Abstract

Conventional heat batteries and concentrated solar power systems adopt subcritical steam Rankine cycles (SRCs) to avoid the technical challenges of supercritical cycles. The water evaporation temperature of 310–337 °C and live steam pressure of 10–14 MPa limit the cycle efficiency (around 42%). This paper proposes a novel partial cascade organic-steam Rankine cycle (ORC-SRC) system to increase the fluid evaporation temperature and thermal efficiency. The ORC-SRC uses a mixture of biphenyl and diphenyl oxide as the top cycle fluid. The mixture absorbs heat from the molten salts and evaporates at about 400 °C to drive a turbine, and then the exhaust vapor releases heat to the bottom SRC. The ORC contributes to saturated steam generation, and molten salts supply the rest heat to the SRC through the steam superheater and reheater. The fundamentals of the system are illustrated, and mathematical models are built. Thermo-economic performance of the system is investigated. The results show that the proposed system significantly increases the average temperature of the power fluid in the heating process, leading to a maximum cycle efficiency of 45.3%. Meanwhile, the moderate live steam pressure of 7.44 MPa in the SRC reduces the leakage loss of the high-pressure turbine and equipment costs. Despite a smaller temperature drop of molten salts during discharge, the equivalent payback period of the ORC-SRC is within 4 years.

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