Abstract:
An improved flue gas cooler  10 , or bank of coolers  10 , handles flue gas G from aluminum reduction cells in an aluminum smelter plant. Each flue gas cooler  10  has a gas inlet chamber  14 , a gas outlet chamber  16 , and a matrix of gas cooling tubes  18  extending between the inlet chamber and the outlet chamber. Each cooling tube  18  has a bell-shaped inlet end  19  comprising an aerodynamically curved gas-accelerating profile effective to facilitate streamlined flow of flue gas G into the tube. The improved flue gas cooler makes it possible to connect the flue gas cooler to receive flue gas G direct from the aluminum reduction cells without getting clogged by dust and sublimates present in the flue gas.

Description:
FIELD OF THE INVENTION 
     The present invention relates to an improved gas cooler for cooling flue gas from aluminium smelters. It further relates to an improved flue gas cooling and cleaning system for an aluminium smelter plant, and a system for extracting heat energy from the flue gas. 
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     Aluminium smelters, comprising many aluminium reduction cells (colloquially called “pots”), produce large amounts of hot flue gas containing hydrogen fluoride, other gases, particulates, and sublimates. For example, an aluminium smelter producing 300,000 tonnes/year of aluminium metal will comprise about 400 reduction cells, arranged in four rows. Such a potline will produce about 3,600,000 Normal cubic meters per hour (Nm 3 /h) of flue gas. The raw flue gas must be cleaned, and a well-known type of gas cleaning process used in this connection is the so-called “dry scrubbing” process. Gas cleaning plant using this process is available, for example, from ALSTOM Power Environment Control Systems at Drammensveien 165, 0277 Oslo, Norway (Tel. +47 22 12 70 00). 
     The trend of technical development in the aluminium production industry is toward the hooded pre-bake type of reduction cells. These are increasing in size and energy input, resulting in increasing flue gas temperatures. From a previous level of 70-90° C., the flue gas temperature from the most modern potlines is now in the range 120-180° C., or even more. Unfortunately, such flue gas temperatures exceed acceptable temperature levels for gas cleaning plant using the dry scrubbing process, with regard to both the process and the equipment. Consequently, the dust- and impurity-containing raw flue gas has to be cooled before it enters the cleaning plant. 
     It is known to cool hot raw flue gas produced by aluminium reduction cells by mixing cool ambient air into the flue gas ducts upstream of a gas cleaning plant. Gas/air mixing is easy and cheap, but when gas temperatures are up to or exceeding 150° C., the volume of ambient air required to give adequate cooling becomes substantial, and so does the increase in cooled gas volume. Hence, there is a corresponding increase in the size of the gas cleaning plant, the downstream fans that pull the gas through the cleaning plant, and the plant energy consumption. This adversely affects the plant economics, both during its construction and during its operation. 
     It is also known to cool the flue gas from aluminium reduction cells by evaporation using direct injection of atomised water. Although this system reduces the overall flue gas volume, the volume of steam thereby produced must also be taken into account. Direct cost for this cooling system is moderate, but it requires large quantities of compressed air for atomisation of the injected water, so energy consumption for air compression is high. Furthermore, the system requires quite large quantities of fresh, purified cooling water, which is an economic and environmental disadvantage in areas where fresh clean water is a valuable asset. Additionally, assuming filter bags are used in the subsequent gas cleaning plant, high humidity in the cooled flue gas may hydrolyse the standard polyester type of filter bag, necessitating use of a more chemically inert and very considerably more expensive material for the filter bags. 
     In some existing aluminium smelting plants, it is known to recover heat from the flue gas after it has been cleaned by passing it through heat exchangers to produce warm water for heating purposes. Hitherto, such heat recovery has only been possible after the gas has been cleaned, because dust, sublimates and other impurities in raw flue gases would otherwise tend to deposit as hard scale onto heat exchanger surfaces, resulting in clogging and reduced heat transmission in the heat exchanger. Moreover, at present the building of new or larger aluminium smelting capacity is mainly limited to tropical or subtropical countries, in which the energy requirement for heating purposes is limited or non-existent, the greater need usually being energy for cooling purposes. 
     It is known to use the gas tube type of gas cooler to cool hot flue gases from steel, ferro-silicon and silicon metal furnaces. In such coolers, the flue gas—which comes from the furnace to the cooler via flue ducting—flows through a bundle of parallel tubes, with the coolant flowing over the outside of the tubes. The fumes and particulates in these gases tend to form insulating layers of dust on the cooler tube walls that reduce the heat transmission in the coolers. This type of dust layer can be blown down to an acceptable thickness and can be nearly completely removed by maintaining a high gas velocity along the tubes, thus maintaining an acceptable heat transmission in the coolers. 
     The fumes and particulates in the flue gas from aluminium reduction bells have, in contrast to the fumes and particulates in the above-mentioned furnace gases, a strong tendency to form hard-as-stone scales when impacting surfaces in turbulent gas flow zones, and surfaces that lie across the gas flow. These scales are too hard and compact to be blown away and removed by any practical gas velocity in tubes or other parts of a gas transportation system. Besides having an insulating effect in a gas cooler, such scaling tends to continue to grow on impact surfaces and in zones of turbulence until the cooler is completely clogged. 
     It will therefore be understood that the above-mentioned gas tube type of gas cooler, in the form used to cool hot flue gases from metal furnaces, is unsuitable for use in cleaning flue gas from aluminium reduction cells. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     According to one aspect of the present invention, a gas cooler capable of handling hot, raw flue gas from aluminium reduction cells in an aluminium smelter plant comprises:
         (a) a gas inlet chamber;   (b) a gas outlet chamber; and   (c) a plurality of gas cooling tubes, each cooling tube having an inlet end in the inlet chamber and an outlet end in the outlet chamber, the inlet ends being bell-shaped and comprising an aerodynamically curved gas-accelerating profile effective to facilitate streamlined flow of hot, raw flue gas into the tubes.       

