Descripción del proyecto
Unas turbinas de gas ecológicas
Las turbinas de gas son la fuente de energía tradicional más ecológica. El equipo del proyecto HERMES, financiado con fondos europeos, avanzará en el desarrollo de la tecnología de las turbinas de gas. En concreto, desarrollará el primer sistema energético de alta eficiencia, de circuito cerrado, supercrítico y sin emisiones. Este nuevo sistema se basa en combustibles líquidos y gaseosos (metanol o hidrógeno) renovables y sintetizados localmente, combinados con la captura, el almacenamiento y la utilización descentralizadas de carbono. Al funcionar en condiciones de alta presión (por encima de los 150 bares), el sistema logra una eficiencia considerablemente más alta (superior al 65 %) que la de las turbinas de gas actuales. Además, el sistema no genera contaminantes, ya que usa oxígeno puro para oxidar el combustible y captura una gran parte del flujo de las sustancias de escape (H2O o CO2), que reutiliza en la síntesis del combustible.
Objetivo
Wind and sun will be central energy sources of a climate neutral Europe 2050, bringing with them the need to balance weather dependent differences between supply and load. Conventional gas turbines can fulfill this task also for longer periods even well as they can stabilize the grid with their capability of quick start/stop. However, their efficiency is limited and – even if burning climate neutral hydrocarbons – they still produce local emissions. HERMES overcomes these limitations and advances gas turbine technology to the future-proof level by creating a reliable, flexible, zero-emission solution for energy supply with long term impact at EU level.
HERMES develops and assesses the first highly efficient closed-loop supercritical zero emission energy system. It is based on directly fired supercritical gas turbine engine operating on locally synthesized renewable liquid and gaseous fuels (e.g. methanol or hydrogen) coupled with decentralized carbon capture utilization and storage (CCUS). The carrier medium is highly dense supercritical carbon dioxide or xenon demanding less compression power. Therefore, and because of operating at high pressure conditions (above 150 bar), the system achieves significantly higher efficiency (above 65%) than today’s gas turbines. By utilizing pure oxygen for fuel oxidation, and by capturing bulky flow of exhaust products (H2O and/or CO2) and reusing them for fuel synthesis, the system produces virtually no pollutants. A detailed assessment of the HERMES approach will be done using experimental and computational approaches and dynamic simulation tools including digital twins and machine learning.
The 36-month project will be realized by an 11-partner consortium including 3 SMEs with expertise in renewable energy, combustion, techno-economics and socio-political science. Hermes will pave the way to a major breakthrough in the understanding of fundamentals of combustion in supercritical fluids with zero emission of any pollutants.
Ámbito científico
- natural scienceschemical sciencesinorganic chemistrynoble gases
- natural sciencesearth and related environmental sciencesenvironmental sciences
- engineering and technologyenvironmental engineeringenergy and fuels
- engineering and technologyenvironmental engineeringcarbon capture engineering
- natural sciencescomputer and information sciencessoftwaresoftware applicationssimulation software
Palabras clave
Programa(s)
Régimen de financiación
HORIZON-RIA - HORIZON Research and Innovation ActionsCoordinador
7522 NB Enschede
Países Bajos