12 research outputs found

    SANDIA REPORT Scaling Considerations for a Multi- Megawatt Class Supercritical CO2 Brayton Cycle and Commercialization Scaling Considerations for a Multi-Megawatt Class Supercritical CO2 Brayton Cycle and Commercialization

    No full text
    Abstract Small-scale supercritical CO 2 demonstration loops are successful at identifying the important technical issues that one must face in order to scale up to larger power levels. The Sandia National Laboratories supercritical CO 2 Brayton cycle test loops are identifying technical needs to scale the technology to commercial power levels such as 10 MW e . The small size of the Sandia 1 MW th loop has demonstration of the split flow loop efficiency and effectiveness of the Printed Circuit Heat Exchangers (PCHXs) leading to the design of a fully recuperated, split flow, supercritical CO 2 Brayton cycle demonstration system. However, there were many problems that were encountered, such as high rotational speeds in the units. Additionally, the turbomachinery in the test loops need to identify issues concerning the bearings, seals, thermal boundaries, and motor controller problems in order to be proved a reliable power source in the 300 kW e range. Although these issues were anticipated in smaller demonstration units, commercially scaled hardware would eliminate these problems caused by high rotational speeds at small scale. The economic viability and development of the future scalable 10 MW e solely depends on the interest of DOE and private industry. The Intellectual Property collected by Sandia proves that the ~10 MW e supercritical CO 2 power conversion loop to be very beneficial when coupled to a 20 MW th heat source (either solar, geothermal, fossil, or nuclear). This paper will identify a 4 commercialization plan, as well as, a roadmap from the simple 1 MW th supercritical CO 2 development loop to a power producing 10 MW e supercritical CO 2 Brayton loop
    corecore