4.7 Article

Experimental and modelling analysis of efficiency enhancement in a liquid piston gas compressor using metal plate inserts for compressed air energy storage application

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENERGY STORAGE
Volume 43, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.est.2021.103240

Keywords

Liquid piston gas compressor; Compression efficiency; Compressed air energy storage; Three-dimensional modelling; Experiment

Categories

Funding

  1. European Union's INTERREG VA Programme
  2. Department for the Economy (Northern Ireland)
  3. Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment (Republic of Ireland)

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Experimental and numerical analyses were conducted to improve the efficiency of a Liquid Piston Gas Compressor by utilizing a column of water for air compression and incorporating aluminium parallel plates for heat exchange. The study revealed that including plate inserts in the compressor significantly reduced air temperature at the end of compression, leading to an increase in compression efficiency. Modeling also showed that increasing plate thickness and optimizing plate height can further enhance compression efficiency.
In this work, experimental and modelling analyses are performed in order to improve the compression efficiency of a Liquid Piston Gas Compressor (LPGC), which utilizes a column of water for air compression. Due to low cost and easy manufacturing, aluminium parallel plates are used as the heat exchanger inside the LPGC to absorb the thermal energy from the compressed air and hence increase the efficiency of the compressor. A comprehensive set of experimental and numerical analyses are performed to gain deep insight into the flow and thermal characteristics of the air and water in the LPGC with plate inserts. A LPGC prototype including a steel cylinder with a height of 1.1 m and a diameter of 0.08 m is developed and experimental data is collected for air compression from 8 bar to 40 bar. Experiments are performed for three plate inserts with different heights of 0.2 m, 0.35 m and 0.5 m. Experimental data is acquired for 3 different water flow rates of 0.0005 m(3)s(-1), 0.0007 m(3)s(-1) and 0.0008 m(3)s(-1) equivalent to compression times of 1.7 s, 2.6 s and 3.5 s, respectively. To gain further understanding of the flow and heat transfer characteristics inside the LPGC, three-dimensional modelling is performed by solving unsteady Reynolds-Averaged Naiver Stokes (BANS) equations and deploying the Volume of Fraction (VOF) approach for tracking the water-air interface in the LPGC cylinder. Experimental results show that in comparison to the no-insert LPGC case, the air temperature at the end of the compression can be reduced by about 50 K, 75 K, and 82 K with the inclusion of plate inserts with the height of 0.20 m, 0.35 m and 0.5 m, respectively. This leads to an increase in the LPGC compression efficiency by about 3%, 4% and 8%, respectively. The modelling tool validated against the experimental data, revealed that for a fixed number of plates in the LPGC, increasing the thickness of the plates, increases the compression efficiency. Additionally, the parametric study performed by the modelling tool showed that for a fixed plate thickness, increasing the plate height up to an optimum value, compression efficiency increases. After, further increase in the plate height, decreases the compression efficiency. For the LPGC geometrical property and compression conditions studied here, the optimum plate height, which maximizes the efficiency, is found to be 0.9 m for all plate thicknesses studied.

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