The disclosure relates to systems which generate power from a heated gas by using the heated gas to pressurize water, which is then used to generate power in a water turbine.
This invention applies pressurized gas to water in a chamber and the pressurized water is then used to make power. The gas may be geothermal steam, or it may be air and combustion products which are created by burning fuel in the air. In particular this invention is designed to work with heated pressurized gas which contains abrasive or corrosive material that may not be suitable for use in a turbine or in a steam boiler. In general an electric generating system which extracts energy from a pressurized gas uses a benign fuel such as kerosene or natural gas which does not create corrosive or abrasive combustion products. These systems expand the gas through a series of gas turbines at lower and lower pressures. However if the fuel is waste biomass, or the gas is geothermal sour steam, wear or corrosion on the turbines may be excessive. Biomass to energy plants are well known, but they generally use waste wood products and are not compatible with yard waste or crop waste. These non-woody biomass materials contain chlorine, excess ash, tar or another contaminants which make them unsuitable for use in standard steam boiler power plants.
Currently the use of coal to generate power is known to add carbon dioxide to the atmosphere, thereby reducing the heat radiation from the Earth and causing the planet to warm up. Therefore the use of coal, which has high energy density and is inexpensive, is being reduced. Coal is generally used to boil water to make steam to generate electricity in a well-known process. Natural gas can be burned with air and the resulting combustion gases may be expanded in a gas turbine. Other energy sources, such a biomass are becoming more attractive. However, biomass in general does cause problems. Burning non-wood biomass in a coal style plant causes the heat exchanger tubes to require excessive maintenance, due to fouling or corrosion. To avoid the problem of fouling heat exchangers, fuel can be burned in air above a water surface. The fuel/air combustion will increase the pressure above the water surface, thus pressurizing the water. The pressurized water may be used to generate power or do work. In this way the corrosive gases can be diluted, and if the inside of the combustion/pump chamber becomes covered with a layer of tar or ash, there will be no reduction in performance. Furthermore, the water becomes a protective barrier between the corrosive or abrasive gases and the hydro-turbine blades. Some have proposed liquid piston engines wherein combustion occurs in a sealed vessel and thereby propels a slug of liquid. These engines generally run on gaseous fuel. A liquid piston engine based on this concept, the Humphrey pump, has been used to pump water in Australia. Also hydropower systems which use gas pressure to move water through a turbine have been described in U.S. Pat. No. 1,310,712 by Rector, U.S. Pat. No. 3,611,723 by Theis, U.S. Pat. No. 6,739,131 by Johnson or U.S. Pat. No. 6,182,615 by Kershaw. In general these systems admit high-pressure gas into a chamber filled with water and propel the water through a Pelton Wheel. A Pelton Wheel is generally efficient, with efficiencies above 90% for water pressure over 3 atmospheres. However, these systems suffer from low efficiency, as the gas which is released under pressure when the pump chamber has been emptied of liquid represents lost energy. A better system would allow the gas in the chamber to decrease in pressure and temperature as the water is emptied from the chamber, thereby extracting more energy from the gas.
The proposed system is a method to extract more energy from the complete expansion of the gas, much like a multistage turbine does, but the stages are separate in time instead of space. A typical cycle might include a fuel load and ash removal phase, where a grate containing ash is removed from a combustion chamber using a pick-and-place mechanism or robot, and fuel is loaded into the combustion chamber on a similar grate. Next compressed air is fed into the fuel area, either via an air compressor or by filling the combustion chamber with water under pressure. Then the fuel is ignited, and the hot gas generated forces the water out of the chamber, initially at high pressure and later at lower pressure as expansion occurs. During each phase of the expansion, the water is delivered to a turbine which is optimized for the given pressure. Once the chamber is empty, it is refilled with water and the cycle repeats. In the two embodiments the system runs a cycle similar to the Otto cycle or the Brayton cycle. In both these cycles, the gas is pressurized, energy is added and the gas is expanded. The invention pertains to optimizing the gas expansion and how the energy is captured
The object of this invention is to convert the available energy in hot pressurized gas into mechanical energy in a more efficient manner.
Another object of this invention is to provide a device that can operate reliably with fuel or hot gas that is corrosive or abrasive.
This invention relates to systems which expands hot pressurized gas against a column of water and extracts energy in an efficient manner as the gas pressure decreases. It does this by utilizing different water turbines for different portions of the gas expansion cycle in order to maximize the efficient extraction of energy from the pressurized gas. The invention relates primarily to the method of energy recovery during expansion. Methods to compress gas and combust fuel are well known.
Various embodiments of the invention will now be described in greater detail with reference to the preferred embodiments illustrated in the accompanying drawings, in which like elements bear like reference numerals, and wherein:
In the preferred embodiment, as shown in
In an alternative embodiment shown in
The ignitor/agitator may run on compressed air and alcohol or wood gas in order to make a system that does not depend on fossil fuel.
In either of the above systems the water maybe filtered to remove abrasives, or chemically treated to neutralize corrosive substances. The exhaust gases may be filtered to remove any toxic gases.
Another method to remove particulate and ash would be to have a conical mesh screen under the surface of the water in the pump/combustion chamber, so that the tip of the come is pointing downward in the direction of flow when the pump chamber is being cycled during its power stroke. The conical screen insures that contaminates cannot get by it. The apex of the cove would then be attached to a pipe that exits the pump chamber. As the conical screen accumulates particulate or ash it can periodically be flushed via a valve in-line with this pipe.
In order to clean the pump/combustion chamber, it may be occasionally filled with Oxygen, steam or other reactive gases to burn off the accumulated tar and ash.
The maximum pressure that the system runs at has a direct effect on the efficiency of the process. The maximum efficiency of a heat engine is the Carnot efficiency. Based on a thermodynamic analysis the proposed system should run at about 4 to 1 compression ratio in order to maximize the efficiency while keeping the pressures moderate. Higher compression ratios would result in better efficiency and better combustion, at a cost of more expensive valves and plumbing.
While the preferred embodiment of the present disclosure has been shown and described, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications may be made in the embodiment without departing from the spirit of the present disclosure. Such modifications are all within the scope of the invention.
The present application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/195,269 filed on Oct. 6, 2006 and entitled “Combustion Powered Hydroelectric Sequential Turbines”. This application is hereby incorporated by reference as if set forth in full in this document.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61195269 | Oct 2008 | US |