Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4990727 | Applied Thermal Engineering | 2017 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
This paper presents a novel design of a stand-alone refrigeration system consisting of a combined organic Rankine cycle and a cascade refrigeration system (ORC-CRS) for low-evaporation-temperature applications (from â55 °C to â30 °C). Natural refrigerants were used as working fluids: toluene for the organic Rankine cycle and NH3/CO2 for the cascade refrigeration system. A parametric study and a regression analysis have been performed to characterize the system and to estimate the overall system coefficient of performance (COPoval) and exergetic efficiency (ηex_oval). The highest values of COPoval and ηex_oval calculated were 0.79 and 31.6%, corresponding to ORC evaporation temperatures of 315 °C and 255 °C, respectively. Renewable thermal energy sources from 100 to 350 °C can be used to drive the facility, thus reducing dependence on fossil fuel and CO2 emissions. This stand-alone facility seems to be a feasible option to exploit low- and medium-grade thermal energy (geothermal, solar, waste heat) in places where the electricity supply is unreliable.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
Authors
R. Lizarte, M.E. Palacios-Lorenzo, J.D. Marcos,