried out, showing that the case with the lowest environmental impact is the same as the one with the most attractive economic performance. Results indicate that the material manufacturing has the main impact; primarily the metallic parts of the MED. Overall, this study highlights the development efforts required in terms of both membrane performance and cost reduction, in order to make this technology cost effective in the future.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2019-08-21 | Energies |