Title :
Lignite Fuel and Power-Plant Availability
Author_Institution :
Stone & Webster Engineering Corp., Boston; 5 Marlyn Rd; Medfield, MA 02052 USA.
Abstract :
This initial study of lignite-fueled power plants encompasses the characteristics of lignite coal, plant reliability problems associated with the handling and burning of Northern Great Plains (NGP) lignite, information on present NGP lignite-fueled plants, a study of boiler and turbine arrangement for achieving low plant unavailability, and a preliminary cost comparison of alternate boiler and turbine arrangements for lignite coal. The conclusions are listed below. 1. Little is known about lignite units. A boiler design up to 500 MW can be specified to attain objectives of low unavailability and high capacity. Consideration should be given to 2 boilers and 1 turbine for outputs greater than 500 MW. 2. Lignite is a difficult fuel to burn but is an abundant, long-term, and cost-effective energy source. 3. Conventional fossil-fuel plant design is inadequate for achieving low unavailability and high capacity factors in a Northern Great Plains lignite fueled plant unless a very conservative design is specified. 4. A lignite plant whose boiler size is identical to a conventional sub-bituminous coal-burning boiler will deliver a low output. 5. As compared to the standard sized fossil-fuel plants, the larger and more expensive lignite plants can provide lower long-term energy costs due to the abundance and ease of mining (strip mining) lignite. Cost reductions will be realized for mine-site power stations which will eliminate coal transportation costs. 6. As more operating experience is accumulated, lignite plant design criteria will improve as will plant unavailability and capacity factors. 7.
Keywords :
Ash; Availability; Boilers; Costs; Fuels; Power engineering and energy; Power generation; Reliability engineering; Strips; Turbines; Lignite fuel, Availability;
Journal_Title :
Reliability, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TR.1979.5220603