Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7161513 | Energy Conversion and Management | 2016 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Optimal radiator thermal emission spectra maximizing thermophotovoltaic (TPV) conversion efficiency and output power density are determined when thermal effects in the cell are considered. For this purpose, a framework is designed in which a TPV model that accounts for radiative, electrical and thermal losses is coupled with a genetic algorithm. The TPV device under study involves a spectrally selective radiator at a temperature of 2000Â K, a gallium antimonide cell, and a cell thermal management system characterized by a fluid temperature and a heat transfer coefficient of 293Â K and 600Â Wmâ2Â Kâ1. It is shown that a maximum conversion efficiency of 38.8% is achievable with an emission spectrum that has emissivity of unity between 0.719Â eV and 0.763Â eV and zero elsewhere. This optimal spectrum is less than half of the width of the spectra obtained when thermal losses in the cell are neglected. A maximum output power density of 41,708Â Wmâ2 is achievable with a radiator spectrum having emissivity values of unity between 0.684Â eV and 1.082Â eV and zero elsewhere when thermal losses are accounted for. These emission spectra are shown to greatly outperform blackbody and tungsten radiators, and could be obtained using artificial structures such as metamaterials or photonic crystals.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Energy
Energy (General)
Authors
John DeSutter, Michael P. Bernardi, Mathieu Francoeur,