What is supercritical CO2 and why is it useful in turbines?
Supercritical CO2 is CO2 heated above ~31°C and pressurized above ~7.39 MPa so it has liquid‑like density and gas‑like flow. That combo lets it transfer more energy per volume and spin turbines more effectively, enabling smaller, higher‑efficiency generator designs.
How does sCO2 efficiency compare to traditional steam cycles?
The sCO2 Brayton‑style cycles can theoretically reach ~50% or higher thermal efficiency, compared with roughly ~33% for many conventional steam (Rankine) cycles—making improvements of many percent worth millions in fuel savings at scale.
What did China’s Choten 1 claim to achieve?
Choten 1 (commissioned Dec 2025 at a steel plant) reportedly delivered an ~85% increase in efficiency and ~50% more power output from the same facility by replacing a steam generator with an sCO2 unit.
What major engineering challenges could limit sCO2 adoption?
Challenges include manufacturing and repairing precision heat exchangers, handling corrosion and contamination in a high‑pressure CO2 loop, and avoiding gradual performance degradation that raises maintenance costs over years.
How might sCO2 help meet rising data‑center energy demand?
Because sCO2 units can be retrofitted into existing plants, deliver higher efficiency in a smaller footprint, and operate without large water cooling, they could quickly add capacity and reduce fuel use to help offset rapidly growing power needs from AI data centers.