There is a U.S. Navy base located in the middle of the Mojave desert.
According to an official Web site …
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NAWS China Lake provides and maintains
land, facilities and other assets that support the Navy’s research, development,
acquisition, testing and evaluation (RDAT&E) of cutting-edge weapons
systems for the warfighter.
source: https://www.cnic.navy.mil/regions/cnrsw/installations/naws_china_lake.html
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But, as interesting as this is, the reason for its mention in this post is that
for a quarter of a century this Naval station has operated several geothermal
power plants. A byproduct of the power production process is sulfur.
An article in the May 2022 issue of Decarbonisation
Technology (https://www.decarbonisationtechnology.com/
) offers a detailed description of the Lo-Cat desulfurization technology employed
to remove the sulfur.
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Decarbonisation Technology, May 2022
Geothermal
sulphur removal
Vent gases from a geothermal power plant have consistently met H2S
emissions specifications for over 25 years
David Jackson Merichem Company
Mark Kolar Coso Operating Company
[ EXCERPT ]
Dubbed “the sun beneath our feet”, geothermal energy has moved from being a
niche player to becoming a viable contender in making 100% clean electricity available
to the world. It is a reliable source of power that has a small land footprint compared
to other renewable sources and can be harnessed at both large and small scales.
The industry is expanding, and its infrastructure is long-lasting.
In the eastern portion of Central California on the military-owned Naval Air
Weapons Station near China Lake, the Coso Geothermal Field, operated by Coso
Operating Company, has been producing geothermal power continuously since 1987.
It is one of the top three producers of geothermal electrical power in the US.
Coso provides power to the southern California power grid and plays an
important role in supporting the State’s mandated Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS).
It also supplies approximately 8% of the entire geothermal power in the US.
The Coso generating facility consists of four separate but interlinked
geothermal power plants with nine 30 MW turbine-generator sets for a total of
270 MW of rated capacity, enough power to supply 250,000 homes. Due to the high
pressures and temperatures encountered in the field, which allow the units to
operate above their initial rated capacity, the net running capacity is higher
than the rated capacity at 302 MW. Between 80 and 90 production wells operate at
any given time, producing a mass flow rate of more than 14 million pounds per
hour.
Depending on the volume of fluid that needs to be handled and where pressure
support is required, the Coso field can employ 30-40 injection wells. Because
of the high-temperature fluids, the power plants utilise double-flash technology
for steam extraction. Wellhead pressures range from 85-500 psig. Produced fluids
are moderately saline chloride brines with total dissolved solids from
7,000-18,000 ppm. Non-condensable gases account for 6% of the gas fraction,
with 98% of that from CO₂. Hydrogen sulphide ranges from <10-85 ppm. After
the wells are tapped and gathered, the steam wells produce electricity from the
renewable geothermal energy source. The produced steam passes through a set of
turbines/ generators, and the non-condensable vapours are separated from the
condensed steam (water) at low pressure. Finally, the brine is reinjected into
the geothermal field.
The non-condensable vapours cannot be vented to the atmosphere until the
particles of hydrogen sulphide (H₂S) are removed. During the initial facility
start-up, the H₂S-laden vapours were reinjected into the geothermal field with the
water. Over time, this H₂S abatement method became more costly, mostly due to compressor
maintenance. In 1993, a Merichem Lo-Cat unit was installed, the first of three.
Poststart- up, the non-condensable carbon dioxide (CO2)and H₂S are flashed,
compressed, and routed to the Lo-Cat unit for sulphur removal before being
emitted into the atmosphere. The Lo-Cat process has been removing H₂S at this facility
for over 25 years and has significantly reduced sulphur emission exceedances
and operating costs compared to other technologies previously employed.
The site now has a total of four power generation facilities, two of them
containing Lo- Cat units: the Navy 1 power plant and Navy 2 power plant with
three Lo-Cat units (see Tables 1 and 2). There are two Lo-Cat units at the Navy
2 site: Navy 2 and Navy 210. Only Navy 210 will be discussed here because Navy
2 is operated periodically.
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Saturday, May 14, 2022
China Lake, Geothermal, and all that …
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