Prebantha Moodley, Kevin Harding and Thomas A. Adams
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
This work investigates the water impact of carbon capture technologies employed in coal and natural gas power generation, viz. the integrated gasification combined cycle, oxy-fuel combustion, solid oxide fuel cells and solvent-based post-combustion. The water impact per CO2 avoided (WICa) metric was developed to understand the tradeoff between water usage and global warming potential, and additionally as a decision-making tool. It relates the impact on available water resources to greenhouse gas reduction over the cradle-to-plant-exit lifecycle by leveraging existing metrics, including the water impact index (WII), water withdrawal, water consumption, water quality, and water scarcity index (WSI). The results show that some carbon capture technologies increase the overall water usage of power generation plants, thereby increasing the water impact per CO2 avoided. Solid oxide fuel cells and oxy-fuel technology, though not mature in comparison with post-combustion capture, have the least water impact per CO2 avoided. Furthermore, water withdrawal and consumption are shown to trend with the WII in specific scenarios, implying that, in the absence of water quality and WSI data, the metric's use as a stakeholder decision-making tool remains. The potential to reduce global warming via carbon capture technologies in the power generation industry can create additional water resource challenges for countries if not carefully considered.
这项研究调查了煤炭和天然气发电中采用的碳捕集技术对水的影响,即综合气化联合循环、富氧燃烧、固体氧化物燃料电池和燃烧后溶剂型。为了解用水量与全球升温潜能值之间的权衡,以及作为决策工具,开发了每避免 CO2 对水的影响(WICa)指标。该指标利用现有指标,包括水影响指数(WII)、取水量、耗水量、水质和缺水指数(WSI),将对可用水资源的影响与在从摇篮到工厂到退出的生命周期内减少温室气体排放联系起来。结果表明,一些碳捕集技术会增加发电厂的总体用水量,从而增加了每避免 1 吨二氧化碳对水的影响。与后燃烧技术相比,固体氧化物燃料电池和全氧燃烧技术虽然并不成熟,但每避免 1 CO2 对水的影响最小。此外,在特定情景下,取水量和耗水量与 WII 呈趋势,这意味着在缺乏水质和 WSI 数据的情况下,该指标仍可用作利益相关者的决策工具。如果不仔细考虑发电行业通过碳捕集技术减少全球变暖的潜力,可能会给各国带来额外的水资源挑战。
期刊介绍:
Environmental Science: Water Research & Technology seeks to showcase high quality research about fundamental science, innovative technologies, and management practices that promote sustainable water.