CSP Technologies: Solar Dish /sterling Engine System Parabolic Trough Solar Concentrating Receiver
The document discusses Stirling engines and compares different solar concentrating technologies:
1) Stirling engines use an external combustion process where combustion occurs outside the engine and the products do not mix with the working fluid. They consist of a heat source, regenerator, cooler, heat sink, displacer, and hot side heat exchanger.
2) Dish Stirling systems have the highest efficiency of 21% due to concentrating sunlight 3000 times, followed by power towers at 16% and parabolic troughs at 14%.
3) However, parabolic troughs require the least land area of around 5 acres/MW compared to dish Stirling needing 4 acres/MW and power towers 8 acres/MW.
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0 ratings0% found this document useful (0 votes)
34 views
CSP Technologies: Solar Dish /sterling Engine System Parabolic Trough Solar Concentrating Receiver
The document discusses Stirling engines and compares different solar concentrating technologies:
1) Stirling engines use an external combustion process where combustion occurs outside the engine and the products do not mix with the working fluid. They consist of a heat source, regenerator, cooler, heat sink, displacer, and hot side heat exchanger.
2) Dish Stirling systems have the highest efficiency of 21% due to concentrating sunlight 3000 times, followed by power towers at 16% and parabolic troughs at 14%.
3) However, parabolic troughs require the least land area of around 5 acres/MW compared to dish Stirling needing 4 acres/MW and power towers 8 acres/MW.
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 13
*CSP Technologies
* Solar Dish /Sterling engine system
* Parabolic Trough * Solar concentrating receiver *Stirling engine * The spark-ignition and Diesel-cycle reciprocating engines just described are examples of internal combustion engines. That is, combustion takes place inside the engine itself. * An alternative approach is external combustion, in which energy is supplied to the working fluid from a source outside of the engine. Stirling-cycle engines were patented in 1816 by a minister in the Church of Scotland, Robert Stirling. Sterling engine consists of the following components: * 1) Heat Source. * 2) Regenerator. * 3) Cooler. * 4) Heat Sink * 5) Displacer. * 6) Hot side heat exchanger. Heat source: *The heat source may be combustion of a fuel and, geothermal energy, solar energy or any other source. Since in sterling engine, external combustion takes place so the products do not mix with the working fluid and hence they don’t come into contact with the internal moving parts of the engine. *A Sterling engine can run on many fluids that can damage the working of internal combustion engine. Regenerator: *In a Sterling engine, the regenerator part is an internal heat exchanger and temporary heat storage placed between the hot and cold spaces such that the working fluid passes through it first in one direction then in the other direction. * Its function is to retain within the system that heat which would otherwise be passed to the environment at temperatures intermediate to the maximum and minimum cycle temperatures, thus enabling the thermal efficiency of the cycle to approach the limiting Carnot efficiency defined by those maxima and minima Cooler / cold side heat exchanger: * In small, low power engines this may simply consist of the walls of the cold space(s), but where larger powers are required a cooler using a liquid like water is needed in order to transfer sufficient heat. Heat sink:- * The heat sink is typically the environment at ambient temperature. In the case of medium to high power engines, a radiator is required to transfer the heat from the engine to the ambient air. * Marine engines can use the ambient water. In the case of combined heat and power systems, the engine's cooling water is used directly or indirectly for heating purposes. * Alternatively, heat may be supplied at ambient temperature and the heat sink maintained at a lower temperature by such means as cryogenic fluid (Liquid nitrogen) or iced water Displacer:- * The displacer is a special-purpose piston, used in Beta and Gamma type Sterling engines, to move the working gas back and forth between the hot and cold heat exchangers. Depending on the type of engine design, the displacer may or may not be sealed to the cylinder, i.e. it is a loose fit within the cylinder and allows the working gas to pass around it as it moves to occupy the part of the cylinder beyond. Hot side heat exchanger: * In small, low power engines this may simply consist of the walls of the hot space(s) but where larger powers are required a greater surface area is needed in order to transfer sufficientheat. Typical implementations are internal and external fins or multiple small bore tubes. * Designing Sterling engine heat exchangers is a balance between high heat transfer with low viscous pumping losses and low dead space (unswept internal volume). With engines operating at high powers and pressures, the heat exchangers on the hot side must be made of alloys retaining considerable strength at temperature that also will not corrode or creep. * Stirling engines in sizes ranging from less than 1 kW up to about 25 kW are beginning to be made commercially available. While their efficiency is still relatively low, typically less than 30%, rapid progress is being made toward boosting that into the range in which they would be competitive with internal-combustion engines.
* Since fuel is burned slowly and constantly, with no explosions, these
engines are inherently quiet, which could make them especially attractive for automobiles, boats, recreational vehicles, and even small aircraft. In fact, that quietness has been used to advantage in Stirling engine propulsion systems for submarines. *Comparison Efficiency: All three of these technologies incorporate heat engines, which means the higher the temperature of the heat source, the greater the potential efficiency. The key to high temperatures is the intensity of solar radiation focused onto the receiver, which is usually expressed in dimensionless “suns” of concentration where the reference point of 1 sun means no concentration. * Dish Stirling systems achieve concentration ratios of about 3000 suns, power towers about 1000 suns, and parabolic trough systems about 100 suns. * Not surprisingly, the corresponding efficiencies of these technologies follow the same ranking,with dish Stirling the highest and parabolic trough the lowest. * Annual efficincies :Dish Stirling 21%, power towers 16%, and parabolic troughs 14%. * In terms of land area required, however, power towers suffer because of the empty space between tower and mirrors, so the rankings shift some. Dish Stirling requires about 4 acres per MW, parabolic troughs about 5 acres/MW, and power towers about 8 acres/MW. * All three of these CSP technologies can be hybridized using fossil fuel auxiliary heat sources, so they are the somewhat the same in that regard. Another way to achieve reliability, however, is with thermal storage; in that regard, parabolic troughs and power towers havean advantage over dish Stirling engines. * When thermal storage is the backup rather than fuel combustion, systems are easier to permit since they can be 100% solar. * Dish Stirling engines, which need no cooling water have the advantage over current designs for troughs and towers. They also make very little noise and have a relatively low profile so they may be easier to site close to residential loads. * Dish Stirling systems appear to be appropriately sized at about 25 kW each, but economies of scale play a bigger role for troughs and towers and they may be most economical in unit sizes of about 100 MW. * It seems likely to be easier to find investors willing to help develop $100,000 dish systems, working out the bugs and improving the technology as they go along, than to assemble the hundreds of millions of dollars needed for a single trough or tower system. Wind turbines, with their explosive growth, have certainly benefited from the fact that they too are small in scale.
Gas-Engines and Producer-Gas Plants
A Practice Treatise Setting Forth the Principles of Gas-Engines and Producer Design, the Selection and Installation of an Engine, Conditions of Perfect Operation, Producer-Gas Engines and Their Possibilities, the Care of Gas-Engines and Producer-Gas Plants, with a Chapter on Volatile Hydrocarbon and Oil Engines