Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
152826 Chemical Engineering Journal 2009 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

A transient heat transfer model is developed for analyzing the thermal performance of a thermochemical reactor for the solar-driven dissociation of ZnO in the 1600–2136 K range. The reactor consists of a rotating cavity-receiver lined with ZnO particles that are directly exposed to concentrated solar radiation. The model couples radiation, convection, and conduction heat transfer to the reaction kinetics for a shrinking domain and simulates a transient ablation regime with semi-batch feed cycles of ZnO particles. Validation is accomplished in terms of the numerically calculated and experimentally measured temperature profiles and reaction extents for a 10 kW reactor prototype tested in a high-flux solar simulator and subjected to peak solar concentration ratios exceeding 5000 suns. Scaling-up the reactor technology to 1 MW solar thermal power input has the potential of reaching a solar-to-chemical energy conversion efficiency of 56%.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering (General)
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