Expert assessments of retrofitting coal-fired power plants with carbon dioxide capture technologies
Abstract
Carbon dioxide capture and storage is an emerging set of technologies that can contribute
to significant reductions in CO2 emissions. However, a substantial amount of uncertainty
belies the technical and economic feasibility of capturing CO2 at commercial scale.
This study explores the uncertainties associated with carbon dioxide capture technologies,
with a specific focus on retrofitting existing coal-fired power plants. 13 respondents
with expertise in post-combustion and oxy-fuel combustion capture systems responded
to an extensive questionnaire and provided their opinions on present status and future
expected performance and costs for amine-based systems, chilled ammonia process, and
oxy-combustion.
Expert elicitation, a formal protocol for obtaining probabilistic judgments on a subject
with insufficient data, was the primary method used to establish best estimates and
95% confidence limits of the energy penalties associated with the technologies under
focus. Additionally, this paper presents observations based on the aggregated responses
for technology maturity, ideal plant characteristics for early adopters, and the extent
to which R&D and deployment incentives will impact costs.
The results show a general consensus that amine-based systems are closer to commercial
application, but potential for improving performance and lowering costs is limited;
chilled ammonia and oxy-combustion contain greater potential for cost reductions,
but not without greater uncertainty in regard to scale and technical feasibility.
A cost model using expert estimates of expected energy penalties was developed to
establish 2030 projections of CO2 capturecosts for amine-based systems. Results from
the model indicate that under the reference case(current trends in RD&D), the energy
penalty reduction equates to an 11% decrease in annual energycosts. In the best case
scenario(best results under an enhanced RD&D policy), the annual energy savings are
29% and the CO2capturecost decreases 16% from $55(in the reference case)to $46per
ton of CO2(2006 dollars).
Type
Master's projectPermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/1024Citation
Chung, Timothy S. (2009). Expert assessments of retrofitting coal-fired power plants with carbon dioxide capture
technologies. Master's project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/1024.Collections
More Info
Show full item record
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.
Rights for Collection: Nicholas School of the Environment
Works are deposited here by their authors, and represent their research and opinions, not that of Duke University. Some materials and descriptions may include offensive content. More info