Oxygen provision for a steel mill via flexible electrolyser operation
Research output: Thesis › Master's Thesis
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2022.
Research output: Thesis › Master's Thesis
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TY - THES
T1 - Oxygen provision for a steel mill via flexible electrolyser operation
AU - Wallner, Stefan
N1 - no embargo
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Due to the lower energy consumption and carbon dioxide emissions, steel production via electric arc furnaces represents a promising alternative to integrated steel production via blast furnace and basic oxygen furnace. Nevertheless, steelmaking through the electric arc furnace route consumes high amounts of electric energy, natural gas and oxygen. This thesis deals with feasible ways to provide carbon dioxide neutral oxygen while also cutting back on natural gas demands via the implementation of a power-to-gas plant. Hydrogen produced by electrolysis could be used to substitute natural gas, either directly by combusting hydrogen or by creating synthetic natural gas via methanation, whereas by-product oxygen could be utilized in the steelmaking process. Moreover, electrolysis would provide a flexibility option, enabling better integration of intermittent energies into the electricity grid and the optimal exploitation of varying electricity prices. Using an energy system model of a steel mill, different scenarios for the application of electrolysis and subsequent methanation are studied. Then, the flexibility and the economic feasibility of these scenarios are assessed. It turns out that economic performance mainly depends on the utilization of hydrogen. Using technical parameters and prices from 2020, only scenarios focusing on selling hydrogen are profitable, while scenarios focusing on substituting natural gas are not viable under the specified conditions.
AB - Due to the lower energy consumption and carbon dioxide emissions, steel production via electric arc furnaces represents a promising alternative to integrated steel production via blast furnace and basic oxygen furnace. Nevertheless, steelmaking through the electric arc furnace route consumes high amounts of electric energy, natural gas and oxygen. This thesis deals with feasible ways to provide carbon dioxide neutral oxygen while also cutting back on natural gas demands via the implementation of a power-to-gas plant. Hydrogen produced by electrolysis could be used to substitute natural gas, either directly by combusting hydrogen or by creating synthetic natural gas via methanation, whereas by-product oxygen could be utilized in the steelmaking process. Moreover, electrolysis would provide a flexibility option, enabling better integration of intermittent energies into the electricity grid and the optimal exploitation of varying electricity prices. Using an energy system model of a steel mill, different scenarios for the application of electrolysis and subsequent methanation are studied. Then, the flexibility and the economic feasibility of these scenarios are assessed. It turns out that economic performance mainly depends on the utilization of hydrogen. Using technical parameters and prices from 2020, only scenarios focusing on selling hydrogen are profitable, while scenarios focusing on substituting natural gas are not viable under the specified conditions.
KW - demand side management
KW - elctric steel mill
KW - power-to-gas
KW - PEM-electrolysis
KW - flexible oxygen production
KW - energy system modelling
KW - energy system optimization
KW - Demand Side Management
KW - Elektro-Stahlwerk
KW - Power-to-Gas
KW - PEM-Elektrolyse
KW - flexible Sauerstoffproduktion
KW - Energiesystem Modellierung
KW - Energiesystem Optimierung
M3 - Master's Thesis
ER -