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June 11, 2009 5:51 AM PDT

GE, Idaho Labs turn waste heat into electricity

by Martin LaMonica
  • 5 comments

Re-revving your engine: Waste heat is a terrible thing to waste.

(Credit: Idaho National Laboratories)

General Electric and the Idaho National Laboratory are plumbing engines for a cheap source of energy: waste heat.

The two organizations said Tuesday that they have received a $2 million Department of Energy grant to further develop GE technology that converts the heat from industrial engines into electricity. That technology could make engines 20 percent to 40 percent more efficient and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

The engines that run factories, mills and power plants are often only 35 percent efficient. That means the rest of the available energy from fossil fuels goes unused.

GE researchers in Germany and New York have been working to improve the Organic Rankine Cycle, a process that's been understood for over 100 years but has been expensive in practice. The research will seek to build a prototype of a more efficient and cost-effective ORC which will convert heat from a gas turbine.

Rather than use a working fluid to capture and transfer the waste heat, GE has developed a new evaporator to transfer it. The new design means that ORCs can be used to convert relatively low-temperature heat (under 500 degrees Celsius) into electricity on a wide range of power sources, including the equipment in coal power plants and small gas turbines, said Thomas Fry, a researcher in GE's Munich offices.

There are already waste-heat recovery systems operating in large industrial facilities that produce steam from smokestacks to turn an electricity turbine. Another technology that's being pursued, although is still expensive, is thermoelectrics, materials that create a current from heat.

One company called ElectraTherm has developed a on-site generator, which uses an Organic Rankine Cycle to make electricity at facilities such as offices or hospitals.

November 12, 2008 9:51 AM PST

ElectraTherm gets funds for 'waste-heat generator'

by Martin LaMonica
  • 1 comment

ElectraTherm, which has developed a relatively small machine for making electricity from waste heat, has raised $2.6 million and plans a follow-on round next year.

The Carson City, Nev.-based company's ElectraTherm Green Machine is designed to squeeze power from the heat thrown off at industrial facilities like factories, saw mills, or oil and gas operations.

A 50-kilowatt generator that runs on industrial waste heat.

(Credit: ElectraTherm)

The company intends to make units that range in size from 30 kilowatts to 500 kilowatts, enough to offset electricity use at an industrial facility. A 50 kilowatt unit can generate roughly what 40 U.S. homes consume.

The money from the $2.6 million Series A was from Michigan investor Interlaken and angel investors, said William Olsen, ElectraTherm's vice president of business development. He said the company intends to raise more money--in the range of $5 million to $8 million--early next year to expand manufacturing.

The company has made only a handful of units so far, including one installed at Southern Methodist University. But Olsen said the company is in discussions with utilities, oil and gas companies, and other industrial firms looking for energy-efficiency technologies.

"There's waste heat everywhere," he said. "We've been able to convince (potential customers) that the technology works. At this stage, it's just helping them deploy it."

The generator uses an organic Rankine cycle to convert heat into electrical energy. It channels heat to a refrigerant that is converted to a gas by the heat. The vapor pressure caused from that reaction turns a mechanism that is connected to a generator that makes electricity.

ElectraTherma certainly isn't the only company that has equipment to turn industrial waste heat into electricity. But its product design allows it to operate at relatively small scale and low temperatures, as low as 200 degrees, Olsen said.

When fossil fuels are burned, about two thirds of the energy content is wasted. The net effect of a heat-capturing machine is to squeeze another ten percent of energy from those fuels, Olsen said.

The cost for a 50-kilowatt system is $128,000. Depending on the cost of electricity, the payback is typically under three years, according to the company.

August 22, 2008 4:00 AM PDT

Smokestack heat: Fuel of the future?

by Martin LaMonica
  • 21 comments

How's this for a tantalizing possibility: rather than install solar panels on your roof, the lost heat from your furnace could power your home.

That's not yet a product, but a growing number of scientists and clean-tech companies are trying to coax usable energy from smokestacks and other waste-heat sources.

A global push toward energy efficiency is prodding more industrial outfits to reuse heat from their operations that would otherwise be lost to the skies.

Meanwhile, improving thermoelectric technology that converts heat into electricity is being fitted onto everything from car exhaust pipes to furnace flues.

It's a sign that energy efficiency, which often takes a backseat to renewable energy or alternative fuels, is getting more attention from technology innovators.

One company, GMZ Energy which was formed earlier this year by researchers from Boston College and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is taking a high-tech path to waste-heat recovery.

