On the Way to CO2 Free Power Plants

CCS-Versuchsanlage. Bild: Thomas Ott.
Inside the pilot plant. (c): Thomas Ott / TU Darmstadt

Innovative methods for capturing CO2 use hardly any energy and add little to operating costs / TU Darmstadt dedicates a pilot plant

The Technische Universität Darmstadt dedicated a pilot plant for capturing carbon dioxide (CO2) contained in flue gases of power plants. Its Institute for Energy Systems and Technology plans to utilize the plant for investigating two innovative methods for CO2 capture that require less energy and lower operating costs than earlier approaches.

Combustion of fossil fuels, such as coal, fuel oil, or natural gas, liberates large quantities of carbon dioxide, a gas that significantly affects global climate. A key technology that would reduce emissions and lead to more environmentally friendly power plants is the capture and storage of carbon dioxide from flue gases of power plants (carbon capture and storage (CCS)). CCS might be able to reduce CO2 emissions resulting from the employment of fossil fuels for power generation and other uses in industry to near zero and thereby contribute to reducing greenhouse-gas emissions. Earlier approaches to CO2 capture require expending significantly more energy and entail greatly increased operating costs, which raises questions regarding their efficiency and acceptance. The TU Darmstadt’s Institute for Energy Systems and Technology’s new pilot plant will be utilized for investigating two new methods for CO2 capture that will allow nearly totally eliminating CO2 emissions and require virtually no additional energy input and entail only slight increases in operating costs.

Over the next two years, the institute’s director, Prof. Dr.-Ing. Bernd Epple, and his 26 coworkers will be investigating the “carbonate looping” and “chemical looping” methods for CO2 capture. Both methods employ natural substances and reduce the energy presently required for CO2 capture by more than half. As Epple put it, “These methods represent milestones on the way to CO2 free power plants. They might allow coal-fired, oil-fired, and natural-gas-fired power plants to reliably and cost-effectively generate power without polluting the environment.”

Carbonate-Looping. (c): FG EST / TU Darmstadt
Carbonate-Looping. (c): FG EST / TU Darmstadt

Technical details

The carbonate looping method involves utilizing naturally occurring limestone to initially bind CO2 from the stream of flue gases transiting power plants’ stacks in a first-stage reactor. The resultant pure CO2 is reliberated in a second reactor and can then be stored. The advantage of the carbonate-looping method is that even existing power plants can be retrofitted with this new method.

The investigations of these new methods are being supported with grants totaling seven million Euros from the European Union, the German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs, and various industrial partners. Due to the pilot plant’s height, the TU Darmstadt has built a new, twenty-meter high experimentation hall on its “Lichtwiese” campus to house it. Construction of the new hall and pilot plant took twenty months. The plant has already demonstrated its ability to bind CO2 in conjunction with initial trial runs.

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3 comments

3 of 3: Syahar wrote on 2012/05/16 05:20:01

Mr.

It is very imazing to have such pilot plant.I,m currently looking for a place to do my PHD course (germany) in power plant technology.I'm graduated in Master degree in Mechanical Engineering(thermo-fluid) from University Technology of Malaysia(UTM). At present, i'm working as tutor(teaching) at University Technology MARA MAlaysia(thermodynamics,thermal engineering).My group and i also doing research activities in one of power plant in Malaysia (KEV Power Plant), We are performing the energy and exergy analysis of separated components,soot blowing process,flue gas analysis,excess air as well as combustion/furnace effriciency in the boiler. i'm really appreciated if you consider/give me an opportunity to join your research group. Many Thanks, Syahar

2 of 3: Mehdi wrote on 2011/05/24 10:41:17

Research Partners

Could you please write a bit about your research partners in the energy section

1 of 3: Masoumeh Nasrollahzadeh wrote on 2011/01/24 09:30:46

Research Assistant

I was so interested when I read your plant. I am graduated in Master degree in Chemical Engineering from "Iran University of Science and Technology". I want to be a researcher in your group. Would you please guide me how I can cooperate with you? Can I be your PhD student and do research in your field? Sincerely, Masoumeh