Increased renewable generation on the grid along with market deregulation has resulted in a significant increase in the cycling of coal and gas-fired power plant. This increase in cycling will result in increased wear-and-tear costs for units that were not traditionally designed for cycling. Asset owners can make operational changes to mitigate the wear-and-tear impact or alternatively retrofit existing units for improved flexibility. With retrofits, these plants can provide increased operational flexibility, or in other words cycle more, but this comes at an initial cost. On the other hand, increased flexibility in terms of faster starts, better turndowns and ramp rates also provides opportunity for the asset owners to recover their costs in the market. This paper evaluates the operational, as well as cost-benefit of retrofitting power plants for flexibility using a portfolio of generation resources in North America.
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ASME 2014 Power Conference
July 28–31, 2014
Baltimore, Maryland, USA
Conference Sponsors:
- Power Division
ISBN:
978-0-7918-4608-7
PROCEEDINGS PAPER
Retrofitting Fossil Power Plants for Increased Flexibility
Sundar Venkataraman,
Sundar Venkataraman
GE Energy Consulting, Phoenix, AZ
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Debra Lew,
Debra Lew
National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO
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Greg Brinkman,
Greg Brinkman
National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO
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David Palchak,
David Palchak
National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO
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Jaquelin Cochran
Jaquelin Cochran
National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO
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Nikhil Kumar
Intertek AIM, Sunnyvale, CA
Sundar Venkataraman
GE Energy Consulting, Phoenix, AZ
Debra Lew
National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO
Greg Brinkman
National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO
David Palchak
National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO
Jaquelin Cochran
National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO
Paper No:
POWER2014-32024, V001T06A001; 9 pages
Published Online:
November 19, 2014
Citation
Kumar, N, Venkataraman, S, Lew, D, Brinkman, G, Palchak, D, & Cochran, J. "Retrofitting Fossil Power Plants for Increased Flexibility." Proceedings of the ASME 2014 Power Conference. Volume 1: Fuels and Combustion, Material Handling, Emissions; Steam Generators; Heat Exchangers and Cooling Systems; Turbines, Generators and Auxiliaries; Plant Operations and Maintenance; Reliability, Availability and Maintainability (RAM); Plant Systems, Structures, Components and Materials Issues. Baltimore, Maryland, USA. July 28–31, 2014. V001T06A001. ASME. https://doi.org/10.1115/POWER2014-32024
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