Abstract
Screw expanders are volumetric machines particularly suitable in energy conversion with steam–liquid mixtures and for the exploitation of low temperature heat sources. This study explored the main criteria to evaluate the thermodynamic advantages and exergetic assessment of an innovative solar electricity generation system: Screw expanders are utilized as power machines and parabolic trough collectors as a thermal source. Such a direct steam generation solar system, which is based on the Rankine cycle, offers benefits in comparison with usual power plants with dynamic expanders: The best exploitation of low temperature heat sources, satisfactory thermal efficiency with steam–liquid mixtures, lower evaporation pressures, and reduced size. Under real working conditions, screw expanders can work at part-load operating conditions; thus, the chief purpose of the present paper was to analyze the exergetic advantages of the planned solar power system when solar radiation and off-design working conditions fluctuate. Initially, the polytropic expansion phase with a specific numerical model is described to evaluate the energy losses that affect the thermodynamic performance of screw expanders when installed in the planned renewable energy power plant. Subsequently, to explore the exergy harnessing in the exhausted steam at off-design working conditions and then to appraise the maximum exergetic efficiency of the proposed screw expander-based solar thermal electricity plant, numerical optimization was performed in a broad range of evaporation and condensation temperatures.
Subject
Energy (miscellaneous),Energy Engineering and Power Technology,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment,Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Control and Optimization,Engineering (miscellaneous)
Cited by
8 articles.
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