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http://asiair.asia.edu.tw/ir/handle/310904400/111527
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Title: | Profit Optimization of Sustainable Low-to-Medium Temperature Waste Heat Recovering Management |
Authors: | 林君維;Lin, Chun-Wei Remen;?玉涓;JIUAN, PARNG YUH;*;陳昱霖;Chen, Yu-Lin |
Contributors: | 會計與資訊學系 |
Keywords: | Organic Rankine Cycle (ORC) system, Particle swarm optimization (PSO), Waste heat recovery |
Date: | 2018-03 |
Issue Date: | 2018-10-22 |
Abstract: | Purpose
Responding to natural resource depletion and carbon dioxide (CO2) emission problems, and also the stricter government’s energy regulations, the purpose of this paper is to develop a sustainable waste heat recovery optimal-profit-oriented management model especially targeting on the easily forgotten low- and medium-temperature waste heat in the industry. In the paper, a system is constructed to facilitate converting the low- and medium-grade waste heat in factories into electricity, and yields optimal profit.
Design/methodology/approach
This paper integrates an efficient Organic Rankine Cycle (ORC) system from both sustainable energy reservation and cost effectiveness approaches with an optimization model that adopts particle swarm optimization (PSO) algorithm to determine proper installation locations and feasible generator sets. The system is constructed to facilitate converting the low- and medium-grade waste heat in factories into electricity, and yields optimal profit. The model considers the environmental factors: temperature, heat amount, equipment configuration of the number of ORC sets, and detailed investment cost constraints.
Findings
The results show that annual investment return rate, annual increase in electricity, power generation efficiency, and annual CO2 emission reduction are all highly improved, and investment recovery period is shortened. Also, the larger scale of the waste heat emission, the better the performance is achieved. Finally, the study also completes a sensitivity test under dynamic conditions of electricity price, generator sales price and factory budget constraints, and the results are consistently robust. More valuably, this paper demonstrates applications on two different manufacturing industries with various waste heat emission scales to prove the accountability.
Originality/value
The main contributions are in three aspects. First, it proves that applying PSO to a nonlinear mathematical model can help determine the optimal number and style configuration of generators for waste heat sources. Second, different from the prior research works focusing on power generation, this paper also deliberates the cost factors, cost of generators, costs of numerous peripheral components and future maintenance costs to ensure the factories not conflict with the financial limitations. Third, it is not only successfully applied in two industries with different scales, but also robust with various economic tests, electricity price change, generator sales price change, and investment budget adjustments. |
Relation: | INDUSTRIAL MANAGEMENT & DATA SYSTEMS |
Appears in Collections: | [會計與資訊學系] 期刊論文
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