Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / Scopus Indexed Publications Collection
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7148
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Article Citation - WoS: 8Citation - Scopus: 11Geothermal Potential of Granites: Case Study- Kaymaz and Sivrihisar (eskisehir Region) Western Anatolia(Elsevier, 2022) Chandrasekharam, Dornadula; Baba, Alper; Ayzit, Tolga; Singh, Hemant K.Radiogenic granites are gaining importance due to their ability to generate a substantial amount of electricity and support the advancement of agricultural and water sectors. In the western Anatolian region, such granites occupy a cumulative area of 6910 km2 varying from 7 to 20 μW/m3, far above the heat generated by the average continental crust of 5 μW/ m3. One cubic. The granite plutons of the Eskisehir region are amongst such granites with radioactive heat generation kilometer of such granite can generate 79 × 106 kWh of electricity. In the present case, the Eskisehir granites are capable of generating 616 million kWh of carbon-free electricity. Besides electricity, the heat from the granites can be utilized for space heating and greenhouse cultivation. This energy can also be utilized for the generation of fresh water from the sea through the desalination process. Hydrofracturing of the granites to create a fracture network connecting injection and production well is being replaced with closed-loop system that do not require knowledge about the stress pattern of the region and reduce the risk of induced micro-seismicity that was a bottleneck for developing EGS projects. Although the currently estimated cost of electricity generated from EGS projects is 9 euro cents/kWh, this cost will get reduced due to technological development in drilling technology. The Western Anatolian region has an additional advantage over the cost, since the drilling depth to capture the heat from the granites is shallow (∼3 km) which gives further benefit to the cost due to the reduction in drilling depth cost. In addition to high radiogenic granites, the presence of curie point temperature at shallow depth, high heat flow, and high geothermal gradient makes this region a warehouse of energy making Turkey energy-food and water independent in the future.Article Citation - WoS: 38Citation - Scopus: 40Exergoeconomic Analysis and Optimization of a High-Efficient Multi-Generation System Powered by Sabalan (savalan) Geothermal Power Plant Including Branched Gax Cycle and Electrolyzer Unit(Elsevier, 2022) Seiiedhoseiny, Miryasin; Khani, Leyla; Mohammadpourfard, Mousa; Gökçen Akkurt, GüldenEmploying suitable subsystems to reach high efficiency and low cost in renewable-based power plants is more crucial. The geothermal energy heat source is located in many countries, but this has never been investigated to run a multi-generation system, including a branched GAX cycle and an electrolyzer. In this path, a high-efficient multi-generation system powered by a Sabalan (Savalan) geothermal power plant consisting of a single flash cycle, a branched GAX cycle, and an electrolyzer is presented and scrutinized from thermodynamic and exergoeconomic viewpoints. In the end, a two-objective optimization, by using the Total Unit Cost of Product (TUCP) and energy efficiency as objectives, is utilized to find the optimum operating conditions. Critiques and studies of variables reveal that the produced hydrogen rate remains unchanged at 5.655 kg/h by changing the degassing value and temperature of the generator, condenser 2, and evaporator. By increasing the flash tank pressure from 5.2 bar to 7 bar, the cooling and heating loads rise about 108.4%, while the net electricity falls from 3977 kW to 3506 kW. Interestingly, the TUCP has a minimum value at the evaporator temperature of 273 K and condenser 2 temperature of 322.3 K. The optimization results indicate the values of the produced hydrogen rate and net electricity with 5.85 kg/h and 4187 kW are more than those of the base case. Also, the optimal values are 7.046 $/GJ, 36.82%, and 65.42% for the TUCP and energy and exergy efficiencies, respectively.