     By raw flue gas is meant flue gas that issues untreated from the aluminium smelter pot line, containing hydrogen fluoride, dust, sublimates and other impurities. 
     The bell-shaped inlets of the cooling tubes are designed to smoothly accelerate the flow of flue gas into the tubes, thereby substantially preventing scale formation inside the tubes. That is to say, the above-mentioned bell-shaped, aerodynamically curved acceleration zone at the inlet of each cooling tube encourages streamlined flow acceleration and prevents flow contraction (the vena contracta effect). In the absence of such preventative measures, turbulent flow would cause impact of the flue gas with the internal surfaces of the cooling tubes, leading to scaling. Our best estimate is that the accelerated gas velocity in the cooling tubes of a preferred embodiment should be in the range of roughly 20-30 m/sec, depending on gas temperature. 
     Preferably, the cooling tubes form a matrix of mutually parallel, spaced-apart tubes. The cooling tubes should be evenly spaced apart over the cross-sectional extents of the inlet and outlet plenum chambers and their inlet and outlet ends should project into the inlet and outlet plenum chambers, respectively. 
     The gas cooler should include a coolant enclosure or jacket around the cooling tubes, the enclosure being provided with coolant entry and exit ducts. Conveniently, the coolant enclosure forms part of an external shell of the gas cooler. Preferably, the coolant is water or other appropriate liquid. To maximise heat exchange efficiency, the direction of coolant flow through the coolant enclosure over the outside surfaces of the tubes should be counter to the direction of gas flow through the tubes. 
     In operation, the inlet chamber is connected to inlet flue ducting that transports the hot flue gas from the aluminium reduction cells to the gas cooler, whereas the outlet chamber is connected to outlet flue ducting that transports the cooled flue gas away from the gas cooler to gas cleaning plant. 
     The inlet chamber receives the hot, raw flue gas via a diffusing divergent inlet portion, which slows the flue gas entering from the inlet ducting to a relatively low velocity so that it is stabilised and flows evenly into the array of bell-shaped inlets of the cooling tubes. The relative cross-sectional flow areas of the inlet plenum chamber and the array of cooling tubes are judiciously chosen so that the diffusing portion of the inlet plenum chamber slows the hot flue gas to a relatively low velocity, without creating zones of turbulence that would cause unacceptable scaling in the inlet plenum. Our best estimate is that the gas velocity in the inlet plenum chamber should be in the range of roughly 8-12 m/sec, depending on gas temperature. The outlet plenum chamber receives the cooled flue gas from the outlet ends of the cooling tubes, gradually accelerates it through a convergent outlet portion, and discharges it to the flue ducting. 
     Preferably, the inlet and outlet plenum chambers are demountable from the cooling jacket portion of the gas cooler. This has the advantage of allowing easy disassembly and cleaning of the plenum chambers and the entry and exit portions of the cooling tubes, should this become necessary. However, the need for such cleaning is minimised because of the above-mentioned measures taken to avoid turbulence. 
     In another aspect of the invention, a flue gas cooling and cleaning system for an aluminium smelter plant includes in flow sequence:
         a plurality of aluminium reduction cells that in operation discharge hot, raw flue gas;   at least one flue gas cooler in the form of a gas tube heat exchanger comprising a plurality of cooling tubes, each cooling tube having a longitudinally extending major axis and being configured to receive and pass flue gas therethrough in a streamlined flow whose velocity vectors are substantially parallel to the tube&#39;s major axis; and   flue gas cleaning plant of the dry scrubbing type;
 
