OTEC Closed Loop
OTEC Closed Loop
OTEC Closed Loop
In Partial Fulfillment of
the Course Requirements in
Power Plant Engineering (POPLADE)
2nd Term, AY 2018-2019
Submitted by:
Submitted to:
Dr. Archie Maglaya
April 8, 2019
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I. Introduction 2
A. Aquaculture 5
B. Hydrogen Extraction 5
D. Air-conditioning 7
A. Microbial Fouling 10
C. Sealing 12
VI. References 13
I. Introduction
Simply put, Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC) is a process where we utilize the
heat coming from the ocean to generate electricity. However, the OTEC system does not rely on
the same system that is present in other renewable sources. As explained by the US Department
of Energy (2018), OTEC is done when the heat coming from the sun and the warm water, around
25°C or greater, would be pumped through an evaporator in order to vaporize the used working
fluid inside then passed to the turbine to generate electricity. The working fluid is then cooled
into its liquid state as it passes through the condenser. Wherein cool water pumped from the
deeper part of the ocean is used to exchange heat. It is said that the idea came from a french
physicist name Jacques Arsene d'Arsonval. Together with his student, Georges Claude, the first
Ocean Thermal Plant was built is in Matanzas, Cuba in 1930. Operating at around 22 kW with a
low-pressure turbine until it was destroyed by a storm. The technology flourished when an
OTEC plant was built in Nauru, Japan. This was the where the plant could produce 120 kW of
electricity with an ideal efficiency of 10%. This OTEC plant was the first of its kind to actually
supply electricity on the live grid. The plant became operational in October 198 .
OTEC plants are predicted to be likely more provident in tropical countries as the
temperature difference between near surface water and cold deep water would be greater. As it
would provide the base load supply in power generation which is way more reliable from other
renewable sources that rely on ocean for power production. Even though the system is reliable to
produce continuously the required minimum output, the technology itself is considered relatively
new. Due to the small temperature difference from the warm seawater from the cold seawater,
There are numerous OTEC plants that are currently in use. One of the most recent OTEC
plants is the Makai OTEC. The plant itself is located in the ocean energy research center in
Kailau-Kona, Hawaii. The plant's capacity is around 100 kW annually. This OTEC plant is
proclaimed to be the largest facility that is operating to power around 120 households in Hawaii.
However, further research is also being conducted to further improve the energy production from
the plant. According to Power Technology (2018), the data collected within the OTEC plant will
be used to promote research on developing future plants that could power around
Closed-cycle systems use fluid with a low boiling point, such as ammonia (having a
boiling point around -33 °C at atmospheric pressure), to power a turbine to generate electricity.
Warm surface seawater is pumped through a heat exchanger to vaporize the fluid. The expanding
vapor turns the turbo-generator. Cold water, pumped through a second heat exchanger,
condenses the vapor into a liquid, which is then recycled through the system.
In 1979, the Natural Energy Laboratory and several private-sector partners developed the
"mini OTEC" experiment, which achieved the first successful at-sea production of net electrical
power from closed-cycle OTEC. The mini OTEC vessel was moored 1.5 miles (2.4 km) off the
Hawaiian coast and produced enough net electricity to illuminate the ship's light bulbs and run its
this illustration.
3. The hot water and the ammonia flow past one another in a heat exchanger, so the hot
water gives up some of its energy to the ammonia, making it boil and vaporize.
7. Having left the turbine, the ammonia has given up much of its energy, but needs to be
cooled fully for reuse. If the ammonia weren't cooled in this way, it wouldn't be able to
8. How is the ammonia cooled? In a third pipe, cold water is pumped up from the ocean
depths.
9. The cold water and ammonia meet in a second heat exchanger, which cools the ammonia
back down to its original temperature ready to pass around the cycle again.
10. The cold water from the ocean depths, now slightly warmed, escapes into the ocean (or it
11. The hot water from the ocean surface, slightly cooled, drains back into the upper ocean.
A. Aquaculture
As the best known byproduct of OTEC, it helps the plant to reduce costs for both
electricity and finance. This also helps relocate needed nutrients from the deep water to
resurface in the surface water. This "artificial upwelling" mimics the natural upwellings
that are responsible for fertilizing and supporting the world's largest marine ecosystems,
and the largest densities of life on the planet. OTEC aquaculture can also strengthen local
economies of small island developing states (SIDS), by creating job opportunities for
local island residents. As the global population edges towards nine billion by 2050, the
opportunity for jobs in the aquaculture industry will continue to grow. This economic
impact doesn’t stop with island communities. Aquaculture can also extend to ‘upstream’
wholesalers, retailers, transportation, and food services are also supported by the
aquaculture industry.
B. Hydrogen Extraction
transportable and inexhaustible, can play a key role in fulfilling part of the global energy
demand. Hydrogen production through electrolysis process, where water splits into
hydrogen and oxygen under certain temperature and pressure, is considered to be minor
in comparison to natural gas steam reformation. Nevertheless, many firms have been
such as alkaline and polymer electrolyte membrane (PEM) electrolysers. For instance,
researchers from the Japanese international clean energy network using hydrogen
hydrogen production technologies. They carried out extensive works on a solid high PEM
water electrolysis method, which offers higher efficiency and lower cost than
flows through underground pipes, it chills the surrounding soil. The temperature
difference between plant roots in the cool soil and plant leaves in the warm air allows
opportunity to provide large amounts of cooling to industries and homes near the plant.
