http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/partner/first-conferences/news/article/2011/08/supercritical-co2-could-hold-the-secrets-for-cspSupercritical-CO2 could hold the secrets for CSP
By CSP Today | August 15, 2011
San Francisco As the solar industry prepares to meet in San Francisco in three week's time, at the 2nd CSP Plant Optimization Summit (7-8 September), Zhiwen Ma, Senior Engineer at NREL, has been speaking to CSP Today about his recent research into supercritical-CO2 for CSP. Ma is scheduled to present his paper on this at the conference, in which he outlines the main advantages of Super-critical CO2 when compared to conventional steam rankine cycles.
Current CSP plants utilize oil, salt, or steam to transfer solar energy to the power block; however, these fluids have properties that limit plant performance. Synthetic oils, often used in parabolic trough technology, have an upper limit of 400°C, whereas salt is limited to 560°C. Although direct steam generation is being seen as a possible alternative, experts argue that this requires complex control systems to maintain optimum operational pressures and also offers a relatively limited storage capacity when compared to oil and salt. To obviate these limitations Ma examined the possibility of deploying supercritical-CO2 plant configurations in CSP, which could allow for higher operating temperatures and translate into higher thermal cycle efficiencies and more efficient thermal energy storage in plants.
Ma explained that “supercritical-CO2 is operated in a closed-loop recompression brayton cycle and offers higher cycle efficiencies than supercritical or superheated steam cycles at temperatures relevant for CSP applications”. He said that “supercritical-CO2 has the ability to be both the heat transfer fluid for the solar collector and the working fluid for the power block, which will also simplify and reduce the installation, maintenance and operational cost of the system”. Furthermore, the Supercritical CO2 “power unit is more compact and is a tenth of the size of a steam cycle power block”, which will also result in lowered cost when fully developed.
…
Other notable technical sessions come from Bechtel – “Ivanpah – Design & Integration of Power Tower Plants” and Fichtner Solar – “Andasol I & II- Entire Performance Test Results”. To see the interview with Zhiwen Ma in full visit the conference website below:
www.csptoday.com/optimizationusa/albiasa.shtml
…