the at least one flue gas cooler being connected to receive hot, raw flue gas from the reduction cells and to pass cooled raw flue gas to the flue gas cleaning plant.
       

     It is envisaged that the flue gas cooler will receive raw flue gases at a temperature in the range 120-250° C. and deliver them to the flue gas cleaning plant at a temperature in the range 60-120° C. The latter temperature range suits a flue gas cleaning plant of the dry scrubbing type. 
     Cooling of the flue gas before it enters the flue gas cleaning plant is advantageous because the flue gas exiting the reduction cells is at temperatures that exceed the capabilities of the dry scrubbing plant. To achieve the required cooling of the flue gas, we utilise a coolant jacket around the cooling tubes of the flue gas cooler as part of a closed circuit coolant circulation system that couples the flue gas cooler to a heat exchange arrangement that extracts heat energy from the coolant and rejects it to the environment and/or passes it to further plant. Preferably, the closed circuit coolant circulation system flows the coolant through the coolant jacket in a direction counter to the flow of flue gas through the cooling tubes. It is convenient if the coolant in the closed circuit coolant circulation system is water. 
     Cooling of the hot, raw flue gases before they are passed to the dry scrubbing plant will be environmentally advantageous, because such cooling will improve the adsorption efficiency of the scrubbing media, thereby improving the efficiency of recovery of hydrogen fluoride from the flue gases and so reducing harmful emissions. Additionally, flue gas cooling prior to the gas cleaning process will extend the life of filter bags used in the dry scrubbing process. 
     A further efficiency advantage may arise, in that cooling of the flue gases before entry to the gas cleaning process may allow the potline operators to increase potline amperage without detrimental effect on the gas cleaning process. 
     An aluminium smelter may have a large number of reduction cells, and to handle the large volumetric flow rate of the resulting flue gas, we prefer that a plurality of flue gas coolers are connected in parallel with each other to receive flue gas from the reduction cells. For example, each such flue gas cooler may receive flue gas from between about 50 to about 100 reduction cells. 
     In a further aspect, the invention provides a method of cooling and cleaning raw flue gas from an aluminium smelter plant provided with flue gas cleaning plant of the dry scrubbing type, comprising the steps of:
         (a) passing the raw flue gas at an initial temperature in excess of that compatible with the flue gas cleaning plant through a plurality of gas coolers arranged to receive the raw flue gas in parallel with each other, the gas coolers comprising an array of cooling tubes configured to receive and pass the raw flue gas therethrough in a streamlined flow;   (b) flowing coolant on the outside of the cooling tubes to cool the raw flue gas by transfer of flue gas heat to the coolant, thereby cooling the flue gas to a temperature compatible with the flue gas cleaning plant; and   (c) passing the cooled raw flue gas to the flue gas cleaning plant.       

     Heat energy may be extracted from the coolant by a heat exchange arrangement and used to increase the efficiency of further plant coupled to the heat exchange arrangement. 
     In yet another aspect of the invention, an aluminium smelter plant is provided with a flue gas cooling system, the system comprising:
         at least one flue gas cooler in the form of a gas tube heat exchanger comprising a plurality of cooling tubes, each cooling tube having a longitudinally extending major axis and being configured to receive and pass raw flue gas therethrough in a streamlined flow whose velocity vectors are substantially parallel to the tube&#39;s major axis; and   a coolant circulation system that flows coolant over the outside of the cooling tubes.       

