Energies, Vol. 19, Pages 620: Integration Optimization and Annual Performance of a Coal-Fired Power System Retrofitted with a Solar Tower

Energies, Vol. 19, Pages 620: Integration Optimization and Annual Performance of a Coal-Fired Power System Retrofitted with a Solar Tower

Energies doi: 10.3390/en19030620

Authors:
Junjie Wu
Ximeng Wang
Yun Li
Jiawen Liu
Yu Han

Solar-aided power generation offers a pathway to reduce the carbon dioxide emissions from existing coal-fired plants. This study addresses the gap in comparing different solar integration modes by conducting a thermo-economic analysis of a 600 MW coal-fired system retrofitted with a solar tower. Four integration modes were designed and rigorously compared, encompassing series and parallel configurations at either the high-exergy reheater or the lower-exergy economizer. A detailed thermodynamic model was developed to simulate its off-design and annual performance. The results showed that integration at the primary reheater outperformed the economizer integration. Specifically, the parallel configuration at the primary reheater (Mode II) achieved the highest annual solar-to-electricity efficiency of 18.43% at a thermodynamically optimal heliostat field area of 125,025.6 m2. Economic analysis revealed a trade-off, with the minimum levelized cost of energy (LCOE) of −0.00929 USD/kWh for Mode II occurring at the economically optimal area of 321,494 m2 due to greater coal and emission savings. Sensitivity analysis across two other locations confirmed that the annual solar-to-electricity efficiency and LCOE are directly influenced by solar resource quality, but the thermodynamically optimal and economically optimal heliostat field area remain consistent. This work demonstrates that parallel integration with the primary reheater presents a favorable and practical configuration, balancing high solar-to-electricity conversion efficiency with favorable economics for hybrid solar–coal power plants.

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