Luca Bertoni, Simon Roussanaly, Luca Riboldi, Rahul Anantharaman, Matteo Gazzani
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Direct air capture (DAC) is a key component in the transition to net-zero society. However, its giga-tonne deployment faces daunting challenges in terms of availability of both financial resources and, most of all, large quantities of low-carbon energy. Within this context, small modular nuclear reactors (SMRs) might potentially facilitate the deployment of DAC. In the present study, we present a detailed thermodynamic analysis of integrating an SMR with solid sorbent DAC. We propose different integration designs and find that coupling the SMR with DAC significantly increases the use of thermal energy produced in the nuclear reactor: from 32% in a stand-alone SMR to 76%–85% in the SMR-DAC system. Moreover, we find that a 50–MW SMR module equipped with DAC could remove around 0.3 MtCO2 every year, while still producing electricity at 24%–42% of the rated power output. Performing a techno-economic analysis of the system, we estimate a net removal cost of around 250 €/tCO2. When benchmarking it to other low-carbon energy supply solutions, we find that the SMR-DAC system is potentially more cost-effective than a DAC powered by high-temperature heat pumps or dedicated geothermal systems. Finally, we evaluate the potential of future deployment of SMR-DAC in China, Europe, India, South Africa and the USA, finding that it could enable up to around 96 MtCO2/year by 2035 if SMRs prove to be cost-competitive. The impact of regional differences on the removal cost is also assessed.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Physics-Energy is an interdisciplinary and fully open-access publication dedicated to setting the agenda for the identification and dissemination of the most exciting and significant advancements in all realms of energy-related research. Committed to the principles of open science, JPhys Energy is designed to maximize the exchange of knowledge between both established and emerging communities, thereby fostering a collaborative and inclusive environment for the advancement of energy research.