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Keywords = Allam–Fetvedt cycle

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23 pages, 6098 KiB  
Article
Simulation and Environmental Sustainability Assessment of an Integrated LNG-Power Cycle-Electrolyzer-Methanol Process for Clean Energy Generation
by Asmae Abousalmia, Laalea Al-Remaihi, Shouq Al-Kaabi, Fatima Jassim and Seckin Karagoz
Processes 2025, 13(5), 1476; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13051476 - 12 May 2025
Viewed by 538
Abstract
The growing demand for clean energy and sustainable industrial processes has driven interest in integrated energy systems that optimize resource utilization while minimizing environmental impacts. This study presents the simulation and environmental sustainability assessment of an integrated process combining liquefied natural gas (LNG), [...] Read more.
The growing demand for clean energy and sustainable industrial processes has driven interest in integrated energy systems that optimize resource utilization while minimizing environmental impacts. This study presents the simulation and environmental sustainability assessment of an integrated process combining liquefied natural gas (LNG), Allam–Fetvedt cycle, solid oxide electrolysis’ system, and methanol synthesis to produce clean energy. The proposed system enhances overall efficiency and sustainability by utilizing the Allam–Fetvedt cycle to generate power while capturing CO2, which is then used in the manufacture of syngas and hydrogen by the electrolysis of water and CO2. Syngas is subsequently transformed into methanol, a viable alternative fuel characterized by lowcarbon emissions. A comprehensive process simulation is conducted to evaluate energy efficiency, material flows, and system performance. The sustainability assessment focuses on environmental impact indicators, including carbon footprint reduction, energy efficiency improvements, and resource optimization. The results demonstrate that the integrated system significantly reduces CO2 emissions while maximizing energy recovery, making it a promising approach for decarbonized energy production. In this study, the integrated process including the ASU, power cycle, electrolyzers, methanol production units, and LNG unit results in carbon emissions of 0.29 kg CO2 per kg of LNG produced, which is very close to the literature-reported lower limit, even though it also has methanol production. On the other hand, when the identical process is assessed solely for methanol production (without the LNG unit), it attains net-zero carbon emissions. Despite the incorporation of high-energy electrolyzer systems, the overall energy demand of the proposed integrated process remains comparable to that of existing conventional technologies with high emission outputs. Full article
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17 pages, 3103 KiB  
Article
Design and Simulation of an Integrated Process for the Co-Production of Power, Hydrogen, and DME by Using an Electrolyzer’s System
by Asmae Abousalmia and Seckin Karagoz
Energies 2025, 18(10), 2446; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18102446 - 10 May 2025
Viewed by 498
Abstract
The increasing global demand for clean energy and sustainable industrial processes necessitates innovative approaches to energy production and chemical synthesis. This study proposed and simulated an innovative integrated system for the co-production of power, hydrogen, and dimethyl ether (DME), combining the high-efficiency Allam–Fetvedt [...] Read more.
