A Scalable Compact Additively Manufactured Molten Salt to Supercritical Carbon Dioxide Heat Exchanger for Solar Thermal Application

JOURNAL OF SOLAR ENERGY ENGINEERING-TRANSACTIONS OF THE ASME(2024)

引用 0|浏览2
暂无评分
摘要
Design of an additively manufactured molten salt (MS) to supercritical carbon dioxide (sCO(2)) primary heat exchanger (PHE) for solar thermal power generation is presented. The PHE is designed to handle temperatures up to 720 degrees C on the MS side and an internal pressure of 200 bar on the sCO(2) side. In the core, MS flows through a three-dimensional periodic lattice network, while sCO(2) flows within pin arrays. The design includes integrated sCO(2) headers located within the MS flow, allowing for a counterflow design of the PHE. The sCO(2) headers are configured to enable uniform flow distribution into each sCO(2) plate while withstanding an internal pressure of 200 bar and minimizing obstruction to the flow of MS around it. The structural integrity of the design is verified on additively manufactured (AM) 316 stainless steel sub-scale specimens. An experimentally validated, correlation-based sectional PHE core thermofluidic model is developed to study the impact of flow and geometrical parameters on the PHE performance, with varied parameters including the mass flowrate, surface roughness, and PHE dimensions. A process-based cost model is used to determine the impact of parameter variation on build cost. The model results show that a heat exchanger with a power density of 18.6 MW/m(3) (including sCO(2) header volume) and effectiveness of 0.88 can be achieved at a heat capacity rate ratio of 0.8. The impact of design and AM machine parameters on the cost of the PHE are assessed.
更多
查看译文
关键词
additive manufacturing,solar thermal,primary heat exchanger,supercritical carbon dioxide,molten salt,nickel superalloy,heat transfer,thermal power,laser powder bed fusion
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要