Application of Supercritical CO₂ Cycle for Waste Heat Recovery in LNG Carriers
Abstract
Nowadays, decarbonization of the shipping industry has become the top priority of the maritime community. In an effort to reduce emissions from shipping, numerous technological and design solutions are being investigated; Waste Heat Recovery (WHR) by marine engines is one of the most important and widespread ones. This paper investigates the utilization of a carbon dioxide Supercritical Brayton Cycle (SBC) for WHR of a LNG carrier. SBC is an innovative, promising technology for power generation with unprecedented performance and a small form factor, due to the properties of the working fluid. A thermodynamic model is developed and programmed in MATLAB using the CoolProp free library. By means of this model, the performance of simple and recuperated SBC (RSBC) for WHR of a specific marine engine at its full load operation is assessed and the optimum compressor pressure ratio for power maximization of the RSBC is selected. The combined system Diesel-RSBC exhibits an increase of about 2.9% in thermal efficiency and a similar reduction in specific fuel oil consumption, compared to the sole power production by the Diesel engine, at its full load operation. Significant performance benefits are also demonstrated at part-load operation of the main engine. To assess how the benefits scale with the main engine power, seven similar marine engines of different power are considered, revealing a possible relationship between the optimal pressure ratio and SBC efficiency with the engine’s exhaust gas temperature.
Article Details
- How to Cite
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Koubogiannis, D., & Litsakis, G. (2024). Application of Supercritical CO₂ Cycle for Waste Heat Recovery in LNG Carriers. Technical Annals, 1(8). https://doi.org/10.12681/ta.41761
- Section
- Naval Coastal and Maritime Design Engineering and Planning

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