In lignite-fired power plants, the combustion of pre-dried lignite provides the most important means for further increasing the efficiency. Hot flue gas from the boiler is suitable for the drying, as depicted on the left. However, that requires the use of more high quality fuel. It is therefore more efficient to draw off steam from the turbines and to use this waste heat (approximately 100 °C). The water vapour that evaporates from the coal therefore also contains heat. This can be recovered by preheating the storage water or air for the boiler. This increases the efficiency in dry lignite-fired power plants by up to 5 per cent. In Niederaussem (BoA1), this technology dries around a quarter of the raw lignite using a WTA plant (fluidised bed drying plant with internal heat recovery), which is the world’s first prototype.
Projects currently being funded
Materials of construction for steam temperatures of over 700 °C
Lignite drying
CO2 scrubbing (post-combustion capture)
CO2 storage facilities
CO2 capture in oxyfuel coal-fired power plants
Hydrogen gas turbines
Capturing CO2 using coal gasification
Micro gas turbines
Higher temperatures in turbines
Turbine combustion that produces lower amounts of harmful substances
Higher pressure and lower flow losses in turbines
CO2 compressors
International cooperation
Comparison of power plant systems
More efficient generators thanks to nanoparticles
Storing electricity using compressed air
High-temperature heat storage systems for flexible CCGT power plants
More flexibility for low-emission coal-fired power plants