     We prefer that the coolant circulation system is a closed circuit coolant circulation system and that a heat exchange arrangement is coupled to the flue gas coolers through the closed circuit coolant circulation system to cool the coolant. The heat exchange arrangement may cool the coolant by rejecting heat to the environment and/or exchanging heat with further plant. Thus, the heat exchange arrangement can in turn be coupled to further plant through a further closed circuit coolant circulation system and heat energy extracted from the coolant by the heat exchange arrangement can then be used to increase the efficiency of the further plant. Such further plant may comprise at least one of the following:
         a combined cycle power plant (for example, a pre-heater for boiler water);   a desalination plant;   a district heating scheme.       

     Further aspects of the invention will be apparent from a perusal of the following description and claims. 
    
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
       Exemplary embodiments of the invention will now be described, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which: 
         FIG. 1  is a block diagram of part of an aluminium smelter plant constructed in accordance with the invention; 
         FIG. 2  is a schematic diagram of the flue gas cooling system used in  FIG. 1 ; and 
         FIG. 3  is a longitudinal section of part of the flue gas cooler of  FIG. 2 . 
     
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS 
     It should be understood that the accompanying Figures illustrate purely exemplary embodiments of the invention. Each feature or system parameter shown in the Figures or described below would be subject to variation during detailed design of a system to fit the needs of a particular aluminium smelter potline. 
     In  FIG. 1 , an aluminium smelter potline  2  produces hot, particulate- and sublimate-laden flue gas G. This hot raw flue gas is passed through a gas cooler  10 , which cools the flue gas before it is passed through a flue gas cleaning plant  4  of the dry scrubbing type. In the gas cooler  10 , heat is taken away from the hot raw flue gas G by coolant  22 . It would be possible to use environmental water as coolant  22  to directly cool the flue gas G by means of an open-circuit coolant circulation system. However, as shown, it is preferable to cool the coolant  22  by extracting the heat energy from it in a heat exchange arrangement  24  that is coupled to the gas cooler  10  through a closed-circuit coolant circulation system. The heat exchange arrangement  24  may then cool the coolant by rejecting heat to the environment E, and/or by heat exchange with further plant  44  through a further closed-circuit coolant circulation system, as explained below. 
     Turning now to  FIG. 2 , hot raw flue gas is collected from the smelter potline by flue ducting comprising, in this embodiment, four main flue gas header ducts  12 . Assuming a smelter of capacity 300,000 tonnes of aluminium per year, the potline will produce about 3,600,000 Nm 3 /h of flue gas G. Each duct  12  will therefore handle about 900,000 Nm 3 /h of flue gas G. Each header duct  12  is about 5-6 m diameter and in this instance is shown as having its own gas cooler  10 . As explained below, each gas cooler comprises a gas tube type of heat exchanger that is specially adapted to handle the hot raw flue gas. 
     Each gas cooler  10  has an inlet plenum chamber  14  to slow down and stabilise the hot flue gas received from the corresponding header duct  12 , and an outlet plenum chamber  16  to discharge the cooled flue gas to continuations  20  of the flue gas header ducts. The inlet plenum chambers  14  are about 6-7 m. diameter, and each has a diffusing divergent inlet portion  15  that slows the flue gas G without substantial turbulence to a relatively low velocity of about 8-12 m/sec. The outlet plenum chambers  16  have a convergent contracting profile to increase the velocity of the cooled flue gas G into the flue ducts  20 . Cooling of the flue gas G is effected by transferring heat from the flue gas to cooling water  22  (or other coolant) circulating in a closed loop system that is pressurised to about 2 bar. Pumps (not shown), circulate the coolant through ducts  23  that connect a heat exchanger arrangement  24  (examples of which are described below) to a coolant enclosure or jacket  26  that forms part of an outer shell or casing for each gas cooler  10 . The coolant jackets  26  are connected into the cooling system in parallel with each other, their entries  28  and exits  30  being connected to the “cool” and “hot” legs  32 ,  34 , respectively, of the cooling system. 
     In this embodiment, the gas coolers  10  reduce the flue gas temperature from about 150° C. at their entries  14 , to about 115° C. at their exits  16 . At the latter temperature, the flue gas has cooled sufficiently for entry to a gas cleaning plant of the dry scrubbing type previously mentioned. Meanwhile, the temperature of cooling water  22  has been increased from about 85° C. at its exit from the absorption chiller station  24  to about 120° C. at its exit from the cooling jackets  26 . 