For large buildings and hotels, particularly in tropical climates, air conditioning (AC)
creates the biggest single demand for energy. According to research by the University of
Moreover, companies regularly have expenses associated with replacing leaked coolants
Technologies, energy consumed from refrigeration, air conditioning and heat pumps is
Conditioning has been proven to deliver huge energy savings (up to 90%), potentially
saving hundreds of millions of dollars in electricity costs over the lifespan of large
SWAC systems in global regions with high electricity prices. In addition to the lengthy
successful record of the Hawaii SWAC system at NELHA, there are numerous other
success stories for SWAC. Among them are Google’s data center in Finland, where the
SWAC system uses cold water from the Baltic Sea to cool Google’s critical servers, and
with an SWAC system using cold water from the Pacific Ocean.
IV. Environmental Impacts
As mentioned, Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion is a heat engine system with a heat
source and a heat sink. Based on recent findings and studies, OTEC-based plants are
advantageous for it does not involve burning fossil fuel. In the Philippines, burning of coal and
other natural gas are the top source of fuel for plants, which greatly contribute to air and water
pollution as well as waste production. OTEC mainly uses the temperature difference between the
hot surface of the ocean and the cooler. Specifically, in closed-loop OTEC, there is a long
Ammonia-filled pipeline utilized to produce very low boiling point. The ammonia acts as the
completely renewable energy source without emitting greenhouse gasses. Thus, the
environmental impacts are expected to be minimal compared to nuclear power plant or fossil fuel
- generated plants. Still, OTEC facilities have the potential for causing environmental changes.
system. Plants under this system requires very large volume of water for the flow. About 5 cubic
meters per second of both warm surface water and cold deep water is required for each megawatt
of net power generated in closed loop OTEC, having a total flow of 10 cubic meters per second.
The used water will then have to be returned to the ocean. The combination of large difference in
temperature with the amount of water used will cause large-scale redistribution of ocean water
and its properties - physical, chemical and biological. These changes in properties of ocean
impose a risk and may cause environmental damage affecting nearby organisms. Marine life is
sensitive to this type of alterations, involving level of fluctuation in temperature and salinity of
their environment. Relatively huge changes can directly kill those organisms who are greatly
exposed in the area. Small changes could still pose a threat, less obvious yet, still impactful to
the release of Carbon Dioxide from pumping cold water from the deep surfaces of the ocean.
Deep ocean is a major sink for carbon dioxide. It is a greenhouse gas most responsible for global
combustion of fossil fuels. Calculations on the upper bound on the possible release of carbon
dioxide from a closed cycle OTEC indicated that only a fraction, about 10%, of the amount
OTEC plants may come out as beneficial system capable of producing minimal
with decreasing inefficiency would result to only short term contribution in mitigating
environmental impacts. The problem with OTEC is that it uses relatively small temperature
difference between their fluids making it the lowest efficiency type of plant. Because of that, the
processes and facilities involved are required to work hard in pumping huge amount of water just
to produce sufficient amount of electricity. In result, significant amount of electricity is used for
A. Microbial Fouling
the membrane, because of expanded flow resistance because of pore blocking, concentration
polarization, and cake formation. The impact of every one of these fouling components on flux
decline relies upon elements, for example, membrane pore size, solute loading and measuring,
membrane material and working conditions, and so on. While the quick impact of fouling is to
cause a decrease in permeate flux, the long-term effect may prompt irreversible fouling from
microbial activity on the layer material and the decrease of membrane lifetime. To keep up the
Scientists have contrived different procedures to diminish membrane fouling and to improve
membrane cleaning effectiveness for flux recovery. These techniques incorporate improvement
of new film materials, new plan of layer module, alteration of feed stream example, and fuse of
in situ or ex situ cleaning routines in the layer unit. Some of the time, a mix of the different
Parasitic load (also referred to as the in-house load) can therefore simply be described as
the load consumed by the different categories of the power station’s processes, systems and
subsystems that are required to keep the power plant running. In CSP power stations, this
includes power usage by the main users like the Heat Transfer Fluid (HTF) pumps, and basic
users like computers and lights etc. It has been determined that the total parasitic load
consumption of a Solar Tower Power plant is roughly 10% of the gross annual electricity (Jain,
2013), and it is also indicated that the Solar Collectors Assembly (SCA) tracking systems are
also important parasitic load consumers in Parabolic Trough Solar Power Plants
C. Sealing
The evaporator, turbine, and condenser work in halfway vacuum extending from 3% to
of atmospherically air that can debase or close down operations. In closed-cycle OTEC, the
particular volume of low-pressure steam is substantial contrasted with that of the pressurized
working fluid. Parts must have expansive steam velocities to guarantee steam speeds don't get
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