Abstract

The concentrated solar thermal technologies (CST) are versatile in view of their multi-faceted applications, such as, process heat, cooling, and electricity generation. These are of line and point-focusing types with the later having much higher flux concentration (in Suns). This allows achieving a temperature in excess of 1200 K using, for instance, the open volumetric air receiver (OVAR). Such a high temperature is useful for applications, like the one which is developed at IIT Jodhpur, namely the solar convective furnace for heat treatment of aluminum. This requires a temperature of up to 750 K in the first phase of development. Thus, a suitable solar selective coating withstanding such a high temperature and having a thermal conductivity close to the base material for operating in an open atmosphere is desirable. Because of its atmospheric exposure, air and dust-induced degradation is inevitable, which may lead to its failure. These challenges are to be addressed for adapting such high-temperature CST technologies in arid deserts of India, the Middle-East, and Africa. In view of such challenges, the following details and foreseen developments are discussed in the paper: (a) design of OVAR including various sub-components; (b) flow-stability and the effect of heat-flux distribution on an absorber pore; (c) the developed coating and its characterization for OVAR.

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