     Normally, the gas coolers  10  will be cylindrical, the coolant jackets  26  being of the same diameter as the inlet and outlet plenum chambers  14 ,  16 . Part of the wall of the coolant jacket  26  of the topmost gas cooler  10  in  FIG. 2  is shown broken away to reveal a bundle of gas cooling tubes  18  occupying the interior of the gas cooler and connected between the inlet and outlet plenum chambers,  14 ,  16 . There will be many more cooling tubes  18  within each gas cooler  10  than can be illustrated in  FIG. 2 ; about 500-900 tubes (depending on tube diameter), will be equally spaced apart over the cross-sectional areas of the coolant jacket  26  and the inlet and outlet plenum chambers  14 ,  16 . As also indicated in  FIG. 2 , to maximise efficiency of heat transfer from the flue gas G to the coolant  22 , it is arranged that the general direction of flow of coolant through the coolant jackets  26  is counter to the flow of the flue gas G through the heat exchange tubes  18 . 
     For convenience of illustration in  FIG. 2 , the gas coolers  10  are shown with their major, longitudinally extending axes aligned horizontally. However, in  FIG. 3 , gas cooler  10  is oriented vertically, this being the preferred orientation for the gas tube type of heat exchanger. Flue gas G enters the cooling tubes  18  at their top ends, while water or other coolant enters the coolant jacket  26  at the bottom end, flows upwards past the cooling tubes  18  to cool them, and exits the jacket at its top end. Circulation of water coolant is aided by the fact that as it heats up by contact with the tubes, it becomes less dense and naturally rises to the top of the vessel. 
     Because the cooling tubes  18  carry hot raw flue gas direct from the potline, they are carefully aerodynamically designed to control dust deposition and scaling from the flue gas to a minimal amount that maintains effective heat transmission through the walls of cooling tubes  18  into the coolant  22  flowing past them in the coolant jackets  26 . In this context, aerodynamic design is such as to maintain the flue gas stream lines or velocity vectors substantially parallel to the walls of the cooling tubes  18 , i.e., substantially parallel to their longitudinal axes. 
     As shown clearly in  FIG. 3 , each cooling tube  18  has an inlet end  19  that projects into the inlet plenum chamber  14  and an outlet end  21  that projects into the outlet plenum chamber  16 . The tube walls are straight, except at their inlet ends  19 , each of which comprises an aerodynamically shaped bell-mouth converging portion, designed to smoothly accelerate flue gas G into the cooling tubes  18  from the above-mentioned velocity of about 8-12 m/sec in the inlet plenum chamber, to about 20-30 m/sec in the cooling tubes. Maintaining streamline flow into cooling tubes  18 , while increasing the flow velocity, avoids turbulence and prevents scale formation on their inside walls. 
     Dimensions of the cooling tubes  18  to obtain an optimal flue gas velocity will be a compromise between several variables, such as pressure loss, heat exchange efficiency, fouling factors and the overall size of the gas cooler  10 . Optimisation will occur during practical tests. In the present embodiment, each cooling tube  18  is about 6.4 meters in diameter and about 20-30 meters long. 
     It will be noticed from  FIG. 2  that the inlet and outlet plenum chambers  14 ,  16 , are demountable from the cooling jacket portion  26  of the gas cooler  10 . This is facilitated by providing the cooling jacket portion  26  with end plates  28 ,  30 . End plates  28 ,  30  not only separate the pressurised coolant jacket portion  26  from the inlet and outlet plenum chambers  14 ,  16 , respectively, but also provide bolting flanges  31 ,  31   a , to interface with similar bolting flanges  33 ,  33   a  on the inlet and outlet plenum chambers  14 ,  16 . This construction allows easy disassembly, maintenance and descaling of the plenum chambers, and of the entry and exit portions of the cooling tubes, should this eventually become necessary. 
     Note that it is not necessary for there to be a one-to-one relationship between header ducts  12  and gas coolers  10 , as shown in  FIG. 1 . It may in fact be preferable to divide the flue gas flow from one header duct  12  into two or more vertically arranged gas coolers  10 . This makes it easier to control the flow of the water through the water jackets  26  and would make the size and complexity of each gas cooler  10  more manageable. 
     The skilled person will contemplate possible operation of the invention over ranges of process parameters. Examples of possible ranges and a preferred reference value for the embodiment described above are given in the Table below. 
     
