Organic Rankine Cycle system

An Organic Rankine Cycle (ORC) system is a closed thermodynamic cycle used for power generation from low to medium-high temperature heat sources, typically ranging from 80 to 400°C, and for small-medium applications at any temperature level. Consisting of four key components—the ORC turbine, the heat exchanger, the condenser, and the feed pump—ORC technology enables the efficient utilization of low‑grade heat that would otherwise be wasted.

Exergy introduced a major innovation in this field. While axial and radial‑inflow turbines had been used for decades, Exergy utilized the Radial Outflow Turbine (ROT), applying this highly efficient technology across a wide range of customized ORC power plants and delivering additional performance advantages.

Exergy’s expertise in tailor‑made ORC systems is supported by a portfolio of 600 MWe installed. In addition to its customized solutions, Exergy also offers a standardized ORC product series.

ORC geothermal power plant

PRODUCE CLEAN AND AFFORDABLE ELECTRICITY FROM A WIDE RANGE OF HEAT SOURCES WITH THE ORGANIC RANKINE CYCLE.

The Organic Rankine Cycle


The working principle of an Organic Rankine Cycle power plant is similar to the most widely used process for power generation, the Clausius-Rankine Cycle.

The main difference is the use of organic substances (hydrocarbons or refrigerants) instead of water (steam) as working fluid.

The organic working fluid has a lower boiling point and higher vapor pressure than water and is therefore able to use low-medium temperature heat sources to produce electricity more efficiently than steam cycle.

The organic fluid for the cycle is chosen for best fit with the heat source according to their various thermodynamic properties, thus obtaining higher cycle and expander efficiencies.

The main components
of an Organic Rankine Cycle power
plant include:

Organic Rankine Cycle system for clean power generation

Organic Rankine Cycle applications

By converting thermal energy to electricity from low to medium-high temperatures, ORCs are suitable for a wide range of applications, given a ORC plant size between 100 kW ad 50 MWe, including:

Organic Rankine cycle vs Rankine cycle: learn why ORC cycles are more competitive and flexible

History of Organic Rankine Cycle

2000s

Over the past two decades, the Organic Rankine Cycle market has experienced substantial growth, establishing itself as the preferred technology for geothermal power plants. This trend is expected to continue, with ORC market value projected to reach USD 1,290.9 million by 2033 and a CAGR of 4.7%. The increasing urgency to enhance energy efficiency and deploy decarbonization technologies will further accelerate the adoption of ORC systems for waste heat recovery across multiple industrial sectors.

1990s

The use of ORC expands rapidly, especially for biomass and geothermal applications, leaving great margin for growth in WHR and solar thermodynamic applications.

1980s

THE FINNISH SCHOOL

In Finland, Prof. J. Larjola leads the development of high-speed hermetic turbogenerators in the hundreds of kWe range, in which the turbine, generator and pump share the same shaft. One of the first applications of this type of ORC turbogenerator was charging the batteries of a deep-sea submersible (1987).

1970s

Prof. G. Angelino, together with Ennio Macchi and Mario Gaia start Italian research activity in the ORC sector at Politecnico di Milano. They begin studying the possibility of using organic fluids instead of water to power the Rankine Cycle for automotive, space and solar applications.

1945

Collaborating with Prof. d’Amelio, who first designed a power plant using ethyl chloride to power a turbine, Società Anonima Forze Endogene Napoletane (SAFEN) installs a 300 kWe geothermal plant on Ischia Island (Italy). This plant became operational in 1955 and was the first modern binary plant worldwide.

1935

Prof. Luigi D’Amelio employs an organic fluid in a real turbine system. He is also the first to consider the advantages of high molecular mass fluids to reduce rpm and the number of turbine stages.

1883

Frank Ofeldt develops a power system engine that uses naphtha instead of water.

1840s

Prof William John Macquorn Rankine develops a complete theory of the steam engine describing how power can be generated from the temperature difference between a heat source and a cold source and idealizing the thermodynamic cycle that then took his name: Rankine Cycle.

1824

Nicolas Léonard Sadi Carnot publishes Reflections on the Motive Power of Fire, in which he expresses the first successful theory of the maximum efficiency of heat engines, laying the foundations for an entirely new discipline: thermodynamics.