The increasing global demand for clean energy and sustainable industrial processes necessitates innovative approaches to energy production and chemical synthesis. This study proposed and simulated an innovative integrated system for the co-production of power, hydrogen, and dimethyl ether (DME), combining the high-efficiency Allam–Fetvedt cycle with co-electrolysis and indirect DME synthesis. The Allam–Fetvedt cycle generated electricity while capturing CO2, which, along with water, was used in solid oxide electrolyzers (SOEs) to produce syngas via co-electrolysis. The resulting syngas was converted to methanol and subsequently to DME. Aspen HYSYS was used to model and simulate the process, and heat/mass integration strategies were implemented to reduce energy demand and optimize resource utilization. The proposed integrated process enabled an annual production of 980,021 metric tons of DME, 189,435 metric tons of hydrogen, and 7698.27 metric tons of methanol. The energy efficiency of the Allam–Fetvedt cycle reached 55%, and heat integration reduced the system’s net energy demand by 14.22%. Despite the high energy needs of the electrolyzer system (81.28% of net energy), the overall energy requirement remained competitive with conventional methods. Carbon emissions per kilogram of DME were reduced from 1.16 to 0.77 kg CO2 through heat integration and can be further minimized to 0.0308 kg CO2/kg DME (near zero) with renewable electrification. Results demonstrated that 96% of CO2 was recycled within the Allam–Fetvedt cycle, and the rest (the 4% of CO2) was captured and converted to syngas, achieving net-zero carbon emissions. This work presents a scalable and sustainable pathway for integrated clean energy and chemical production, advancing toward industrial net-zero targets. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Renewable Fuels: A Key Step Towards Global Sustainability)
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19 pages, 4089 KiB  
Article
Techno-Economic and Environmental Analyses of an Integrated Liquefied Natural Gas/Allam–Fetvedt Cycle/Air Separation Unit Complex
by Daniel Chen, Pawanahamsa Shetty, Song Wang, Veeracharyulu Nellipudi, Fuad Aziz, Qiang Xu and Gevorg Sargsyan
Energies 2024, 17(11), 2663; https://doi.org/10.3390/en17112663 - 30 May 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1480
Abstract
The natural gas (NG)-powered compressors/engines used in liquified natural gas (LNG) plants are a major source of methane emission. The Allam–Fetvedt cycle (AFC), an oxyfuel, carbon-neutral, high-efficiency power plant, generates pipeline-grade CO2. This work performed novel process modeling, economic analysis, and [...] Read more.
The natural gas (NG)-powered compressors/engines used in liquified natural gas (LNG) plants are a major source of methane emission. The Allam–Fetvedt cycle (AFC), an oxyfuel, carbon-neutral, high-efficiency power plant, generates pipeline-grade CO2. This work performed novel process modeling, economic analysis, and greenhouse gas emissions analysis for a heat-integrated, electrified LNG/AFC/air separation unit (ASU) complex (LAA), then compared it to standalone LNG and AFC/ASU plants (baseline) as well as an LNG plant electrified with AFC/ASU without heat integration. The low-grade heat generated from compressors of the LNG plant can enhance the AFC net power output by 7.1%. Utilizing the nitrogens cold energy reduces the compressor power requirement by 1.6%. In the integrated LAA complex, not only are GHG emissions avoided, but the energy efficiencies are also improved for both the LNG plant and the AFC power plant. A cash flow analysis of LAA was performed over a 20-year period with 5%, 7%, and 10% discount rates and three levels of LNG prices. The 45Q CO2 credit of USD 85/T as stipulated by the recent Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) of 2022 has been incorporated. The results clearly indicate the economic and environmental benefits of the proposed electrification and heat/power integration. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section B: Energy and Environment)
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22 pages, 1331 KiB  
Review
The Allam Cycle: A Review of Numerical Modeling Approaches
by Fabrizio Reale
Energies 2023, 16(22), 7678; https://doi.org/10.3390/en16227678 - 20 Nov 2023
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 4124
Abstract
In recent years supercritical CO2 power plants have seen a growing interest in a wide range of applications (e.g., nuclear, waste heat recovery, solar concentrating plants). The Allam Cycle, also known as the Allam-Fetvedt or NET Power cycle, seems to be one [...] Read more.
In recent years supercritical CO2 power plants have seen a growing interest in a wide range of applications (e.g., nuclear, waste heat recovery, solar concentrating plants). The Allam Cycle, also known as the Allam-Fetvedt or NET Power cycle, seems to be one of the most interesting direct-fired sCO2 cycles. It is a semi-closed loop, high-pressure, low-pressure ratio, recuperated, direct-fired with oxy-combustion, trans-critical Brayton cycle. Numerical simulations play a key role in the study of this novel cycle. For this reason, the aim of this review is to offer the reader a wide array of modeling solutions, emphasizing the ones most frequently employed and endeavoring to provide guidance on which choices seem to be deemed most appropriate. Furthermore, the review also focuses on the system’s performance and on the opportunities related to the integration of the Allam cycle with a series of processes, e.g., cold energy storage, LNG regasification, biomass or coal gasification, and ammonia production. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section B: Energy and Environment)
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