ORIGINAL RESEARCH ARTICLE | Oct. 30, 2017
Prospect of Green Power Generation Using Rooppur Nuclear Power Plant in Bangladesh
Md. Arman Arefin, Avijit Mallik, Md. Alif Khan
Page no 364-372 |
10.21276/sjeat.2017.2.10.2
Bangladesh, a standout amongst the most crowded regions of Asia is at
present experiencing Major energy emergency. Years of unconsciousness, absence of
potential assets, labor, innovation and investment have taken the circumstance to an
emergency level. Commercial energy consumption depends on natural gas (around
70%) trailed by coal, oil and hydropower. At present there is a huge difference
between demand and generation of electricity. A step of building a nuclear power
plant named Rooppur Nuclear Power Plant (RNPP) is taken by Government to fulfill
this crying need. Bangladesh has planned to establish two Russian nuclear power
reactors in operation (Rooppur-1 & Rooppur-2). The power plant will be built at
Rooppur, 200 km north-west of Dhaka, at Paksey union on the bank of the Padma in
the Ishwardi subdistrict of Pabna District, in the northwest of the nation. This paper
discusses the prospect of green power generation using RNPP and evaluates different
parameters whether it is a proper decision or not and also provides some necessary
recommendations regarding the implementation of Rooppur Nuclear Power Plant.
ORIGINAL RESEARCH ARTICLE | Oct. 30, 2017
Study of the Viability of a Methanol-To-Gasoline Process for the Monetization of Stranded Natural Gas
D. Appah, B.O Evbuomwan, E.P. Uhunmwangho
Page no 358-363 |
10.21276/sjeat.2017.2.10.1
Methanol-to-Gasoline Process involves the chemical transformation of
Natural gas into usable gasoline range products. The objective of this work was to
conduct a techno-economic analysis of Methanol-to-Gasoline Process, identifying
heat integration, recycle and cost saving opportunities in the Process, and determining
the Present-day Profitability of the Process. Aspen Hysys v8.6 was used in the model
simulation, with an Auto-thermal Reformer being Used in modelling Synthesis Gas
Manufacture, and a Plug Flow Tubular Reactor used in the methanol synthesis, with
kinetic data similar to that of the commercial Cu/ZnO/Al2O3 Catalyst. The Gasoline
synthesis reactor was modelled as a conversion reactor, with 94% conversion based
on the CuO/ZnO/HZSM-5 zeolite conversion yield. It was also discovered, that
starting with 10.02MMscfD of natural gas, we obtained 1462 Barrels/day of
Gasoline, 82 Barrels/day of Methanol and 147 Barrels/day of Di-Methyl Ether. The
total Capital Cost came to $172,360,500, the Operating Cost of $21,808,945
annually, and Gross annual revenue came to $26,575,626, with annual savings of
$4,766,681. After Heat Integration and product recycle, a savings of $7,303,009 was
realized (74% reduction). The simple payback period of 36.2 years and a Net-present
value of -$94million after 20 years, indicating that the MTG process is not viable
under the present economic situation. The results of the sensitivity analysis show that
the MTG process will be profitable within the 1st 20 years when the price of natural
gas falls $500/MMscf or is completely free, or when the interest rate falls 5% or
when the inflation rate rises above 20%. The reason for its non-profitability was
discovered to be its water to hydrocarbon volume distribution, with water being
53.32% and Gasoline was 46.68%.
REVIEW ARTICLE | Oct. 30, 2017
Experimental Investigation of Flow Characteristics over Crump Weir with Different Conditions
Dr. Abdul-Hassan K. Al-Shukur, Dr. Mohammed Abbas Al-jumaily, Zahraa Shaker
Page no 373-379 |
10.21276/sjeat.2017.2.10.3
Weirs are the most extensively used hydraulic structures in the different
fields of hydraulics, environmental, irrigation, and chemical engineering, as flow
measuring and flow control devices in open Channels. The object of the present paper
is to study the effect of the geometry of crump weir on the coefficient of discharge
(Cd) under different flow conditions. The experimental work was conducted in
rectangular laboratory flume; fifteen physical models were used with five upstream
angles (17o, 22o, 27o, 32o and 37o) and three different crest heights (10, 15 and 20) cm
under free flow conditions. The results show that Cd value will increase with the
decrease of crest height as well as with increasing flow rate; it is also directly
proportional to the upstream slope and inversely to the downstream slope.
Computational fluid dynamic (FLOW 3D) were used to conduct new experiments.An
empirical relation was obtained to estimate the coefficient of discharge Cd under
different height and upstream slopes crump weirs.
ORIGINAL RESEARCH ARTICLE | Oct. 30, 2017
Floristic Characterization of the Natural Rangelands of the Classified Forest of Upper Alibori in Northern Benin
Alassan S. Assani, Ibrahim T. Alkoiret, Hilaire Sanni Worogo, Abdel-Aziz Agbayigbo, Marcel Houinato
Page no 380-389 |
10.21276/sjeat.2017.2.10.4
The aim of this study is to assess the state of plant biodiversity in the
natural rangelands of transhumant cattle herds in the Classified Forest of Upper
Alibori (CFUA), Northern Benin. Forty-five (45) phytosociological plots were
carried out using the Braun-Blanquet method. The phytosociological data were
submitted to Detrended Correspondence Analysis (DCA) under the software R.3.3.2
with a package vegan. The results revealed that the natural rangelands of the CFUA
have 178 species belonging to 45 families of which the most abundant and dominant
are the Poaceae, Caesalpiniaceae, Combretaceae and Rubiaceae. Three (3) types of
pasture were highlighted: Detarium microcarpum and Pennisetum polystachion ;
Isoberlinia doka and Brachiaria stigmatisata; Prosopis africana and Pennisetum
pedicellatum. The most abundant and dominant biological types on these natural
rangelands are phanerophytes followed by therophytes. However, Sudanese species
are the most abundant and dominant. This shows that pastures in this protected area
are relatively undisturbed. The unsweetened and invasive species such as Senna
obtusifolia, Hyptis suaveolens, Loudetia togoensis, etc. were also observed in this
natural rangeland. It follows from this study that the natural rangelands of CFUA are
degraded due to the strong agropastoral pressure.