I have heard of the Organic Rankine Cycle and other similar systems which use the waste heat from a steam turbine to boil a liquid of lower boiling point (for example, an organic compound like pentane or isobutane) and turn a second turbine to generate extra power.
It seems like this would be a great thing for our nuclear, and even coal-fired power plants, because it is such a shame how we waste two-thirds of the energy in the fuel when generating electricity. If our nuclear units were outifitted with this system, fossil plants could be closed, reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Even a 20% increase in efficiency would be great. It would also obviously be good for smaller-scale power plants, like waste-to-energy facilities and wood-fired plants.
Obviously that organic fluid has to come from somewhere (oil), but it is constantly recycled, not consumed.
What are the issues with this technology? Is the initial investment too high or is the technology not mature enough? I do believe it is being used in many geothermal power stations where the water is not hot enough to make superheated steam, obviously at a smaller scale than the typical nuclear unit.


