“…Often, an increase in the production capacity and plant flexibility is also pursued [32,33]. Considering these goals, several approaches can be adopted, including: -Fuel switch to cleaner and/or cheaper one, often retrofitting fossil fuel boiler to (co-) combustion of natural gas [34], process gases [35], biomass [36,37] or waste fuels [38,39]; -Refitting the existing boilers to oxycombustion [40], which requires installation of an air separation unit for oxygen-enriched air production [41,42] improving fuel burnout, cuts down greenhouse gases emissions [43,44], and can be a pre-requisite to carbon capture from flue gas [45,46]; -Supplementing the existing boilers with a gasification unit [47,48], enabling processing of a wide range of even low-quality materials into combustible gas [49,50]; -Adding a "topping" unit to the existing Rankine cycle unit, usually a gas turbine [51,52], internal combustion engine [53] or a battery of fuel cells [32], resulting in multiple variants of modified plant layout [54]. Each of those variants results in layout reorganization of the remaining plant parts, usually including changes in boiler feedwater train [55,56], boiler air and flue gas fans, and in flue gas and ash handling equipment [57] to boost the energy efficiency even further and to meet the tightening limits of pollutant emissions set by legislation [58].…”