       
         
               
               
               
               
             
               
               
               
               
             
           
               
                 TABLE 
               
               
                   
               
               
                   
                   
                   
                 Reference 
               
               
                 Parameter 
                 Unit 
                 Range 
                 Value 
               
               
                   
               
             
             
               
                   
               
             
          
           
               
                 Flue gas temperature at gas cooler 
                 ° C. 
                 120-250  
                 150 
               
               
                 inlet 
               
               
                 Flue gas temperature at gas cooler 
                 ° C. 
                 60-120 
                 115 
               
               
                 outlet 
               
               
                 Flue gas pressure at cooling tube 
                 Pa 
                 500-2000 
                 1000 
               
               
                 inlet 
               
               
                 Allowable pressure drop across 
                 Pa 
                 500-1500 
                 1100 
               
               
                 cooling tube 
               
               
                 Flue gas velocity in cooling tubes 
                 m/sec 
                 15-35  
                 20-26  
               
               
                 Dust load in flue gas 
                 mg/Nm 3   
                 100-3000 
                 500-1000 
               
               
                 Water temperature at inlet of water 
                 ° C. 
                 60-120 
                 85 
               
               
                 jacket 
               
               
                 Water temperature at outlet of water 
                 ° C. 
                 90-150 
                 120 
               
               
                 jacket 
               
               
                 Internal water pressure 
                 Bar 
                 0-4  
                 2 
               
               
                   
               
             
          
         
       
     
