4.6 Article

Measured global thermal performance of a directly irradiated suspension-flow solar particle receiver with an open aperture

Journal

SOLAR ENERGY
Volume 231, Issue -, Pages 185-193

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.solener.2021.11.012

Keywords

Solar Receiver; Particle; Heat transfer; Two-phase flows; Vortex; Reactor Development

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Renewable Energy Agency, ARENA through Bayer program [RND054]
  2. ASTRI P4.2 program

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An experimental investigation on the thermal performance of a 1-kW suspension-flow solar particle receiver was conducted, showing that the ratio of solar input to total heat capacity and suction level have significant impact on device performance. The heat absorbed by air was found to be 3-15 times higher than that of the solid phase, depending on operating conditions. The presence of the solid phase enhanced total heat absorption by the two-phase flow.
We present an experimental investigation of the thermal performance of a 1-kW directly irradiated suspensionflow solar particle receiver with an open (windowless) aperture under simulated solar conditions. Silicon carbide and air were used as the particulate and fluid media, respectively. A 5 kWel xenon-arc solar simulator was used as the energy source. An outlet-suction strategy was employed to induce a net inflow through the aperture as means to mitigate particle and hot fluid egress from the device. The influence of various operating parameters, namely particle loading, air inlet mass flow rate and net air ingress through the aperture on the global thermal performance (thermal efficiency, exergy disruption, specific heat losses and wall temperature distribution) of the device was investigated systematically. It was found that the ratio of the solar input to total heat capacity of the two-phase flow and the level of suction have controlling influence on the global performance of the device. For the operating conditions investigated here, the heat absorbed by the air through the receiver was found to be 3-15 times higher than that of the solid phase, depending primarily on the mass loading and total inlet fluid flow rate. The presence of the solid phase was found to enhance the total heat absorbed by the two-phase flow albeit at the expense of lowering the value of the maximum outlet air temperature.

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