scholarly journals Concentrating Solar Power Central Receiver Panel Component Fabrication and Testing FINAL REPORT

2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael W McDowell ◽  
Kris Miner
2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ellen Beth Stechel ◽  
Andrea Ambrosini ◽  
Aaron Christopher Hall ◽  
Timothy L. Lambert ◽  
Chad Lynn Staiger ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 819 ◽  
pp. 16-20
Author(s):  
Hany Al-Ansary

Concentrating solar power is a family of solar energy technologies that have been used for decades to produce power. These technologies have a unique advantage, which is the ability to store thermal energy for prolonged periods of time such that stable and dispatchable energy can be provided to the electricity grid. However, concentrating solar power has been recently losing market share to photovoltaic technology due to the former’s significantly higher initial cost. There are many efforts worldwide to develop innovative solutions that reduce the cost and/or increase efficiency of concentrating solar power systems. However, concentrating solar thermal energy already has great promising area of application that is still largely unexplored, and that is high-temperature industrial process heat. This study attempts to make the case for using concentrating solar thermal energy in process heat applications by examining the economic feasibility (represented by the levelized cost of energy) for three scenarios of deployment, where the temperature levels are 400°C, 550°C, and 700°C, respectively. The first scenario uses parabolic trough collectors, while the second uses a central receiver system, both with 12 hours of molten salt storage. The third scenario uses a central receiver system that employs the innovative falling particle receiver concept to push the operating limit to 700°C, and silica sand is used to store thermal energy for 12 hours. The location chosen for this analysis is Alice Springs, Australia, due to its high direct normal irradiance and the presence of mining industries in its vicinity. The analysis shows that all three scenarios have a lower levelized cost of energy when compared to natural gas. To further confirm these findings, the analysis needs to be extended to other locations to account for different solar resources and different economic constraints.


Author(s):  
Michael J. Wagner ◽  
Sanford A. Klein ◽  
Douglas T. Reindl

The operation of solar energy systems is necessarily transient. Over the lifetime of a concentrating solar power plant, the system operates at design conditions only occasionally, with the bulk of operation occurring under part-load conditions depending on solar resource availability. Credible economic analyses of solar-electric systems requires versatile models capable of predicting system performance at both design and off-design conditions. This paper introduces new and adapted simulation tools for power tower systems including models for the heliostat field, central receiver, and the power cycle. The design process for solar power tower systems differs from that for other concentrating solar power (CSP) technologies such as the parabolic trough or parabolic dish systems that are nearly modular in their design. The design of an optimum power tower system requires a determination of the heliostat field layout and receiver geometry that results in the greatest long-term energy collection per unit cost. Research presented in this paper makes use of the DELSOL3 code (Kistler, 1986) which provides this capability. An interface program called PTGEN was developed to simplify the combined use of DELSOL3 and TRNSYS. The final product integrates the optimization tool with the detailed component models to provide a comprehensive modeling tool set for the power tower technology.


Author(s):  
Rudolf Popp ◽  
Robert Flesch ◽  
Thomas Konrad ◽  
Uwe Jassmann ◽  
Dirk Abel

1977 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. L. Russell, Jr. ◽  
G. Eggers ◽  
W. Emrich ◽  
F. Openshaw ◽  
W. Walker

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