Energy Systems Engineering / Enerji Sistemleri Mühendisliği

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/4752

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  • Book Part
    Citation - Scopus: 4
    Investigation of a New Methanol, Hydrogen, and Electricity Production System Based on Carbon Capture and Utilization
    (Springer, 2023) Khani, Leyla; Mohammadpourfard, Mousa
    It is well-known that clean energy transition requires low carbon emission. The increase in population, economic development, and human welfare demands has led to a rise in energy consumption, mainly supplied by fossil fuels. However, burning fossil fuels produces carbon dioxide, which is a greenhouse gas and a contributor to environmental problems. Therefore, carbon capture and conversion to different products have gained attention. On the other hand, combining two or more different thermodynamic systems for simultaneous production of various demands from one energy source looks reasonable. In this regard, a new trigeneration system is proposed to decrease atmospheric carbon dioxide emission and produce methanol, hydrogen, and power. A flue gas stream with a defined composition, solar energy, and atmospheric air are the system’s inlets. Then, mass, energy, and exergy balance equations are applied for each subsystem to investigate the system’s thermodynamic performance. Also, the effect of changing operating parameters on the performance of each subsystem is studied. © 2023, The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.
  • Book Part
    Citation - Scopus: 1
    A New Stable Solar System for Electricity, Cooling, Heating, and Potable Water Production in Sunny Coastal Areas
    (Springer, 2023) Khani, Leyla; Mohammadpourfard, Mousa
    Nowadays, more attention is paid to provide clean energy products with low environmental pollution in a decentralized way. Many coastal rural areas suffer from freshwater and electricity scarcity, especially in hot weather condition. Meanwhile, these regions have a great access to intense solar radiation and seawater. Hence, it seems logical to use the available solar energy in those places to provide to necessities like power, heating, and cooling. A new solar cooling, power, heating, and freshwater production system is designed, evaluated, and optimized in this research. The proposed system is composed of several subsystems to generate each product with high efficiency and reliability. Solar energy is unavailable at night, so molten salt energy storage is used to establish the steady operation of the system. Then, the system is evaluated from thermodynamic and exergoeconomic viewpoints, and a parametric study is accomplished to study the effect on the system performance of key variables. In the end, the system is optimized to determine its best operating condition for different cases. © 2023, The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 1
    Citation - Scopus: 1
    Energy and Exergy Analysis of a Geothermal Energy Sourced Hot-Air Drying System
    (Inderscience Enterprises, 2023) Helvacı, Hüseyin Utku; Keleş, Nazlı; Gökçen Akkurt, Gülden
    A geothermal energy-sourced drying system was tested for the thin-layer drying process of tomato slices at air temperatures of 40 degrees C, 50 degrees C and 60? and velocities of 0.5 m/s and 1.5 m/s to investigate system performance in terms of the first and second laws of thermodynamics. The energy and the exergy efficiency of the system were found to be 6.6% and 22.31%. The energy utilisation and energy utilisation ratio were calculated in the range of 1.271 kW-5.102 kW and 9.644%-39.56%, respectively. The exergy destruction, exergy efficiency and improvement potential of the drying chamber varied between 0.0198 kW-0.2621 kW, 59.74%-81.95% and 0.00486 kW-0.07396 kW, respectively.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 1
    Citation - Scopus: 1
    Thermodynamic Re-Assessment of a Geothermal Binary Power Plant Operated in a Moderate-Temperature Geothermal Field
    (Inderscience, 2023) Özcan, Zeynep; Gökçen Akkurt, Gülden
    An existing organic rankine cycle power plant which uses isobutane as working fluid is re-evaluated for different working fluids. The plant is first modelled by EES software; then the model is simulated for different working fluids obtaining heat transferred through the heat exchanger, net work output, energy and exergy efficiencies, and mass flowrate of the working fluid. Two parametric studies are conducted to evaluate the thermodynamic performance of the plant under a range of turbine inlet temperature (130°C–155°C) and geothermal resource temperature (152°C–161°C) for each working fluid. The study reveals that the highest cycle energy and exergy efficiencies are observed for R-152a at any geothermal resource temperature. R-152a resulted with 13.1% and 58.2% cycle energy and exergy efficiency, respectively at operation condition, whilst the lowest efficiency and net work output is calculated under n-butane presence.