A linear receiver able to achieve temperatures up to 800 °C is presented. The high-temperature resistance is achieved by avoiding critical aspects (vacuum, glass-metal joints, surface films) that limit the temperature in usual receivers; the thermal insulation is obtained by enclosing the receiver tube in an elliptic reflecting cavity. The tube is placed near a focus of the cavity, and the primary collector concentrates the radiation on the other focus, where the cavity has a small opening: the ellipse reflects the radiation toward the tube and largely contains the reflected radiation and thermal emission, thus acting both as a secondary reflector and as a cavity receiver. Optical and thermal simulations show that temperatures up to 800 °C can be achieved, with optical efficiency above 70% and thermal efficiency in the range 45-85% for temperatures in the range 500-800 °C; the local overall efficiency ranges from about 40% to 66%, depending on the receiver tube emissivity and fluid temperature. In this way, the field of applicability of the linear collector technology can be significantly extended to include a vast amount of processes such as thermochemical cycles for hydrogen production, and solar fuel production processes, which require temperatures above 700 °C.
High temperature solar linear receiver enclosed in a reflecting elliptic cavity
Grena R.;Lanchi M.;Turchetti L.;Crescenzi T.
2021-01-01
Abstract
A linear receiver able to achieve temperatures up to 800 °C is presented. The high-temperature resistance is achieved by avoiding critical aspects (vacuum, glass-metal joints, surface films) that limit the temperature in usual receivers; the thermal insulation is obtained by enclosing the receiver tube in an elliptic reflecting cavity. The tube is placed near a focus of the cavity, and the primary collector concentrates the radiation on the other focus, where the cavity has a small opening: the ellipse reflects the radiation toward the tube and largely contains the reflected radiation and thermal emission, thus acting both as a secondary reflector and as a cavity receiver. Optical and thermal simulations show that temperatures up to 800 °C can be achieved, with optical efficiency above 70% and thermal efficiency in the range 45-85% for temperatures in the range 500-800 °C; the local overall efficiency ranges from about 40% to 66%, depending on the receiver tube emissivity and fluid temperature. In this way, the field of applicability of the linear collector technology can be significantly extended to include a vast amount of processes such as thermochemical cycles for hydrogen production, and solar fuel production processes, which require temperatures above 700 °C.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.