An air-based corrugated cavity-receiver for solar parabolic trough concentrators
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Bader, Roman
Pedretti , Andrea
Barbato, Maurizio
Steinfeld, Aldo
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Pergamon Press
Abstract
A tubular cavity-receiver that uses air as the heat transfer fluid is evaluated numerically using a validated heat transfer model. The receiver is designed for use on a large-span (9 m net concentrator aperture width) solar parabolic trough concentrator. Through the combination of a parabolic primary concentrator with a nonimaging secondary concentrator, the collector reaches a solar concentration ratio of 97.5. Four different receiver configurations are considered, with smooth or V-corrugated absorber tube and single or double-glazed aperture window. The collector’s performance is characterized by its optical efficiency and heat loss. The optical efficiency is determined with the Monte Carlo ray-tracing method. Radiative heat exchange inside the receiver is calculated with the net radiation method. The 2D steady-state energy equation, which couples conductive, convective, and radiative heat transfer, is solved for the solid domains of the receiver cross-section, using finite-volume techniques. Simulations for Sevilla/Spain at
the summer solstice at solar noon (direct normal solar irradiance: 847 W m2 , solar incidence angle: 13.9) yield collector efficiencies between 60% and 65% at a heat transfer fluid temperature of 125 C and between 37% and 42% at 500 C, depending on the receiver configuration. The optical losses amount to more than 30% of the incident solar radiation and constitute the largest source of energy loss. For a 200 m long collector module operated between 300 and 500 C, the isentropic pumping power required to pump the HTF through the receiver is between 11 and 17 kW.
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Applied Energy
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2037-12-31
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