Title :
Parametric analysis of cyclic phase change and energy storage in solar heat receivers
Author :
Hall, Carsie A. ; Glakpe, Emmanuel K. ; Cannon, Joseph N. ; Kerslake, Thomas W.
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Eng., Howard Univ., Washington, DC, USA
fDate :
27 Jul-1 Aug 1997
Abstract :
A parametric study on cyclic melting and freezing of an encapsulated phase change material (PCM), integrated into a solar heat receiver, has been performed. The cyclic nature of the present melt/freeze problem is relevant to latent heat thermal energy storage (LHTES) systems used to power solar Brayton engines in microgravity environments. Specifically, a physical and numerical model of the solar heat receiver component of NASA Lewis Research Center´s Ground Test Demonstration (GTD) project was developed. Multi-conjugate effects such as the convective fluid flow of a low-Prandtl-number fluid, coupled with thermal conduction in the phase change material, containment tube and working fluid conduit were accounted for in the model. A single-band thermal radiation model was also included to quantify reradiative energy exchange inside the receiver and losses through the aperture. The eutectic LiF-CaF2 was used as the phase change material (PCM) and a mixture of He/Xe was used as the working fluid coolant. A modified version of the computer code HOTTube was used to generate results in the two-phase regime. Results indicate that parametric changes in receiver gas inlet temperature and receiver heat input effects higher sensitivity to changes in receiver gas exit temperatures
Keywords :
aerospace computing; aerospace simulation; heat engines; software packages; solar absorber-convertors; solar heating; solar power stations; space vehicle power plants; thermal analysis; thermal energy storage; HOTTube; He-Xe; LiF-CaF2; computer code; computer simulation; convective fluid flow; coolant; cyclic phase change; latent heat thermal energy storage; low-Prandtl-number fluid; multi-conjugate effects; parametric analysis; phase change material; reradiative energy exchange; single-band thermal radiation model; solar Brayton engines; solar heat receiver; solar heat receivers; space solar power; thermal conduction; two-phase regime; Energy storage; Fluid flow; Heat engines; NASA; Numerical models; Parametric study; Phase change materials; Solar heating; Temperature sensors; Testing;
Conference_Titel :
Energy Conversion Engineering Conference, 1997. IECEC-97., Proceedings of the 32nd Intersociety
Conference_Location :
Honolulu, HI
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-4515-0
DOI :
10.1109/IECEC.1997.659231