TY - JOUR
T1 - Beyond emission reduction
T2 - How carbon capture reshapes operational flexibility and energy efficiency of coal-fired CHP plants
AU - Liu, Xingyan
AU - Wang, Zhu
AU - Liu, Ming
AU - Liu, Miaomiao
AU - Fu, Yue
AU - Liu, Yuen
AU - Liu, Jiping
AU - Yan, Junjie
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 Elsevier Ltd. All rights are reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.
PY - 2026/5/15
Y1 - 2026/5/15
N2 - Combined heat and power (CHP) technology can effectively improve the energy efficiency of coal-fired power plants and thus cut down their carbon emission intensity in power generation. The integration of a carbon capture system (CCS) offers a further pathway to reduce carbon emissions from such plants. However, CCS integration imposes notable constraints on the operational flexibility and complicates the energy consumption characteristics of CHP plants—a critical issue that has not yet been comprehensively investigated. To address this research gap, off-design models of the CHP plant integrated with CCS were developed. Taking a 660 MW coal-fired CHP unit as the reference case, quantitative analyses were performed to evaluate impacts of CCS integration on the unit's operational flexibility, carbon emission performance, and energy efficiency. The results demonstrate that CCS integration significantly narrows of the feasible operational domain of the CHP plant: the maximum power load decreases by 22.68%, while the maximum heating load drops by 62.50%. Meanwhile, CCS integration leads to a decline in energy efficiency of the CHP plant, with the maximum reduction in energy efficiency and exergy efficiency reaching 33.56% and 18.20%, respectively. Despite these drawbacks, CCS integration achieves a remarkable reduction in carbon emissions: the maximum total carbon emission and carbon emission intensity for power generation are cut by 90.76% and 88.75%, respectively. Finally, an analysis of the additional coal consumption rate for carbon capture, which is a new indicator defined, reveals that this can drop to as low as 43.61 g/kg at the minimum carbon capture rate.
AB - Combined heat and power (CHP) technology can effectively improve the energy efficiency of coal-fired power plants and thus cut down their carbon emission intensity in power generation. The integration of a carbon capture system (CCS) offers a further pathway to reduce carbon emissions from such plants. However, CCS integration imposes notable constraints on the operational flexibility and complicates the energy consumption characteristics of CHP plants—a critical issue that has not yet been comprehensively investigated. To address this research gap, off-design models of the CHP plant integrated with CCS were developed. Taking a 660 MW coal-fired CHP unit as the reference case, quantitative analyses were performed to evaluate impacts of CCS integration on the unit's operational flexibility, carbon emission performance, and energy efficiency. The results demonstrate that CCS integration significantly narrows of the feasible operational domain of the CHP plant: the maximum power load decreases by 22.68%, while the maximum heating load drops by 62.50%. Meanwhile, CCS integration leads to a decline in energy efficiency of the CHP plant, with the maximum reduction in energy efficiency and exergy efficiency reaching 33.56% and 18.20%, respectively. Despite these drawbacks, CCS integration achieves a remarkable reduction in carbon emissions: the maximum total carbon emission and carbon emission intensity for power generation are cut by 90.76% and 88.75%, respectively. Finally, an analysis of the additional coal consumption rate for carbon capture, which is a new indicator defined, reveals that this can drop to as low as 43.61 g/kg at the minimum carbon capture rate.
KW - Carbon capture
KW - Combined heat and power
KW - Energy efficiency
KW - Exergy analysis
KW - Operation flexibility
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105034737561
U2 - 10.1016/j.energy.2026.140884
DO - 10.1016/j.energy.2026.140884
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:105034737561
SN - 0360-5442
VL - 351
JO - Energy
JF - Energy
M1 - 140884
ER -