Dynamics and control of large-scale fluidized bed plants for renewable heat and power generation
Journal article, 2023
The results of the simulations reveal that the inherent dynamics of the process have stabilization times in the range of 5–25 min for all the step changes investigated, with variables connected to district heating production being the slowest. In contrast, variables connected to the live steam are the fastest, with stabilization times of magnitude similar to those of the in-furnace variables (i.e., around 10 min). Thus, it is concluded that the proper description of the dynamics in fluidized bed combustion plants for combined heat and power production requires modeling of both the gas and water sides (which is rare in previous literature). Regarding the assessment of control strategies, the boiler-following and hybrid control (combined fixed live steam and sliding pressure) strategies are found to be able to provide load changes as fast as 5%-unit/s, albeit while causing operational issues such as large pressure overshoots. The relative gain analysis outcomes show that these control structures do not have a steady-state gain on the power produced, and therefore it is the dynamic effect of the steam throttling that triggers the rapid power response. This study also includes the assessment of a turbine bypass strategy, the results of which show that it enables fast load-changing capabilities at constant combustion load, as well as decoupling power and heat production at the expense of thermodynamic losses.
district heating
dynamic modeling
thermal power plant
simulation
plant flexibility
fluidized bed combustion
Author
Guillermo Martinez Castilla
Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Energy Technology
Rubén Mocholí Montañés
Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Energy Technology
David Pallarès
Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Energy Technology
Filip Johnsson
Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Energy Technology
Applied Thermal Engineering
1359-4311 (ISSN)
Vol. 219 B 119591Cost-effective and flexible polygeneration units for maximised plant use
Swedish Energy Agency (P46459-1), 2018-07-01 -- 2021-12-31.
Subject Categories
Energy Engineering
Chemical Process Engineering
Areas of Advance
Energy
DOI
10.1016/j.applthermaleng.2022.119591