Combining exergy-pinch and techno-economic analyses for identifying feasible decarbonization opportunities in carbon-intensive process industry: Case study of a propylene production technology

Decarbonizing carbon-intensive industries requires increased co-location and integration of decarbonization technologies at existing sites to meet net-zero CO2 emissions targets. Pinch-based energy targeting methods are commonly applied to evaluate the energy performance of competing decarbonization...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tharun Roshan Kumar, Johanna Beiron, V.R. Reddy Marthala, Lars Pettersson, Simon Harvey, Henrik Thunman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-01-01
Series:Energy Conversion and Management: X
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590174524003313
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Decarbonizing carbon-intensive industries requires increased co-location and integration of decarbonization technologies at existing sites to meet net-zero CO2 emissions targets. Pinch-based energy targeting methods are commonly applied to evaluate the energy performance of competing decarbonization options. However, these methods are restricted to process modifications in heat-transfer processes and are also inadequate for investigating process electrification as a decarbonization measure. This work presents an alternative exergy-based approach within a framework that aims to maximize exergy utilization and CO2 emissions avoidance within industrial processes retrofitted with decarbonization technologies. The framework combines an iterative exergy-pinch analysis with techno-economic analysis to identify promising process modifications. The framework is demonstrated through a propane dehydrogenation (PDH) plant case study, which presents significant challenges for end-of-pipe CO2 capture due to the highly diluted flue gases (2.5 vol% CO2). The results illustrate how the identified process modifications lead to a substantial reduction in the CO2 avoidance costs (55–71 €/tCO2), approximately 54–67% lower than those for CO2 capture from an unmodified PDH process (155–167 €/tCO2). This reduction is achieved by integrating an industrial gas turbine into the PDH process, utilizing its exhaust gases as regeneration air to pre-concentrate the CO2 in the flue gases up to 5.5 vol% before entering the CO2 capture plant. The proposed configuration reduces the specific energy requirement for CO2 capture by 11%, improves exergy efficiency by 15%, and achieves a substantially higher CO2 avoidance (56%), due to the low-carbon electricity generated, compared to CO2 capture from an unmodified PDH process.
ISSN:2590-1745