Abstract

The Solar Turbo Combined Heat and Power (ST-CHP) project developed a novel solar-gas hybrid prototype for combined heat and power generation in Pretoria, South Africa. A vacuum-membrane faceted parabolic dish with a large-pipe open-cavity receiver was coupled to a counterflow recuperator, a combustion chamber, a micro gas turbine with air bearings and a phase change thermal energy storage unit containing solar salts. This study aimed to validate the electrical output of the full-scale dish-Brayton prototype, addressing the literature gap on micro-scale dish-Brayton plants' in-field power generation. Solar hybridization of micro gas turbine technology can significantly reduce combustion fuel consumption. A performance analysis under relevant conditions revealed a late afternoon micro gas turbine output intermittently peaking at 0.4kWe and subsequently stabilizing to a steady state of 0.145kWe at 130krpm. A SimuPact numerical model and an analytical model supplemented the telemetry data to reduce interference in the experimental setup and fully characterize the ST-CHP prototype performance, estimating a steady-state turbine isentropic efficiency of 57%, a compressor efficiency of 71% and a collector efficiency of 17% due to the late afternoon steady-state point. Analytical case studies revealed that fuel savings of between 12% and 33% at the combustion chamber were achievable from the solarized preheating. A subsequent test of the micro gas turbine without solar hybridization or a recuperator resulted in 1.05kWe being generated. The study confirms the dish-Brayton prototype's viability for combined heat and power generation, producing an initial full-scale performance characterisation during in-field testing, and highlighting the impact of solar hybridization on turbine electrical output. Optical efficiency, insulation effectiveness, pressure losses, and turbine operating conditions were identified as critical areas requiring optimization to improve electrical output. The lessons learned, and the calibrated numerical model may be used to optimize the performance of the dish-Brayton plant in future work. The successful in-field full-scale power generation of the ST-CHP prototype adds to the available literature on dish-Brayton technology and brings the technology closer to a commercial product.

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