Abstract

The Brayton cycle's heat source does not need to be from combustion but can be extracted from solar energy. When a black cavity receiver is mounted at the focus of a parabolic dish concentrator, the reflected light is absorbed and converted into a heat source. The second law of thermodynamics and entropy generation minimisation are applied to optimise the geometries of the recuperator and receiver. The irreversibilities in the recuperative solar thermal Brayton cycle are mainly due to heat transfer across a finite temperature difference and fluid friction. In a small-scale open and direct solar thermal Brayton cycle with a micro-turbine operating at its highest compressor efficiency, the geometries of a cavity receiver and counterflow-plated recuperator can be optimised in such a way that the system produces maximum net power output. A modified cavity receiver is used in the analysis, and parabolic dish concentrator diameters of 6 to 18 m are considered. Two cavity construction methods are compared. Results show that the maximum thermal efficiency of the system is a function of the solar concentrator diameter and choice of micro-turbine. The optimum receiver tube diameter is relatively large when compared with the receiver size. The optimum recuperator channel aspect ratio for the highest maximum net power output of a micro-turbine is a linear function of the system mass flow rate for a constant recuperator height. For a system operating at a relatively small mass flow rate, with a specific concentrator size, the optimum recuperator length is small. For the systems with the highest maximum net power output, the irreversibilities are spread throughout the system in such a way that the internal irreversibility rate is almost three times the external irreversibility rate. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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