ElectraTherm installs first waste heat generato
ElectraTherm installs first waste heat generato
CARSON CITY, NEV.: ElectraTherm, Inc. has installed its first commercial waste heat generator, which makes electricity from residual industrial heat that usually goes to waste.
Using patented heat and pressure recovery technology,
ElectraTherm employs minimal heat (200 degrees F liquid) to generate
fuel-free, emissions-free electricity at low cost: three to four cents
per kW/hr during payback period, under a penny/kW hour thereafter.
Testing of the 50kW ElectraTherm Green Machine, installed at Southern Methodist University (SMU) in Dallas, Texas, by Gulf Coast Green Energy and ElectraTherm, has exceeded the companies' expectations, reaching output beyond its 50kW rating.
"ElectraTherm has unlocked the power of recycling the largest
source of renewable energy in the U.S. - waste heat," said ElectraTherm
CEO Richard Langson. "This technology has the power to increase
electrical output at every fossil fuel burning power plant without
burning oil, gas or coal, and without further pollution or damage to
the environment."
According to some government estimates, electricity generated through waste heat recovery could surpass all other renewable sources, given the amount of waste heat generated in the U.S.
ElectraTherm estimates that its units have a subsidy-free
payback period of three years or less, and company officials claim "the
implications on the world stage of a modular, scalable (50-500kW
output) unit making electricity from unused, accessible heat are huge."
The company's patented Twin Screw Expander enables the
ElectraTherm Green Machine to do its work. The expander is
one-tenth the cost of a turbine as the energy block, according to
ElectraTherm. Since the energy block generally constitutes 30 to 40
percent of the cost of an organic Rankine cycle (ORC) system, the
ElectraTherm Green Machine will cost approximately 30 percent less
than turbine ORC systems.
The unit operates without gearboxes or the high end electronics
required to synchronize a turbine to a generator. Inline process
lubrication eliminates oil pumps, filters, separator tanks, parasitic
loads and maintenance issues usually associated with
lubrication. ElectraTherm officials say the technology reduces
maintenance and extends the life of the ElectraTherm Green
Machine compared to turbine-based energy solutions...
via energycurrent

