Abstract
With the intervention of the industry in every aspect of human lifestyle on the one hand, and the prompt reduction in fossil fuel and their harms to the environment, including global warming, on the flip side, the importance of renewable sources of energy has been revealed more than ever. The presented study attempted to investigate a new configuration for a trigeneration configuration based on a solar renewable source. The proposed system comprises a parabolic trough solar collector segment to drive a transcritical carbon dioxide power and refrigeration subsystem, a dual-pressure organic Rankine cycle, and a thermal vapor compression process combined with a multi-effect desalination unit. The suggested configuration is carefully inspected from thermodynamic and economic perspectives, encompassing an analysis of a certain condition and a detailed parametric evaluation. Four decision parameters are employed for the parametric evaluation, in conjunction with two scenarios from a multi-objective particle swarm optimization combined with a linear programming method for multidimensional preference analysis as a decision-maker. The examination outputs bring out a net output power of 12.147 MW, a 7.707 MW cooling load, a 4.448 kg/s freshwater, and energetic and exergetic efficiencies of 15.286 % and 10.192 %, respectively. Moreover, examining the system's performance from an economic perspective reveals a total product cost rate of 954.249 $/h, leading to a 4.694-year payback period. This study optimizes energy usage and minimizes waste, offering industrial applications such as reducing fossil fuel dependence and lowering greenhouse gas emissions. It supports sustainable development and facilitates the global transition to cleaner energy sources.
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