It has developed a nanomaterial-manufacturing process that improves the efficiency of existing thermoelectric modules, which are usually made from bismuth telluride and look something like a computer chip.

Thermoelectric devices can work in two directions: passing an electrical current through a module creates heat on one side and cooling on the other. Working in the reverse, applying heat to a device will create electricity.

Initially, GMZ Energy plans to sell modules to the existing market for cooling in small refrigerators or server racks, CEO Mike Clary said. The bigger market--on the order of billions of dollars--is converting waste heat from smokestacks or industrial equipment to electricity, he said.

"Eventually, we're going to see a tremendous amount of waste heat recovery applications, but that's 5 to 10 years off," Clary said. "We have to get to that 10 percent efficiency threshold to start making it viable."

Clary said appliance maker Bosch has shown interest in making a home-heating unit with an attachment that makes electricity from exhaust heat. At 10 percent efficiency, a home could meet its power needs with the heat on.

GMZ's prototype modules now operate at about 7 percent efficiency, 30 percent or 40 percent better for cooling than existing devices, Clary said.

A thermoelectric module, which one company intends to use for harvesting waste heat to make electricity.

(Credit: Martin LaMonica/CNET News)

The company, which got its seed funding from venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, is looking to raise a round of funding in September to set up assembly operations in China, Clary said.

It is also readying a technical paper to show that its manufacturing process, where material is milled and then repressed into an ingot, works with both bismuth antimony telluride and silicon germanium for high-temperature applications.

Make steam, make juice
Automakers, too, are investigating heat recovery through thermoelectric devices.

BMW and General Motors are reviving work in this area and plan to test attachments to exhaust pipes next year. So far, research indicates that mileage could be improved by about 5 percent, or 1 mile per gallon, on a Chevrolet Suburban.

GMZ Energy's Clary thinks that automakers' interest in thermoelectrics is one reason the market is likely to take shape. He also notes that many researchers are working in the area.

But even before any breakthroughs in advanced materials, many people consider waste heat recovery the proverbial low-hanging fruit in energy efficiency.

"The market is a lot of wasted energy, and that is, by definition, a zero-cost feedstock," said Roger Ballentine, president of Green Strategies and a clean-tech investor. "That's a pretty attractive proposition."

A traditional heat recovery system. Click to see larger image.

(Credit: Recycled Energy Development)

Ballentine has consulted for China Energy Recovery, a Shanghai-based company that says it can capture 90 percent of energy that would otherwise be lost.

Efficiency, in general, is less sexy than renewable-power generation, an area that attracts more entrepreneurs and investors. But the economics of efficiency are usually better, said Ballentine, who expects to see more growth in heat recovery.

"If energy prices keep going up, the economics keep getting better," he said.

Co-generation plants, where both heat and electricity are produced, have been around for many years. Yet even though it is a cleaner form of power generation than burning fossil fuels, combined heat and power has held steady, at 9 percent of energy production, for several years, according to the World Alliance for Decentralized Energy.

Wasting away
The granddaddy of the waste heat recovery business is Recycled Energy Development, whose chairman, Thomas Casten, has been involved in energy-recycling projects for 30 years.

In projects at power plants or factories, the company places coils around a smokestack or other equipment to heat water. That hot water is then pumped back into the facility for heating or industrial processes. Or the hot water is turned into pressurized steam to make electricity in a turbine.

The amount of heat in a typical power plant that goes up in smoke is a "problem and an embarrassment," said Dick Munson, senior vice president at Recycled Energy Development, who spoke at the Virtual Energy Forum in June.

The average U.S. power plant uses three units of fuel to do one unit of power, meaning that two-thirds of the energy content is vented as waste, he said.

The efficiency of power plants in the United States has not improved in 50 years, while industry in Denmark has managed to increase efficiency 60 percent in the last three years, he said.

One customer is taking wasted energy from a steel smelter to make 220 megawatts of electricity. That's on the order of a single large solar-power plant. Through waste heat recovery, the U.S. could generate the equivalent of 400 coal-fired power plants, Munson said.

Polices need to be updated to better favor efficiency, Munson argued. Another barrier to industrial-scale heat-recycling projects is high capital costs, Ballentine added.

But one of the biggest impediments to heat recovery is changing the mind-set of building operators and product designers.

That's even truer of thermoelectric technology, which still needs to improve before more people look at it seriously, said GMZ Energy's Clary. A hybrid car or diesel truck, for example, could improve efficiency, as could a solar-thermal power generator.

"New ways of thinking like that just don't happen overnight in complex systems that have complex product cycles," he said. "As people get dialed into it, and the performance goes up, it will take off."

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