Assessment of a Molten Salt Heat Transfer Fluid in a Parabolic Trough Solar Field
Author:
Kearney D.1, Herrmann U.2, Nava P.2, Kelly B.3, Mahoney R.4, Pacheco J.4, Cable R.5, Potrovitza N.5, Blake D.6, Price H.6
Affiliation:
1. Kearney & Associates, P.O. Box 2568, Vashon, WA 98070 2. Flabeg Solar International, 7 Muhlengasse Strasse, 58070 Koln, Germany 3. Nexant, Inc., 101 Second Street, San Francisco, CA 94105 4. Sandia National Laboratories, P.O. Box 5800, Albuquerque, NM 87185 5. KJC Operating Co., 41100 Hwy 395, Boron, CA 93516 6. National Renewal Energy Laboratory, 1617 Cole Blvd., Golden, CO 80401
Abstract
An evaluation was carried out to investigate the feasibility of utilizing a molten salt as the heat transfer fluid (HTF) and for thermal storage in a parabolic trough solar field to improve system performance and to reduce the levelized electricity cost. The operating SEGS (Solar Electric Generating Systems located in Mojave Desert, California) plants currently use a high temperature synthetic oil consisting of a eutectic mixture of biphenyl/diphenyl oxide. The scope of this investigation included examination of known critical issues, postulating solutions or possible approaches where potential problems exist, and the quantification of performance and electricity cost using preliminary cost inputs. The two leading candidates were the so-called solar salt (a binary salt consisting of 60% NaNO3 and 40% KNO3) and a salt sold commercially as HitecXL (a ternary salt consisting of 48% CaNO32, 7% NaNO3, and 45% KNO3). Assuming a two-tank storage system and a maximum operation temperature of 450°C, the evaluation showed that the levelized electricity cost can be reduced by 14.2% compared to a state-of-the-art parabolic trough plant such as the SEGS plants. If higher temperatures are possible, the improvement may be as high as 17.6%. Thermocline salt storage systems offer even greater benefits.
Publisher
ASME International
Subject
Energy Engineering and Power Technology,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
Reference8 articles.
1. Reilly, H. R. and Kolb, G., 2001, “An Evaluation of Molten-Salt Power Towers Including Results of the Solar Two Project,” SAND2001-3674. 2. Kearney, D., Kelly, B., Cable, R., Potrovitza, N., Herrmann, U., Nava, P., Mahoney, R., Pacheco, J., Blake, D., and Price, H., 2002, “Evaluation of a Molten Salt Heat Transfer Fluid in a Parabolic Trough Solar Field,” Proc. of Solar 2002, Reno, NE. 3. Kearney, D., Kelly, B., Cable, R., Potrovitza, N., Herrmann, U., Nava, P., Mahoney, R., Pacheco, J., Blake, D., and Price, H., 2002, “Engineering Aspects of a Molten Salt Heat Transfer Fluid in a Trough Solar Field,” Proc. of 11th SolarPaces Int. Symp. on Concentrating Solar Power and Chemical Energy Technologies, Zurich, Switzerland. 4. Nexant Inc., 2001, “USA Trough Initiative: Nitrate Salt HTF Rankine Cycle, Steam Generator, and Thermal Storage Analyses,” prepared for NREL. 5. Pacheco, J. E., Showalter, S., and Kolb, W., 2001, “Development of a Molten Salt Thermocline Thermal Storage System for Parabolic Trough Plants,” Solar Forum 2001, Washington, DC.
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