The Siemens Industrial
Solutions and Services (I&S) Group has received an order from HotRock
Erdwärmekraftwerk Germersheim GmbH & Co. Objekt KG, Karlsruhe, to plan and
build a turnkey geothermal power plant in Bellheim near Landau in the German
state of Rhineland-Palatinate
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January 24, 2006, Erlangen :
The Siemens
Industrial Solutions and Services (I&S) Group has received an order from
HotRock Erdwärmekraftwerk Germersheim GmbH & Co. Objekt KG, Karlsruhe, to
plan and build a turnkey geothermal power plant in Bellheim near Landau in the
German state of Rhineland-Palatinate. The geothermal plant will work according
to the Kalina principle. This enables heat to be converted into electrical
energy with a considerably higher yield than is possible with conventional
plants. The scope of supply and services covers the turbine generator set
including the turbine, gearbox and generator, the Kalina heat-exchanger circuit,
the cooling circuit, the entire electrical equipment and the control system, as
well as constructing the control center building, power house and cooling tower
basin. The geothermal power station is designed to have an output of 6.4
megawatts.
The small town of Bellheim
is situated in the Upper Rhine Graben (rift), and therefore in the "hottest
zone" - in geological terms - in Germany. Temperature gradients here can be over
50°C per 1000 meters. The bore hole in Bellheim, extending to a depth of almost
3000 meters, is expected to supply water at a temperature of 165°C. HotRock
Erdwärmekraftwerk Germersheim, a company located in nearby Karlsruhe, has
planned a project to build a 6.4-megawatt power station here. This corresponds
to the power requirements of approximately 25,000 households. A coal-fired power
station with the same output would emit some 29,000 metric tons of CO2 per
year.
Siemens is responsible for the complete planning and construction
of the above-ground components of the power plant. These include the
evaporator-condenser circuit, the steam turbine with generator, and the cooling
circuit, as well as all the automation and control systems. Siemens had already
received orders for the pre-engineering and the production of time-critical
components from HotRock during the previous year. The geothermal power plant at
Bellheim will operate according to the Kalina principle, using a binary working
fluid made up of water and ammonia. Compared with single-component fluids with a
constant boiling point such as water or pentane, this mixture boils over a large
temperature range at a given pressure. This makes it possible to achieve
considerably greater thermal yield than with comparable processes - and hence
generate power more efficiently.
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