Optimal Heat-Matched Cogeneration of Energy in a Firm Owned Power Station: A Case Study

Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksChapter

Authors

Energy represents for every industrial site a fundamental process input which can only be substituted with great difficulty and without which industrial manufacture in general is impossible. The requirement is hereby concentrated on the utilization of distinct types of thermal energy for the process steam and heating, as well as for power and light. According to Wolf (1987) the total demand in 1981 for energy for industrial purposes in the Federal Republic of Germany was divided as follows — 75.9% for the manufacturing process, 10.9% for space heating, and 13.2% for power and light. Although serveral energy resources were used equally for the production of heat, power and light were generated almost without exception by means of electricity. Heat as well as power and light, or rather electricity, are all commodities which have only a limited storage capacity. This leads to considerable procurement problems when the energy requirement fluctuates.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationEssays on Production Theory and Planning
EditorsGünter Fandel, Harald Dyckhoff, Joachim Reese
Number of pages14
Place of PublicationBerlin
PublisherSpringer
Publication date01.10.1988
Pages107-120
ISBN (print)3-540-19314-6, 978-3-540-19314-2, 978-3-642-73750-3, 0-387-19314-6
ISBN (electronic)978-3-642-73748-0
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01.10.1988
Externally publishedYes

    Research areas

  • Management studies - Steam Generation, Space Heating, Desalinate Water, Throttle valves, Contract Price