Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7935752 | Solar Energy | 2018 | 15 Pages |
Abstract
This work assesses the performance of a solar tower power plant based on liquid sodium as heat transfer fluid and supercritical CO2 cycles. The adoption of liquid sodium as heat transfer fluid allows maximum temperatures up to 750â¯Â°C and higher heat fluxes on the receiver with respect to molten salts (both Solar Salts and KCl-MgCl2) also considered as reference. The assessment is carried out through detailed modeling of the solar to electricity conversion processes accounting for detail optical, thermal and power block models. Results at design conditions show that plants using sodium as HTF in the receiver can achieve overall efficiency above 25%, whereas the use of Solar Salts at 565â¯Â°C and KCl-MgCl2 at 750â¯Â°C reach 21.5% and 24% respectively. The higher efficiency is consequence of the higher thermal efficiency of sodium which is achieved increasing the concentration ratio. Considering a yearly analysis, the overall efficiency of sodium reduces to 20.5% and 19.3% in Seville and Las Vegas respectively which is 7-9% higher than using KCl-MgCl2 and 11% with respect to Solar Salts. Outcomes of this work are the importance of (i) coupling higher temperatures with higher allowable fluxes on the receiver and (ii) defining the system operating conditions on overall yearly efficiency rather than design point.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Energy
Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
Authors
Simone Polimeni, Marco Binotti, Luca Moretti, Giampaolo Manzolini,