4.7 Article

Modeling a solar pressurized volumetric receiver integrated in a parabolic dish: Off-design heat transfers, temperatures, and efficiencies

Journal

ENERGY CONVERSION AND MANAGEMENT
Volume 293, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.enconman.2023.117436

Keywords

Concentrated solar power; Solar receiver; Parabolic dish; Ray tracing optical models; Heat transfer and losses; Realistic meteorological data

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This paper conducts a heat transfer analysis on an air volumetric receiver coupled to a parabolic dish for distributed generation. The optical efficiency of the dish collector is computed using ray-tracing software, while the thermal performance of the solar receiver is modeled under steady-state conditions. The results show that the thermal efficiency of the receiver depends on solar irradiance, receiver geometry, materials, and ambient temperature.
Concentrated solar power plants are commonly recognized as one of the most attractive options within carbon -free power generation technologies because of their high efficiency and feasible hybridization and/or storage implementation. In this work, a complete heat transfer analysis for an air volumetric receiver coupled to a parabolic dish focused on distributed generation (in the range of kWe) is carried out. It includes most relevant heat losses. Dish collector optical efficiency is computed by means of a ray-tracing software while the thermal performance of the solar receiver is modeled under steady-state conditions using a comprehensive set of equations with a clear physical origin and meaning. Detailed information on the temperatures and heat transfers along the different inner and outer receiver zones are computed with a built from scratch in-house code programmed in Mathematica & REG;. The model considers the main losses from convection, conduction and radiation and through the surrounding insulator. The resulting thermal efficiency mainly depends on the incoming solar irradiance at the glass window, the receiver geometry and the type of materials considered, as well as on the ambient temperature. Explicit numerical results are given at two locations under different meteorological conditions. Optical efficiencies reach values of about 84%. For irradiance values around 800- 900 W/m2, at the receiver outlet, air can reach temperatures of about 1200 K and receiver thermal efficiency is over 80%. It is expected that this model (precise but not too expensive from the computational viewpoint) could help to identify the main efficiency bottlenecks, paving the way for optimization when designing this type of concentrated solar plants through further coupling with a power block, as Brayton or other cycles.

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