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A recent census for the United States Department of Energy
(DOE) found that CHP systems on US campuses presently supply
more than 967 MW of generation, with another 675 MW in planning
or building. The heating and air-conditioning thermal loads
of most college campuses make them perfect for CHP systems.
Many college campuses already have district energy piping
systems capable of combining thermal requirements.
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| New Jersey is home to the beautifully
landscaped cogeneration plant at Princeton University.
The twin cooling towers of the chilled-water plant reach
toward the sky in the background. |
A study by the International District Energy Association
(IDEA) states that the average campus CHP was 15 MW in size
and the median system size was 7.4 MW. The systems installed
on campuses ranged from 0.18 to 85 MW. Campus district cooling
systems were identified as holding a total of 900,000 mt of
cooling capacity.
IDEA also documented 1.7 million lin. ft. of chilled-water
distribution networks in campus district cooling systems.
These cooling systems often use steam-driven chillers. Substantial
growth is being reported in campus cooling systems due to
construction of new campus buildings.
Why are colleges and universities installing and/or using
CHP systems? They are doing so in an effort to meet increasing
campus load growth and to accommodate the shift toward year-round
operations, as well as to meet the growth of attendant air-conditioning
loads in an environmentally responsible manner. An IDEA study
has identified the capacity for an added CHP system potential
of 472662 MW, based on the recent DOE census and supplemented
by considerable growth in district cooling project development.
The University of Texas at Austin (UT), the University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNCCH), and the University
of Iowa (UI) are three examples of institutions of higher
learning that have CHP systems hard at work on their campuses.
These three schools are not alone; they are in very good company.
Princeton uses a CHP system, as do Cornell, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, and Rutgers.
When asked to comment on the facilities in use at Princeton,
Tom Nyquist, the school's director of facilities engineering,
succinctly states, "Our CHP plant provides the university
with reliable heat and power in a very cost-effective manner,
especially in this era of electric deregulation."
UNCCH and UT both have large boilers making steam for assorted
uses. Each campus links the boilers to a steam turbine, which
generates electricity, and a heating system. This reduces
the campuses' dependency on the local grids and reduces
operating expenses. Then this less-expensive electricity also
can be used to operate electric chillers for cooling, which
in turn reduces cooling costs. The rest of the steam is used
to heat domestic water and the campuses' office, classroom,
and dormitory areas. Chillers used to cool campus living spaces
also can use steam produced by the boilers.
The UNCCH coal-fired cogeneration facility uses 9% less fuel
and saves 16,000 tons of coal annually, when compared to separate
heat and power generation. The school has been generating
its own electricity since 1895. It began cogeneration in 1939.
In 1992, UNCCH replaced its old cogeneration system with circulating
fluidized-bed combustion technology to meet the increasing
heating/energy needs of its campus. By 1997, the operating
budget of the facility was about $17 million, and it sold
more than $4 million of electricity to Duke Power Company
during the 1996 fiscal year.
The new plant employs two atmospheric, circulating fluidized-bed
(CFB) boilers, which can produce up to 500,000 lb./hr. of
steam; a single steam-driven turbo-generator rated at 28 MW,
which is capable of generating one-third of the campus'
electric requirements; and a backup gas- and oil-fired boiler,
which provides a safety blanket for the campus. The annual
reliability rate of the system has maintained a range between
99.61% and 99.99%.
Bituminous coal is used as the primary fuel for the two CFB
boilers, with natural gas and fuel oil as backup. The backup
boiler is used during peaking when necessary and for emergency
situations. Steam at 1,300 psig drives the turbogenerator
before being extracted through dual variable extraction points.
After extraction, this steam is directed for end use on campus.
The low-pressure steam derived from this process is used
across the 13 million-ft.2 campus and by UNCCH hospitals for
water heating, space heating, cooking, cleaning, humidification,
and space cooling. Slightly higher pressurized steam is used
to sterilize medical equipment at the UNCCH hospitals. This
steam travels through 45 mi. of underground piping. There
is an additional 10 mi. of piping that carries the chilled
water supplied by the system.
UT has a central plant for both heating and cooling. Natural
gas is used as the primary fuel, with oil as backup. The facility
purchases $17,535,573 worth of fuel on an annual basis.
Table 1 shows the boilers operating at the plant.
According to Juan Ontiveros, P.E., the director of utilities
and energy management at UT, this plant has a total installed
heating capacity of 1,146,000 lb./hr. Ontiveros adds that
this meets 100% of the university's heating-energy demand
and heats 97% of the university's buildings' square footage.
UT also has a central chilled-water system in multiple locations
with a total installed capacity of 40,800 tons. Ninety-seven
percent of UT's buildings' square footage is served with cooling
from the central plant. The central plant meets 100% of UT's
cooling-energy needs.
Table 2 describes the system.
Ontiveros explains that the first boiler plant was commissioned
in 1910. It started generating 100% of the power by 1928.
It was in the 1930s that the first tunnel systems developed,
and their use continues to this day. The process actually
began as a project developed by the mechanical engineering
department. The catalysts for self-generation were improved
reliability and the cost benefit, Ontiveros adds.
