Expansion of organic Rankine cycle working fluid in a cylinder of a low-speed two-stroke ship engine
Journal article, 2016

Electricity and power produced from waste heat is particularly relevant in shipping because fuel expenses constitute the majority of the cost of operating the ships; however, the cost-benefit aspect limits the widespread implementation of waste heat recovery power units on ships. This paper presents the thermodynamic analysis of a concept that aims at reducing the cost of an organic Rankine cycle unit by using one of the cylinders in a large diesel engine as expansion device. Numerical models were used to optimise the process parameters and thereby determine the power potential for this concept. The evaluation of 104 working fluids points to cyclopropane, R245fa and R1234ze(z) as the most promising. The results suggest that the power produced by the organic Rankine cycle cylinder is at least equivalent to that of the cylinders operating with the diesel process. This enables potential fuel savings and emissions reductions of about 8.3% in the studied scenario.

Organic Rankine cycle

Waste heat recovery

Novel configuration

Marine diesel engine

Piston expander

Author

Ulrik Larsen

Chalmers, Shipping and Marine Technology, Maritime Environment and Energy Systems

Jorrit Wronski

IPU, Denmark

J. G. Andreasen

Danmarks Tekniske Universitet

Francesco Baldi

Chalmers, Shipping and Marine Technology, Maritime Environment and Energy Systems

L. Pierobon

Danmarks Tekniske Universitet

Energy

0360-5442 (ISSN)

1212-1220

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Areas of Advance

Transport

Energy

Subject Categories (SSIF 2011)

Energy Engineering

Vehicle Engineering

DOI

10.1016/j.energy.2016.11.069

More information

Created

10/7/2017