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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Heat recovery units  





2 Heat to power units  





3 Applications  





4 Advantages  



4.1  Indirect benefits  







5 Disadvantages  





6 Examples  





7 See also  





8 References  














Waste heat recovery unit






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Aregenerative thermal oxidizer (RTO) is an example of a waste heat recovery unit that utilizes a regenerative process.

Awaste heat recovery unit (WHRU) is an energy recovery heat exchanger that transfers heat from process outputs at high temperature to another part of the process for some purpose, usually increased efficiency. The WHRU is a tool involved in cogeneration. Waste heat may be extracted from sources such as hot flue gases from a diesel generator, steam from cooling towers, or even waste water from cooling processes such as in steel cooling.

Heat recovery units[edit]

Gateway Generating Station, a combined-cycle gas-fired power station in California, is equipped with two heat recovery steam generators on its combustion turbines.

Waste heat found in the exhaust gas of various processes or even from the exhaust stream of a conditioning unit can be used to preheat the incoming gas. This is one of the basic methods for recovery of waste heat. Many steel making plants use this process as an economic method to increase the production of the plant with lower fuel demand. There are many different commercial recovery units for the transferring of energy from hot medium space to lower one:[1]

A waste heat recovery boiler (WHRB) is different from a heat recovery steam generator (HRSG) in the sense that the heated medium does not change phase.

Heat to power units[edit]

According to a report done by Energetics Incorporated for the DOE in November 2004 titled Technology Roadmap[2] and several others done by the European commission, the majority of energy production from conventional and renewable resources are lost to the atmosphere due to onsite (equipment inefficiency and losses due to waste heat) and offsite (cable and transformers losses) losses, that sums to be around 66% loss in electricity value.[3] Waste heat of different degrees could be found in final products of a certain process or as a by-product in industry such as the slaginsteelmaking plants. Units or devices that could recover the waste heat and transform it into electricity are called WHRUs or heat to power units:

Applications[edit]

Advantages[edit]

The recovery process will add to the efficiency of the process and thus decrease the costs of fuel and energy consumption needed for that process.[5]

Indirect benefits[edit]

Disadvantages[edit]

Examples[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Heat Recovery Systems, D.A.Reay, E & F.N.Span, 1979
  • ^ Energetics Incorporated (November 2004), Technology Roadmap Energy Loss Reduction and Recovery (PDF), U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, retrieved May 28, 2012
  • ^ "NREL: Distributed Thermal Energy Technologies - About the Project". www.nrel.gov. Archived from the original on 2005-11-27.
  • ^ "Exergyn®".
  • ^ "Tapping Industrial Waste Heat Could Reduce Fossil Fuel Demands". ScienceDaily. Retrieved 2024-03-17.
  • ^ "Cyclone Power Technologies Website". Archived from the original on 2012-01-19. Retrieved 2011-11-17.
  • ^ "Waste Wattage: Cities Aim to Flush Heat Energy Out of Sewers". news.nationalgeographic.com. 11 December 2012. Archived from the original on December 12, 2012. Retrieved 2014-07-21.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Waste_heat_recovery_unit&oldid=1214213180"

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