Title: Thermophysical Properties of a Cryogenic Pulsating Heat Pipe
1Lukas Feierabend M.S. Graduate StudentMechanical
Engineering
Thesis Model Development and Simulation of
Central Receiver Systems for Solar Towers
2Model Development and Simulation of Central
Receiver Systems for Solar Towers
L. Feierabend, S.A. Klein, D.T. Reindl
3Process flow diagram of the PS10 solar tower
power plant. 1
- The heliostat field, evenly distributed on the
northern hemicycle (PS10) around the tower,
tracks the position of the sun and reflects
radiation onto the central receiver.
- Heat transfer fluid (HTF) (e.g. molten salt,
steam, air) flows through tubes on the receiver
surface and absorbs incident solar radiation.
- Thermal energy is stored in large units to
compensate for times when there is little or no
solar radiation and during peak loads.
- The HTF is routed into a heat exchanger to
deliver heat for a steam cycle (Rankine, Brayton).
- This cycle converts thermal energy into
electricity with a nominal output of 11 MW (PS10).
4Cylindrical Receiver
- Heat transfer fluid tubes are welded together to
form a cylindrical surface area.
- Solar radiation is incident on the entire
receiver circumference, therefore the heliostat
field can be extended to cover the ground area
completely around the tower. However, one has to
consider that
- the costs for the heliostat field account for
about a third of the total investment costs.
- Additionally, the radiation flux incident from
the southern part of the field is low compared to
the radiation reflected from the northern mirrors.
Cylindrical receiver on top of the Solar Two
Power Tower in Barstow, CA. 2
- The cylinder surface is completely exposed to the
surroundings, thus the convective and radiative
heat losses are high.
Cavity Receiver
- The receiver cavity is formed by welded tubes,
which contain the heat transfer fluid. The
receiver face approximates a semicircular
cylinder shape.
- Reflected radiation enters the cavity through a
north-facing aperture. The heliostat field is
built exclusively within the range of possible
incidence angles onto the receiver.
- The geometry of the cavity-type receiver reduces
radiative and convective heat losses, although
forced convection losses depend significantly on
the wind direction.
PS10 cavity-type receiver . 3
5- Improvement of existing correlations for
convective heat losses from receiver surfaces
with numerical modeling of air flow around
different receiver geometries. - Development of a TRNSYS model for cavity-type
central solar receivers for future incorporation
into the Solar Analysis Model.
References 1 Romero, M., Buck, R. and Pacheco
J. E. (2002). An Update on Solar Central Receiver
Systems, Projects, and Technologies, Journal of
Solar Energy Engineering, Vol. 124, pg.
98-108. 2 http//renewablefeed.googlepages.com/s
olarpower 3 http//www.worldfutureenergysummit.c
om/files/geyer_michael.pdf