Effect of Pressure Drop and Reheating on Thermal and Exergetic Performance of Supercritical Carbon Dioxide Brayton Cycles Integrated With a Solar Central Receiver

2015 ◽  
Vol 137 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ricardo Vasquez Padilla ◽  
Yen Chean Soo Too ◽  
Andrew Beath ◽  
Robbie McNaughton ◽  
Wes Stein

Concentrated solar power using supercritical carbon dioxide (S-CO2) Brayton cycles offers advantages of similar or higher overall thermal efficiencies than conventional Rankine cycles using superheated or supercritical steam. The high efficiency and compactness of S-CO2, as compared with steam Rankine cycles operating at the same temperature, make this cycle attractive for solar central receiver applications. In this paper, S-CO2 Brayton cycle is integrated with a solar central receiver that provides heat input to the power cycle. Three configurations were analyzed: simple, recompression (RC), and recompression with main intercooling (MC). The effect of pressure drop in heat exchangers and solar receiver and solar receiver surface temperature on the thermal and exergetic performance of the CO2 Brayton cycle with and without reheat condition was studied. Energy, exergy, and mass balance were carried out for each component and the cycle first law and exergy efficiencies were calculated. In order to obtain optimal operating conditions, optimum pressure ratios were obtained by maximizing the cycle thermal efficiency under different pressure drops and solar receiver temperature conditions. Optimization of the cycle first law efficiency was carried out in python 2.7 by using sequential least squares programing (SLSQP). The results showed that under low pressure drops, adding reheat to the S-CO2 Brayton cycle has a favorable effect on the thermal and exergy efficiencies. Increasing pressure drop reduces the gap between efficiencies for reheat and no reheat configuration, and for pressure drop factors in the solar receiver above 2.5%, reheat has a negligible or detrimental effect on thermal and exergy performance of S-CO2 Brayton cycles. Additionally, the results showed that the overall exergy efficiency has a bell shape, reaching a maximum value between 18.3% and 25.1% at turbine inlet temperatures in the range of 666–827 °C for different configurations. This maximum value is highly dependent on the solar receiver surface temperature, the thermal performance of the solar receiver, and the solar field efficiency. As the solar receiver surface temperature increases, more exergy destruction associated with heat transfer losses to the environment takes place in the solar receiver and therefore the overall exergy efficiency decreases. Recompression with main intercooling (MC) showed the best thermal (ηI,cycle > 47% at Tin,turbine > 700 °C) and exergy performance followed by RC configuration.

Author(s):  
Ricardo Vasquez Padilla ◽  
Yen Soo Too ◽  
Andrew Beath ◽  
Robbie McNaughton ◽  
Wes Stein

Concentrated Solar Power using supercritical CO2 (S-CO2) Brayton cycles offers advantages of similar and even higher overall thermal efficiencies compared to conventional Rankine cycles using superheated or supercritical steam. In this paper, a S-CO2 Recompression Brayton cycle is integrated with a central receiver. The effect of pressure drops in heat exchangers and solar receiver surface temperature on the thermal and ex-ergetic performance of the recompression Brayton cycle with and without reheat condition is studied. Energy, exergy and mass balance are carried out for each component and first law and exergy destruction are calculated. In order to obtain optimal operating condition, optimum cycle pressure ratios are obtained by maximising the thermal efficiency. The results showed that under low solar receiver pressure drops and solar receiver temperature approach, the S-CO2 Recompression Brayton cycle has more thermal and exergy efficiencies than the no reheat case. Pressure drop reduces the gap between reheat and no reheat case, and for pressure drops in the solar receiver of 2.5% or higher, reheat has significant impact on thermal and exergy performance of the cycle studied. The overall exergy efficiency showed a bell shaped, reaching a maximum value between 19.5–22.5% at turbine inlet temperatures in the range of 660–755 °C for solar receiver surface temperature approach among 100–200 °C.


Author(s):  
Jinlan Gou ◽  
Wei Wang ◽  
Can Ma ◽  
Yong Li ◽  
Yuansheng Lin ◽  
...  

Using supercritical carbon dioxide (SCO2) as the working fluid of a closed Brayton cycle gas turbine is widely recognized nowadays, because of its compact layout and high efficiency for modest turbine inlet temperature. It is an attractive option for geothermal, nuclear and solar energy conversion. Compressor is one of the key components for the supercritical carbon dioxide Brayton cycle. With established or developing small power supercritical carbon dioxide test loop, centrifugal compressor with small mass flow rate is mainly investigated and manufactured in the literature; however, nuclear energy conversion contains more power, and axial compressor is preferred to provide SCO2 compression with larger mass flow rate which is less studied in the literature. The performance of the axial supercritical carbon dioxide compressor is investigated in the current work. An axial supercritical carbon dioxide compressor with mass flow rate of 1000kg/s is designed. The thermodynamic region of the carbon dioxide is slightly above the vapor-liquid critical point with inlet total temperature 310K and total pressure 9MPa. Numerical simulation is then conducted to assess this axial compressor with look-up table adopted to handle the nonlinear variation property of supercritical carbon dioxide near the critical point. The results show that the performance of the design point of the designed axial compressor matches the primary target. Small corner separation occurs near the hub, and the flow motion of the tip leakage fluid is similar with the well-studied air compressor. Violent property variation near the critical point creates troubles for convergence near the stall condition, and the stall mechanism predictions are more difficult for the axial supercritical carbon dioxide compressor.


2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Anderson ◽  
James Sienicki ◽  
Anton Moisseytsev ◽  
Gregory Nellis ◽  
Sanford Klein

2012 ◽  
Vol 134 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alan Kruizenga ◽  
Hongzhi Li ◽  
Mark Anderson ◽  
Michael Corradini

Competitive cycles must have a minimal initial cost and be inherently efficient. Currently, the supercritical carbon dioxide (S-CO2) Brayton cycle is under consideration for these very reasons. This paper examines one major challenge of the S-CO2 Brayton cycle: the complexity of heat exchanger design due to the vast change in thermophysical properties near a fluid’s critical point. Turbulent heat transfer experiments using carbon dioxide, with Reynolds numbers up to 100 K, were performed at pressures of 7.5–10.1 MPa, at temperatures spanning the pseudocritical temperature. The geometry employed nine semicircular, parallel channels to aide in the understanding of current printed circuit heat exchanger designs. Computational fluid dynamics was performed using FLUENT and compared to the experimental results. Existing correlations were compared, and predicted the data within 20% for pressures of 8.1 MPa and 10.2 MPa. However, near the critical pressure and temperature, heat transfer correlations tended to over predict the heat transfer behavior. It was found that FLUENT gave the best prediction of heat transfer results, provided meshing was at a y+ ∼ 1.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document