5,596 research outputs found

    Dynamic conversion of solar generated heat to electricity

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    The effort undertaken during this program led to the selection of the water-superheated steam (850 psig/900 F) crescent central receiver as the preferred concept from among 11 candidate systems across the technological spectrum of the dynamic conversion of solar generated heat to electricity. The solar power plant designs were investigated in the range of plant capacities from 100 to 1000 Mw(e). The investigations considered the impacts of plant size, collector design, feed-water temperature ratio, heat rejection equipment, ground cover, and location on solar power technical and economic feasibility. For the distributed receiver systems, the optimization studies showed that plant capacities less than 100 Mw(e) may be best. Although the size of central receiver concepts was not parametrically investigated, all indications are that the optimal plant capacity for central receiver systems will be in the range from 50 to 200 Mw(e). Solar thermal power plant site selection criteria and methodology were also established and used to evaluate potentially suitable sites. The result of this effort was to identify a site south of Inyokern, California, as typically suitable for a solar thermal power plant. The criteria used in the selection process included insolation and climatological characteristics, topography, and seismic history as well as water availability

    Optical and Thermal Analysis of a Heteroconical Tubular Cavity Solar Receiver

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    The principal objective of this study is to develop, investigate and optimise the Heteroconical Tubular Cavity receiver for a parabolic trough reflector. This study presents a three-stage development process which allowed for the development, investigation and optimisation of the Heteroconical receiver. The first stage of development focused on the investigation into the optical performance of the Heteroconical receiver for different geometric configurations. The effect of cavity geometry on the heat flux distribution on the receiver absorbers as well as on the optical performance of the Heteroconical cavity was investigated. The cavity geometry was varied by varying the cone angle and cavity aperture width of the receiver. This investigation led to identification of optical characteristics of the Heteroconical receiver as well as an optically optimised geometric configuration for the cavity shape of the receiver. The second stage of development focused on the thermal and thermodynamic performance of the Heteroconical receiver for different geometric configurations. This stage of development allowed for the investigation into the effect of cavity shape and concentration ratio on the thermal performance of the Heteroconical receiver. The identification of certain thermal characteristics of the receiver further optimised the shape of the receiver cavity for thermal performance during the second stage of development. The third stage of development and optimisation focused on the absorber tubes of the Heteroconical receiver. This enabled further investigation into the effect of tube diameter on the total performance of the Heteroconical receiver and led to an optimal inner tube diameter for the receiver under given operating conditions. In this work, the thermodynamic performance, conjugate heat transfer and fluid flow of the Heteroconical receiver were analysed by solving the computational governing Equations set out in this work known as the Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) Equations as well as the energy Equation by utilising the commercially available CFD code, ANSYS FLUENT®. The optical model of the receiver which modelled the optical performance and produced the nonuniform actual heat flux distribution on the absorbers of the receiver was numerically modelled by solving the rendering Equation using the Monte-Carlo ray tracing method. SolTrace - a raytracing software package developed by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), commonly used to analyse CSP systems, was utilised for modelling the optical response and performance of the Heteroconical receiver. These actual non-uniform heat flux distributions were applied in the CFD code by making use of user-defined functions for the thermal model and analysis of the Heteroconical receiver. The numerical model was applied to a simple parabolic trough receiver and reflector and validated against experimental data available in the literature, and good agreement was achieved. It was found that the Heteroconical receiver was able to significantly reduce the amount of reradiation losses as well as improve the uniformity of the heat flux distribution on the absorbers. The receiver was found to produce thermal efficiencies of up to 71% and optical efficiencies of up to 80% for practically sized receivers. The optimal receiver was compared to a widely used parabolic trough receiver, a vacuum tube receiver. It was found that the optimal Heteroconical receiver performed, on average, 4% more efficiently than the vacuum tube receiver across the temperature range of 50-210℃. In summary, it was found that the larger a Heteroconical receiver is the higher its optical efficiency, but the lower its thermal efficiency. Hence, careful consideration needs to be taken when determining cone angle and concentration ratio of the receiver. It was found that absorber tube diameter does not have a significant effect on the performance of the receiver, but its position within the cavity does have a vital role in the performance of the receiver. The Heteroconical receiver was found to successfully reduce energy losses and was found to be a successfully high performance solar thermal tubular cavity receiver

    Small Scale Solar ORC system for distributed power

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    peer reviewedA solar thermal organic Rankine cycle (ORC) can provide affordable energy supplies in remote regions. The advent of low-cost medium temperature parabolic trough collectors and ORC technology taking advantage of mass produced fluid machinery from HVAC industries are enabling developments for the production of small scale autonomous power generation units. Construction and testing of this type of system is discussed, including benchmarking of scrolls expanders (up to 75% isentropic effieiency) and the field testing of solar collectors (50% thermal efficiency at 150°C operating temperatures) with a nominal cost of $80 m-2. These results have led to the construction of a full-scale 3kW solar ORC power system designed to support a rural health clinic in Lesotho in southern Africa

    Peristaltic Pumping of Blood Through Small Vessels of Varying Cross-section

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    The paper is devoted to a study of the peristaltic motion of blood in the micro-circulatory system. The vessel is considered to be of varying cross-section. The progressive peristaltic waves are taken to be of sinusoidal nature. Blood is considered to be a Herschel-Bulkley fluid. Of particular concern here is to investigate the effects of amplitude ratio, mean pressure gradient, yield stress and the power law index on the velocity distribution, streamline pattern and wall shear stress. On the basis of the derived analytical expression, extensive numerical calculations have been made. The study reveals that velocity of blood and wall shear stress are appreciably affected due to the non-uniform geometry of blood vessels. They are also highly sensitive to the magnitude of the amplitude ratio and the value of the fluid index.Comment: Accepted for publication in ASME journal of Applied Mechanics. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1108.1285v