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| Juan Ontiveros, P.E., is director
of utilities and energy management at UTA. |
Regarding the future of UT's power plant, Ontiveros states,
"We have become dependent on steam for chilled water
and heating. Since the source for 165-psig steam is from generation,
we are tied to the self-generation approach. Therefore our
approach has been to optimize plant efficiency and operational
effectiveness. We have improved our overall system efficiency
from 65% to 75% in about five years. We have other initiatives
underway to better this, including a new 25-megawatt steam
turbine, a dump condenser, an optimum dispatch model, and
a study to add a new gas turbine."
UI is looking toward the future with the use of a rather
unusual fuel: oat hulls, or plant casings. The use of this
biomass fuel began with a phone call from the Quaker Foods
& Beverages cereal mill in Cedar Rapids, IA. The mill
is the largest of its kind in the world and is left with 100,000
tons of oat hulls each year.
Quaker was using these oat hulls to make chemicals for petroleum
companies. The leftover material was being sold to a power
plant. Business conditions changed, however, and Quaker's
oat hull byproduct market was no longer viable. So Quaker
stopped making chemicals.
In 2001, Quaker mill officials called Ferman Milster, UI's
associate director of utilities, with a mutually beneficial
proposition. The folks at Quaker were wondering if Milster
might be able to use the oat hulls as a source of fuel for
the campus cogeneration operation. Seeing a chance to help
both the environment and the local community, Milster seized
the opportunity.
UI was no stranger to seeking environmentally sound practices.
The power plant had burned tire-derived fuel (TDF) for several
years in an effort to reduce the state's inventory of scrap
tires. Burned in a stoker boiler, the TDF was mixed with coal
to a maximum of 5% by weight. The TDF program, excluding coal
costs, was funded by the State of Iowa.
On an almost daily basis, trucks now travel 20 mi. across
Iowa from the Quaker mill to UI to deliver tons of oat hulls
to the power plant. The UI power plant burns approximately
60 tpdbut has burned as much as 100 tons in one day.
The UI power plant's goal is to burn an average of 50,000
tpy of oat hulls. Reaching this goal would reduce UI's
yearly dependence on coal by about 25%.
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| A unique partnership between Quaker Foods & Beverages
and UI helps fuel the CFB boiler at this UI power plant. |
What other benefits are there to burning oat hulls? Substituting
oat hulls for gas or coal helps lower carbon dioxide emissions.
An annual reduction of 60 tons of sulfur dioxide will be achieved.
A decrease in NOx is expected. Landfill space is being saved.
Quaker Oats is saving money on waste disposal, and UI is
saving money on fuel.
At first, Quaker was extracting a chemical from the oat hulls
called furfural, which is used by the petroleum industry.
It then shipped the leftovers of the oat hulls, or resifil,
to UI. Resifil is a dense brown powder that can be burned
as a biomass fuel.
The early resifil project encountered several problems, however.
Power plant staff noted that using a 50% coal/50% resifil
blend, the resifil began to ignite much too soon when added
to the furnace with the coal. The early combustion radically
increased the temperature in some areas of the furnace and
spread superfine dust throughout the plant. There was also
the added problem of the resifil collecting moisture, becoming
acidic, and causing corrosion to the fuel-handling equipment.
Due to these problems, the UI power plant was able to burn
only a 70% coal/30% resifil blend safely.
UI engineers tried adding the resifil at a later stage in
the combustion process, which helps keep temperatures down.
They also teamed up with Foster-Wheeler to design a new pneumatic
injection system for their CFB boiler. This helps keep the
fuel-loading process much cleaner.
The next problem Quaker and UI faced was transporting the
resifil to UI quickly enough to sustain UI's need for
fuel. Quaker was using a railcar system to load waste oats,
but UI was not equipped to receive these railcars. The power
plant was on a small, restricted area at UI, and regulations
called for dust-free unloading at the power plant. Quaker
adapted to make transportation of the biomass fuel less of
an issue.
Pneumatic tanker trucks were the solution. Vacuum loaded
at the mill, the trucks make the 20-mi. trek to the UI power
plant, and their cargo is unloaded in a safe, dust-free manner.
Just as the resifil problems were solved, the market for furfural
all but disappeared. Quaker wondered if the raw oat hullsinstead
of resifilcould be used as a biomass fuel. If so, Quaker
could stop producing furfural and just sell its oat hulls
to UI.
UI resolved to try to burn raw oat hulls. This required that
a new silo be designed specifically for holding grain to feed
the plant. In January 2003, the plant began burning raw oat
hulls in place of resifil.
The pneumatic injection system held its own and even exceeded
expectations, according to Milster. In fact, UI was burning
oat hulls quicker than Quaker could deliver them. This was
just one more puzzle for Quaker and UI to solve. The pneumatic
tanker trucks just couldn't deliver the oat hulls fast
enough. Work began on a system of transportation that would
use 53-ft. box trailers.