     As illustrated in  FIGS. 1 and 2 , the flue gas coolers described above are advantageously part of a system for using heat energy from the flue gas, in which a closed circuit coolant circulation system circulates coolant through the flue gas cooler and a heat exchange arrangement  24 . Heat energy extracted from the coolant by the heat exchange arrangement  24  may be used to increase the efficiency of further plant coupled to the heat exchange arrangement. Examples of such use of extracted heat energy will now be set forth. 
     EXAMPLE 1 
     As previously mentioned, new aluminium smelters tend to be built in tropical or sub-tropical areas of the world. In these areas, electric energy for the reduction cells is produced in gas fired power stations by power blocks comprising gas turbines driving generators. A typical gas turbine used in such a situation is the ALSTOM® GT13 E2M, of 180 MW gross power output, operating on a simple cycle. 
     A limiting factor for the efficiency and power output of simple cycle gas turbines is the inlet air temperature to the compressor. In tropical areas, they are designed for a compressor air inlet temperature of +35° C. The energy output of a typical simple cycle power block (gas turbine only) can be increased by more than 10% if the compressor inlet air temperature is reduced from 35° C. to 15° C. The above-described gas cooler facilitates provision of such inlet air cooling to power blocks, in that heat recovered from the flue gas by the gas tube heat exchanger can be used as the energy source for an absorption type industrial chiller station comprising the heat exchanger arrangement  24 . Such an industrial chiller station can output chilled water, which can be used to reduce compressor inlet air temperatures. It will be recalled that, for the process parameters previously quoted, each gas cooler  10  can cool 900,000 Nm 3 /h of flue gas from a temperature of 150° C. to a temperature of 115° C. This means that approximately 45 MW of heat energy is removed from the flue gas by the absorption chiller station  24 , and in the illustrated arrangement, this energy is used by the chiller station to produce roughly 1450 m 3 /h of cool water  36  at 5° C. The chilled water  36  is circulated through insulated ducts  38  to heat exchangers  40  (i.e., batteries of air coolers, as well known per se in the power generation industry) located at the intakes  42  of three gas turbine power blocks  44 . The heat exchangers  40  are connected to the water cooling system in parallel with each other, their entries  46  and exits  48  being connected to the “cool” and “hot” legs  50 ,  52 , respectively, of the closed circuit water cooling system. The above-mentioned GT13 E2M gas turbine power block draws 1.548×10 6  Nm 3 /h of air through its compressor/turbine system when operating at its normal continuous rating. Standard thermodynamic calculations show that this air flow can be cooled from 35° C. to 15° C. using the above-mentioned amount of chilled water, thereby significantly increasing gas turbine, and therefore power block, efficiency and power output. 
     As previously mentioned, the heat recovered from the flue gas can be used to increase the power production capability of a simple cycle gas turbine power block by up to 10% or more. This extra power can be used, for example, to increase the production capacity of the aluminium smelter without the need to invest in further power plant. 
     It should be noted that alternatively, or additionally, chilled water produced in the above way could be used for air conditioning and cooling of buildings or districts, purposes which are highly appreciated in tropical and sub-tropical areas. 
     Whereas the power blocks  44  have been described above as simple cycle for illustrative purposes, they may alternatively comprise combined cycle power plants, in which waste heat from the gas turbine exhaust is used to produce steam to drive a steam turbine coupled to an electrical generator. Due to the greater thermal efficiency of combined cycles relative to a simple cycle, the flue gas heat from the connected aluminium smelters will—when recovered and utilised in an absorption chiller station as above—have a cooling capacity that is 50% in excess of the compressor air cooling requirement of the connected combined cycle power blocks. This excess cooling capacity can again be used in further plant, such as air conditioning and cooling of buildings or districts. 
     No matter whether simple cycle or combined cycle power blocks are used, we anticipate that the combination of the gas tube heat exchanger  10  with an absorption chiller station  24  and gas turbine air inlet coolers  40 , will be economically beneficial for aluminium smelter plants in tropical and sub-tropical areas. 
     In  FIG. 2 , the chiller station  24  uses a bank of eight absorption-type industrial chillers, such as York Millennium™ YIA-14F3 single-effect absorption chillers, or equivalents from other manufacturers. Depending on required cooling capacity and the capabilities of the absorption chillers, fewer than eight, or more than eight, chillers could be used. To remove low temperature heat from the water at 120° C. returning from the gas coolers  10 , and from the water at 25° C. returning from the air inlet heat exchangers  40 , the chillers use large volumes of water. This may be sea water, since many smelters are currently being built near the coast for ease of bulk transport of the bauxite ore and the refined aluminium. 8000 m3/h of sea water entering the chiller station  24  at 30° C. will be returned to the sea at 40° C., having accomplished the required cooling of the two closed-circuit water cooling systems. As an alternative way of rejecting heat to the environment, assuming sufficiently low ambient air temperatures, one or more cooling towers may be used to cool the water that has been used in the absorption chiller as a coolant to condense the working fluid. To avoid water loss by evaporation, such cooling towers could be “dry” cooling towers, in which the water to be cooled is not directly exposed to the air passing up the tower. 
     Whereas the use of single-effect absorption chillers has been mentioned above, the possible use of double- or multiple-effect absorption chillers is not thereby ruled out. However, the latter two types, though more efficient than single-effect absorption chillers, require a higher-grade heat input than single-effect chillers. The grade of heat input available to the absorption chillers depends mainly on the flue gas temperature, because this controls the water inlet temperature to the absorption chillers. 
     If, instead of an absorption chiller station, the heat exchanger arrangement  24  simply comprises a suitable heat exchanger or bank of heat exchangers for heating process water, the heat energy recovered by the gas coolers  10  may be used in further plant requiring heat input, as in the following examples. 
     EXAMPLE 2 
     Heat extracted from the flue gas by the gas coolers  10  is used to boost the efficiency of a combined cycle power plant by pre-heating boiler water for the steam-raising part of the combined cycle. 
     EXAMPLE 3 
     Heat extracted from the flue gas by the gas coolers  10  is used to pre-heat water to be desalinated in a desalination plant. 
     EXAMPLE 4 
     Heat extracted from the flue gas by the gas coolers  10  is used to heat water for circulation around a district heating scheme. 
     The breadth and scope of the present invention should not be limited by any of the above-described exemplary embodiments, and modifications can be made within the scope of the invention as claimed. Each feature disclosed in the specification, including the claims and drawings, may be replaced by alternative features serving the same, equivalent or similar purposes, unless expressly stated otherwise. 
     Unless the context clearly requires otherwise, throughout the description and the claims, the words “comprise”, “comprising”, and the like, are to be construed in an inclusive as opposed to an exclusive or exhaustive sense; that is to say, in the sense of “including, but not limited to”.