The “Porcupine”: A Novel High-Flux Absorber for Volumetric Solar ReceiversSource: Journal of Solar Energy Engineering:;1998:;volume( 120 ):;issue: 002::page 85DOI: 10.1115/1.2888060Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
Abstract: A new volumetric (directly irradiated) solar absorber, nicknamed Porcupine , is presented. It was tested over several hundreds of hours at the Weizmann Institute’s Solar Furnace, using several flow and geometric configurations, at various irradiation conditions. The experiments, which were conducted at a power level of about 10 kW, showed that the new absorber can accommodate different working conditions and provide a convective cooling pattern to match various irradiation flux distributions. The capability of the Porcupine to endure a concentrated solar flux of up to about 4 MW/m2 , while producing working gas exit temperatures of up to 940°C, was demonstrated. In comparative tests, the Porcupine sustained an irradiation solar flux level about four times higher than that sustained by other volumetric absorbers (foam and honeycomb matrices). Due to its ability to sustain and transport a much higher energy fluxes, the Porcupine yielded twice the power output of the other absorbers while its exit gas temperature was 300–350°C higher. The Porcupine design is highly resistant to thermal stresses development; none of the Porcupine absorbers tested showed any sign of deterioration after hundreds of operating hours, although temperature gradients of several hundreds °C/cm developed in some experiments. The basic Porcupine structure provides convective and radiative energy transport between the matrix elements, therefore alleviating the development of flow instabilities; this phenomenon causes local overheating and restricts the operation of other volumetric matrices. A Porcupine absorber was subsequently incorporated into the directly irradiated annular pressurized receiver (DIAPR), where it has been operating flawlessly at an incident flux of several MW/m2 and temperatures of up to 1,700°C.
keyword(s): Solar energy , Temperature , Irradiation (Radiation exposure) , Thermal stresses , Design , Flow instability , Cooling , Flux (Metallurgy) , Furnaces , Temperature gradients AND Flow (Dynamics) ,
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contributor author | J. Karni | |
contributor author | A. Kribus | |
contributor author | R. Rubin | |
contributor author | P. Doron | |
date accessioned | 2017-05-08T23:57:45Z | |
date available | 2017-05-08T23:57:45Z | |
date copyright | May, 1998 | |
date issued | 1998 | |
identifier issn | 0199-6231 | |
identifier other | JSEEDO-28278#85_1.pdf | |
identifier uri | http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/121087 | |
description abstract | A new volumetric (directly irradiated) solar absorber, nicknamed Porcupine , is presented. It was tested over several hundreds of hours at the Weizmann Institute’s Solar Furnace, using several flow and geometric configurations, at various irradiation conditions. The experiments, which were conducted at a power level of about 10 kW, showed that the new absorber can accommodate different working conditions and provide a convective cooling pattern to match various irradiation flux distributions. The capability of the Porcupine to endure a concentrated solar flux of up to about 4 MW/m2 , while producing working gas exit temperatures of up to 940°C, was demonstrated. In comparative tests, the Porcupine sustained an irradiation solar flux level about four times higher than that sustained by other volumetric absorbers (foam and honeycomb matrices). Due to its ability to sustain and transport a much higher energy fluxes, the Porcupine yielded twice the power output of the other absorbers while its exit gas temperature was 300–350°C higher. The Porcupine design is highly resistant to thermal stresses development; none of the Porcupine absorbers tested showed any sign of deterioration after hundreds of operating hours, although temperature gradients of several hundreds °C/cm developed in some experiments. The basic Porcupine structure provides convective and radiative energy transport between the matrix elements, therefore alleviating the development of flow instabilities; this phenomenon causes local overheating and restricts the operation of other volumetric matrices. A Porcupine absorber was subsequently incorporated into the directly irradiated annular pressurized receiver (DIAPR), where it has been operating flawlessly at an incident flux of several MW/m2 and temperatures of up to 1,700°C. | |
publisher | The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) | |
title | The “Porcupine”: A Novel High-Flux Absorber for Volumetric Solar Receivers | |
type | Journal Paper | |
journal volume | 120 | |
journal issue | 2 | |
journal title | Journal of Solar Energy Engineering | |
identifier doi | 10.1115/1.2888060 | |
journal fristpage | 85 | |
journal lastpage | 95 | |
identifier eissn | 1528-8986 | |
keywords | Solar energy | |
keywords | Temperature | |
keywords | Irradiation (Radiation exposure) | |
keywords | Thermal stresses | |
keywords | Design | |
keywords | Flow instability | |
keywords | Cooling | |
keywords | Flux (Metallurgy) | |
keywords | Furnaces | |
keywords | Temperature gradients AND Flow (Dynamics) | |
tree | Journal of Solar Energy Engineering:;1998:;volume( 120 ):;issue: 002 | |
contenttype | Fulltext |