Milster remarks, "The discovery process took place one
baby step at a time. No one else was doing this. We would
try something, have a problem, and fix what needed to be fixed
as we learned. We spent a lot of time testing, discovering,
and moving forward. Currently, however, all of our permits
are in place. We are also in final negotiations with Quaker
for a multiyear contract with them. Our natural gas and coal
supplies come from out of state, so we are very pleased that
our money is staying in the state of Iowa when we purchase
these oat hulls from Quaker. This partnership is good for
all concerned. It's good for the local economy, it's
good for Quaker, and it's good for us." The CHP
campus biomass project promises to one day save UI about $500,000
a year, according to Milster.
UI has tackled these challenges without increasing the size
of its workforce. Today the plant actually has fewer operators
than it did 12 years ago. This is primarily due to an automated
plant system. The computerized system allows workers to operate
boiler, turbine, and other plant equipment with just one click
of a computer mouse.
The UI campus is seated on 1,900 ac. of land. There are 119
buildings and 14.5 million ft.2 of building space. It is located
in Iowa City.
UI began its central plant operations in 1926. At that time,
the current plant was built. It originally had three coal
boilers and two hydroelectric generators. Later, in 1947,
the plant was introduced to cogeneration. This occurred with
the addition of a controlled-extraction steam turbine.
The plant's primary source of fuel is coal. The plant buys
110,000 tons of coal each year and splits it among three contracts:
One is for stoker coal. Another is for washed bituminous coal
used in the CFB boiler. The third is for the emergency pile
of coal, which weighs 10,000 tons.
Backup steam-production needs are serviced by natural gas.
Natural gas also services peaking. Approximately 15% of UI's
annual steam production is produced using natural gas.
The UI power plant heats 100% of the campus. It also cools
50% of the campus and meets 30% of the campuswide electrical
demand (see Table 3).
Regarding the pros and cons of the new system, Milster notes,
"The program was not cheap. We had to get people to trust
us. By nature, power plants and academic environments do not
go hand in hand philosophically. Key administrative people
had to trust us. We knew, however, there would be a potential
payback only two years into the risk. We're already seeing
the payback now."
UI's goals were to reduce its purchased fuel prices,
reduce their need for purchased energy on campus, and reduce
environmental damage done by greenhouse gases. UI is seeing
more environmental benefits to burning oat hulls, other than
just the reduction of greenhouse gases. A very pleasant surprise,
according to Milster, is that all pollutants go down when
the oat hull biomass fuel is burned.
Milster goes on to say that the campus and more than 7,000
students depend on the reliable energy produced by the power
plant. "If we're not making steam, the university
can't open its doors," Milster states. "We're
constantly evaluating our plant for best practices policies.
We wish to remain economically and environmentally responsible
as we continue to grow to meet the increasing needs of our
expanding UI campus. Our constant challenge is to be ready
to provide energy for the ever-increasing load demand of UI."
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| The CHP system at UT meets
100% of the university's heating energy demand and heats
97% of the university's buildings' square footage. |
Wheaties may claim to be the "Breakfast of Champions,"
but Quaker oat hulls are helping to heat and cool the Iowa
Hawkeyes' recreational complex, which hosts many major Big
10 sporting events. They also are helping heat and cool dormitories,
academic buildings, a large medical center, and administrative
offices on the UI campus. Now there's a cereal byproduct with
power!
Quaker's emergency contingency plan called for the oat hulls
to be taken to the landfill, as they are biodegradable. Unfortunately
the hulls trap air and are difficult to pack. They are also
expensive to ship. Quaker wanted to find a way to use these
oat hulls to its benefit rather than continue to pay for their
transportation and disposal.
"The district energy industryand specifically
college and university campus systemsoffers ideal conditions
for combined heat and power. Campus energy systems employ
central utility plants to meet the aggregated thermal and
electric loads of multiple buildings. The close proximity
and common ownership helps make connecting the buildings with
piping for heating and air-conditioning services very cost-effective.
Additionally, many universities and health centers are owner-occupied
buildings where critical research functions create high load
factors that demand a high degree of comfort and reliability.
District energy systems are recognized for delivering highly
reliable power and thermal services to critical load centers,"
relates Robert P. Thornton, president of the International
District Energy Association, in regard to the rationale behind
district energy systems on campuses in US.
"Often universities are significant users of electricity
and natural gas. Some universities, like the University of
Texas at Austin, house more than 50,000 residents. In many
instances, the university owns the piping, wires, and infrastructure
on campus. The scale of operations and the combination of
thermal and power requirements makes for very attractive load
factors for cogenerating electricity and steam, which can
be used for heating space and driving central chiller plants
in summer. In fact, the aggregated thermal loads of multiple
buildings is what makes CHP economically attractive.
"The strong growth in CHP for the campus market is driven
by load growth from new buildings under construction on campuses,
planned capital replacement and expansion of facility plants,
high reliability needs, and good project risk and credit profiles
in the institutional market. In some cases, campus CHP systems
have been operating for over 110 years, and the financial
markets appreciate the blue-chip' quality of the
CHP project locations," Thornton concludes.
IDEA is hosting the 17th Annual Campus Energy Conference
in San Diego, CA, February 1113, 2004. More information
is available at www.districtenergy.org.
Guest author COLLEEN MADONNA FLOOD WILLIAMS
writes for several business magazines.
DE - Jan/Feb 2004
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