Abstract

Future supercritical carbon dioxide (sCO 2 ) Brayton power cycles demand high-performance gas-to-gas heat exchangers (HXs) operating under extreme temperature and pressure conditions at which most existing superalloy materials fail to function safely. Ceramic HXs are deemed excellent candidates for advanced sCO 2 power plants as they can withstand high-temperature working environments. Particularly, ceramic 3D printing enables compact HX topologies employing complex and efficient heat transfer features. However, ceramic 3D-printed walls separating hot and cold flow streams are susceptible to a through-plane leakage inherent to a powder-based manufacturing process, including ceramic 3D printing. A potential leakage through ceramic separating walls poses a significant challenge in developing reliable ceramic 3D-printed HXs and could deteriorate thermal performance. In this study, various parameters, including feedstock slurry, 3D-printing direction, and post-processing conditions, are considered, for the first time, to characterize the argon gas leakage rate associated with alumina 3D-printed parts. Three 3D-printed ceramic structures of flat plates, curved tubes, and small-scale plate-and-frame HXs with various thicknesses are systematically studied to determine powder and ceramic 3D-printing conditions to eliminate the through-plane leakage. The results showed that an alumina 3D-printed plate with a thickness of 0.75 mm demonstrates a permeability of 6 × 10 −4 milli-darcy. An alumina 3D-printed tube with a wall thickness of 0.9 mm revealed a permeability of 9.6 × 10 −7 milli-darcy. Furthermore, leakage test results of functional 3D-printed modules showed a dependency on the 3D-printing direction. Particularly, alumina cell-scale HXs employing 1.5-mm-thick horizontal and vertical 3D-printed separating walls demonstrated impermeability and gas permeability of 7.2 × 10 −5 millidarcy, respectively. Insights gained from the present study facilitate the development of complex ceramic 3D-printed HXs and other balance of plant components for next-generation high-temperature high-pressure sCO 2 power cycles. • Gas leakage rates of ceramic 3D-printed modules, including flat plates, curved tubes, and heat exchangers, were examined. • Effects of feedstock slurry, 3D-printing direction, and post-processing conditions on leakage rate, were considered. • Enhancing the slurry quality resulted in a noticeable decrease in the leakage rate of alumina 3D-printed modules. • At the same wall thickness, a horizontal alumina 3D-printed wall shows a lower leakage rate than a vertical wall

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