GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

40
GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

Transcript of GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

Page 1: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC

VILLAGE APPLICATIONS

LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

Page 2: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium Division of Environmental Health & Engineering

June 2011

Who We Are

Page 3: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

ANTHC Non-profit, statewide organization Provides a range of medical and

community health services for more than 125,000 Alaska Natives.

Part of the Alaska Tribal Health System, which is owned and managed by the 229 federally recognized tribes in Alaska and by their respective regional health organizations.

Page 4: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.
Page 5: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.
Page 6: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

ANTHC History

1970s-1990s: Regional health organizations in Alaska

Passage of P.L. 105-83 established ANTHC, the only THO established by statute

December 1997: ANTHC incorporated as non-profit 501(c)(3)

June 1998: Initial contract with IHS.

Page 7: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

ANTHC History

October 1998: Contract expanded to include Environmental Health & Engineering

October 1998: ANTHC becomes a P.L. 93-638 Title III Self-Governance entity, signing the Alaska Tribal Health Compact

Page 8: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

DEHE

Designs and Constructs Health and Sanitation Facilities

Provides operations support Monitors & develops standards for

mitigating climate change impacts Health impact studies Environmental Grants & training

Page 9: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.
Page 10: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

Water & Sewer- Why?

Page 11: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

What does this have to do with Heat Recovery?

Hospitalizations are 5 times higher in communities w/o piped water & sewer.

Typical Fuel consumption for an Arctic WTP w/ piped water & sewer: 8000-25,000 Gal / Year Fuel Oil

Fuel Prices between $6.00 & $8.00 / Gal. and rising.

Heat recovery can help make it affordable.

Page 12: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

Extreme Climate

Page 13: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

High Energy Use

Page 14: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

HEAT RECOVERY FROM POWER PLANTS 2 basic types:

Jacket recoveryStack recovery

Small Scale: 50 KW to 3500 KW Ideal for space heat and process heat Considered a fuel saver, not a primary

source of heat.

Page 15: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

Kwigillingok Generator Facility

Page 16: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

ADVANTAGES OF HEAT RECOVERY Very green- reduces carbon footprint. Can dramatically increase the economic

viability of a community water system. Adds additional redundancy to the building

heating system.

Page 17: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

DISADVANTAGES OF HEAT RECOVERY Requires an agreement with the power

utility, often with a charge for waste heat. Usually increases the complexity of the

heating system, especially in Washeterias. Requires additional maintenance and

coordination between power utility and building owner.

Page 18: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

Other Solutions

Page 19: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

SO YOU WANT TO BE GREEN

What do you need to know before you start?

Estimating available waste heat Deciding on a heat recovery strategy Selecting system components

Page 20: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

WHAT DO YOU NEED TO KNOW BEFORE YOU START? Who owns the generators and what are

their conditions? Do you have a viable path between the

waste heat source and the building? What type of building are you serving? Are there other buildings served by the

waste heat? What type of monitoring do you want? Who is going to maintain it?

Page 21: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

ESTIMATING AVAILABLE WASTE HEAT

QA = QGEN – QPIPE - QO

QA: Minimum available waste heat for your building

QGEN: Average generator output during peak heating season (typically much less than rated capacity) in BTUs / Hour

QPIPE: Heat loss from distribution piping during peak heating season. Typically about 50-60 BTUH / LF

QO: Heat used by other buildings on the waste heat system (sometimes this is prioritized by order of connection, so be careful)

Page 22: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

HEAT RECOVERY RULES OF THUMB: Generator Output: 1/3 Electricity, 1/3 Jacket

heat, 1/3 Stack loss 1300-2000 BTU / KW-Hr (Available Jacket Heat) 100,000 BTU delivered heat = 1 gallon of diesel Annual Fuel Saved = .3 x Power plant annual

fuel used x 0.6 Pumping Energy Costs <= 10% Fuel Value

Page 23: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

BREAK EVEN TEMPERATURE DIFFERENCE

TBR: Break even temperature difference between Generator Heating Supply and Building Heating Return (Deg F)

PPUMP: Pump power (W)CE: Electrical cost ($ / kWh)COIL: Fuel cost ($ / Gallon) (80% efficiency assumed)UAHX: Heat exchanger U factor multiplied by HX area (BTU/ Hr x Deg F)GPM: Heat exchanger glycol flow rate (GPM)

(This formula only applies in special case of counterflow HX with matching flow rates and sufficient heating demand to use all of the waste heat)

TBR =PPUMP x CE x 100

COIL x UAHX

PPUMP x CE x 100

900 x GPM x COIL

+

Page 24: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

ESTIMATING WASTE HEAT DEMAND

QD = QBLG + QPROC

QD: Waste heat demand (typically does not include dryers)

QBLG: Building envelope heat losses (must engineer heating system for lower temperatures than typical heating systems)

QPROC: Heat required by process systems (includes circulation loops, raw water heat add, storage tanks, etc. This is where waste heat really shines)

Page 25: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

SELECTING A HEAT RECOVERY STRATEGY Direct heat add to potable water:

Double wall shell and tube, independent of boiler system (Kiana)

Small system with single boiler:Pipe heat exchanger in series with boiler (Chenega

Bay) Large system with multiple boilers:

Pipe heat exchanger in primary / secondary arrangement (Kwigillingok)

Page 26: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY ARRANGEMENT

Page 27: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

RECOVERED HEAT INTO POTABLE WATER

Page 28: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

HEAT EXCHANGER IN SERIES WITH BOILER

Page 29: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

PRIMARY / SECONDARY HEAT EXCHANGER DIAGRAM

Page 30: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

Minto Heat Recovery

Page 31: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

WASTE HEAT CONTROLLER

Turns on at 8 Deg F difference

Turns off at 4 Deg F difference

Built in HOA switch. Provides 1p/2t switch

which can handle a 1 HP pump.

Page 32: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

BTU METER

Page 33: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

Plate / Frame Heat Exchanger

Page 34: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

Brazed Plate Heat Exchangers

Page 35: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

Shell & Tube Heat Exchangers

Page 36: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

Typical pumps

Page 37: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

AMOT Valve

Page 38: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

DESIGN COMMENTS Use Brazed Plate or Plate / Frame heat exchangers Provide controls to ensure heat is not transferred back to generator

cooling system. Provide controls to minimize electric power consumption Provide BTU monitoring if being billed by local utility Provide pressure relief on pipeline Provide strainers on both sides of heat exchanger (reduces cleaning

of heat exchanger). Provide air separator on pipeline side of system. Provide glycol system monitoring and makeup. Provide expansion compensation Don’t use HDPE pipe. Copper, Steel, PEX, Stainless steel. Monitor pipeline for leaks and pressure.

Page 39: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.
Page 40: GENERATOR HEAT RECOVERY CONSIDERATIONS IN ARCTIC VILLAGE APPLICATIONS LCDR William Fraser, P.E.

Questions?