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    Water Withdrawal and Consumption Reduction Analysis for Electrical Energy Generation System

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    Main File (2.191Mb)
    Thesis Presentation (3.318Mb)
    Date
    2015-12-01
    Author
    Nouri, Narjes
    Department
    Engineering
    Advisor(s)
    Hamid Seifoddini
    Adel Nasiri
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    There is an increasing concern over shrinking water resources. Water use in the energy sector primarily occurs in electricity generation. Anticipating scarcer supplies, the value of water is undoubtedly on the rise and design, implementation, and utilization of water saving mechanisms in energy generation systems are becoming inevitable. Most power plants generate power by boiling water to produce steam to spin electricity-generating turbines. Large quantities of water are often used to cool the steam in these plants. As a consequence, most fossil-based power plants in addition to consuming water, impact the water resources by raising the temperature of water withdrawn for cooling. A comprehensive study is conducted in this thesis to analyze and quantify water withdrawals and consumption of various electricity generation sources such as coal, natural gas, renewable sources, etc. Electricity generation for the state of California is studied and presented as California is facing a serious drought problem affecting more than 30 million people. Integrated planning for the interleaved energy and water sectors is essential for both water and energy savings. A linear model is developed to minimize the water consumption while considering several limitations and restrictions. California has planned to shut down some of its hydro and nuclear plants due to environmental concerns. Studies have been performed for various electricity generation and water saving scenarios including no-hydro and no-nuclear plant and the results are presented. Modifications to proposed different scenarios have been applied and discussed to meet the practical and reliability constraints.
    Subject
    Electricity Generation Technology
    Operation Research
    Water Consumption
    Water-Energy-Nexus
    Water Withdrawal
    Permanent Link
    http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/90860
    Type
    thesis
    Part of
    • UW Milwaukee Electronic Theses and Dissertations

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