    Design and analysis of a novel 3-D elliptical hyperboloid static solar concentrator for process heat applications

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    In the present thesis, performance characterisation of a novel non-imaging concentrator, a 3-D elliptical hyperboloid concentrator (EHC) for process heat applications (medium temperature) is investigated. In this investigation, optical and thermal characterisations are extensively carried out for the novel 3-D static concentrator. In the optical study, a 2-D ray tracing simulation was carried out in MATLAB® to predict the optical efficiency of the EHC. The 3-D ray tracing was also carried out in OptisTM software to obtain the optical efficiency. Detailed flux distributions on the receiver are also analysed. Ray tracing and flux distributions were investigated for different solar incidence angle by varying the system parameters such as concentrator height, receiver diameters and concentration ratio. A parametric analysis of four different system configurations, (I) Elliptical Hyperboloid Concentrator (EHC), (ii) Circular Hyperboloid Concentrator (CHC), (iii) Elliptical Parabolic Concentrator (ECPC) and (IV) Circular Parabolic Concentrator (CCPC) were performed. Based on the parametric analysis it was found that the EHC gives better optical performance compared to other configurations. It was found that the EHC gives better optical performance than others. It was also found that for a wide range of acceptance angles (±30) the optimised concentration ratio of 20× resulted in an optimised optical efficiency of 28%. For thermal performance, separate indoor and outdoor characterisations were conducted to predict the receiver stagnation and fluid temperatures. In the indoor test, the performances of three different hyperboloid solar concentrators (EHC1, EHC2 and CHC) were investigated. The outdoor performance test was also carried out for a scaled-up version of the developed prototype of the 3-D static elliptical hyperboloid concentrator system (EHC) of 20× concentration ratio. The tests were carried out at Chennai, INDIA to obtain the maximum stagnation temperature and daily performance of the EHC system. It was observed that a maximum temperature of 150°C is obtained as the stagnation temperature. In the daily performance test, the maximum fluid temperature of 90°C was observed. Thus, the developed 3-D static elliptical hyperboloid concentrator system can be effectively used for medium temperature applications

    Development of a portable laboratory facility to demonstrate alternative energy technologies

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    Six alternative energy technologies are chosen for inclusion in a mobile laboratory facility for aiding in undergraduate engineering education. A background, theoretical development as well as the design and description of a demonstration of the technology are included for each of the six chosen. Finally, experiments performed with the demonstrations are presented and result analyzed for accuracy and ability to aid in student understanding of the technologies

    A simultaneous planar laser-induced fluorescence, particle image velocimetry and particle tracking velocimetry technique for the investigation of thin liquid-film flows

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    AbstractA simultaneous measurement technique based on planar laser-induced fluorescence imaging (PLIF) and particle image/tracking velocimetry (PIV/PTV) is described for the investigation of the hydrodynamic characteristics of harmonically excited liquid thin-film flows. The technique is applied as part of an extensive experimental campaign that covers four different Kapitza (Ka) number liquids, Reynolds (Re) numbers spanning the range 2.3–320, and inlet-forced/wave frequencies in the range 1–10Hz. Film thicknesses (from PLIF) for flat (viscous and unforced) films are compared to micrometer stage measurements and analytical predictions (Nusselt solution), with a resulting mean deviation being lower than the nominal resolution of the imaging setup (around 20μm). Relative deviations are calculated between PTV-derived interfacial and bulk velocities and analytical results, with mean values amounting to no more than 3.2% for both test cases. In addition, flow rates recovered using LIF/PTV (film thickness and velocity profile) data are compared to direct flowmeter readings. The mean relative deviation is found to be 1.6% for a total of six flat and nine wavy flows. The practice of wave/phase-locked flow-field averaging is also implemented, allowing the generation of highly localized velocity profile, bulk velocity and flow rate data along the wave topology. Based on this data, velocity profiles are extracted from 20 locations along the wave topology and compared to analytically derived ones based on local film thickness measurements and the Nusselt solution. Increasing the waviness by modulating the forcing frequency is found to result in lower absolute deviations between experiments and theoretical predictions ahead of the wave crests, and higher deviations behind the wave crests. At the wave crests, experimentally derived interfacial velocities are overestimated by nearly 100%. Finally, locally non-parabolic velocity profiles are identified ahead of the wave crests; a phenomenon potentially linked to the cross-stream velocity field

    Direct steam generation solar systems with screw expanders and parabolic trough collectors: Energetic assessment at part-load operating conditions

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    This paper explains a numerical optimization of a novel screw expander-based solar thermal electricity plant to evaluate the energetic benefits in specific case studies. In the proposed solar electricity generation system, which is based on the steam Rankine cycle, water is used as working fluid and storage, parabolic trough collectors as a thermal source and screw expander as power machine. Such solar system offers major advantages over conventional power plants adopting steam turbines: low operating pressures, good exploitation of low temperature heat sources, acceptable efficiency in energy conversion with steam-liquid mixtures and reduced size. Since screw expanders can operate at off-design working conditions in several situations when installed in direct steam generation solar plants, the chief purpose of the present study is to develop a thermodynamic model to analyse the energy performance of the planned solar power system when off-design operating conditions befall. To assess maximum efficiency of the whole power plant at part-load operating conditions, numerical optimization is then performed in a specific range of fluctuating evaporation temperatures under fixed condensation pressures. Keywords: Steam screw expander, Solar thermal power efficiency, Direct steam generation, Part-load behavior, Polytropic expansion phas
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