This invention relates to conversion of solar energy to electrical energy, and more particularly to such conversion using a Brayton cycle system.
A Brayton cycle engine traditionally includes three basic components, namely, a compressor, a combustor, and a turbine, the compressor and the turbine being mounted on the same shaft. Air compressed by the compressor is mixed with fuel and burned in the combustor. Hot gas from the combustor drives the turbine which in turn operates the compressor. Excess energy not needed to rotate the compressor is available to drive a generator or alternator so as to create electrical energy.
According to the present invention, the combustor is eliminated, and solar energy from a collector is transmitted to the Brayton working fluid of the Brayton cycle engine so as to heat the fluid at a point upstream of the turbine. The invention also contemplates an arrangement in which solar radiation is used to heat the working fluid of a magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) energy conversion device, and heat from the MHD working fluid is transmitted to the working fluid of the Brayton cycle system.
The invention will be described in more detail with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring to
Compressed Brayton working fluid leaving compressor 10 is ducted by conduit 14 to recuperator 15 from which the Brayton working fluid is further ducted to heater 16, from which point the compressed and heated Brayton working fluid flows to the turbine 11 to drive the latter. Rotation of turbine 11 serves, via shaft 13, to drive compressor 10 as well as alternator 12. The alternator may be one which produces three-phase, alternating electric current. The Brayton Brayton working fluid is preferably a gas, or mixture of gases, calculated to optimize operation of the turbine. Among the gases suitable for the purpose are argon, carbon dioxide, nitrogen, helium, xenon, and krypton.
The reduced temperature, but still hot, Brayton Brayton working fluid leaving turbine 11 flows through conduit 20 to recuperator 15, wherein it serves to pre-heat the compressed Brayton working fluid flowing to the recuperator through conduit 14. The post-turbine fluid then flows from recuperator 15 through a conduit 21 to a heat exchanger 22 which also receives ambient air from a fan 23. In this way, the post-turbine Brayton working fluid is further cooled before it continues its flow through a conduit 24 back to the inlet of compressor 10. The heat picked up by ambient air from fan 23 is dispensed to the atmosphere, or possibly used to heat other components.
A thermal bypass loop 25 may be interposed between the heater 16 and turbine 11 to limit the temperature of the Brayton working fluid entering the turbine. The loop contains a relatively cool gas which is metered into the Brayton Brayton working fluid through a valve controlled by a temperature sensor, such as a thermocouple. In this way, should the Brayton working fluid reach an excessive temperature, the metered fluid mixing with it will bring the temperature of the Brayton working fluid down to an acceptable limit.
The Brayton cycle Brayton working fluid is heated in heater 16 by means of solar radiation. This may be accomplished by using a parabolic solar collector or receiver 28, or an array of such collectors, capable of concentrating the rays of the sun at the focus or focal point of the collector. The solar heat is then transmitted from the solar collector to the Brayton cycle Brayton working fluid in heater 16. A preferred approach to transmitting the solar heat to the Brayton working fluid is to use a heat pipe, or a bundle of two or more heat pipes, such as that made by Thermal Transtech International Corporation of Taipei, Taiwan.
A heat pipe, schematically illustrated at 29, is a sealed hollow tube containing a wicking material and an evaporable liquid. For the purposes of this invention the tube is preferably of a heat resistant material, such as a ceramic or carbon fibers, and the liquid within could be a high boiling point metal such as silver or lithium. Thermal energy is very efficiently transmitted from one end of the heat pipe to the other. Therefore, a heat pipe could be arranged to pass through the wall of the heater housing or coil containing the Brayton working fluid. One end of the heat pipe can be arranged to be heated by a parabolic reflector, such as by being located at the focus of the reflector, and the other end reaching temperatures of approximately 1,700-1,800 degrees Celsius, being in contact with the Brayton working fluid within the healer 16. In this way, the solar energy is used to efficiently heat the Brayton Brayton working fluid. An advantage of using a heat pipe in this way is that a heat pipe transfers heat in only one direction, i.e., from the reflector to the Brayton working fluid container. Multiple parabolic reflectors, each including a heat pipe or pipes, could be used to heat the Brayton working fluid in the heater. Some heat pipes are flexible, which may aid this arrangement, as well as in combination with sun-tracking reflectors. Since heat pipes lose efficiency as they increase in length, the shortest possible heat pipe should be used, even as short as one foot in length.
In order to increase the efficiency of heat transfer from the heat pipe to the Brayton Brayton working fluid, the end of the heat pipe contacting the fluid may be furnished with pin-fins, such as illustrated in U.S. Pat. No. 6,817,405. In place of the parabolic solar dish collector 28, a parabolic trough solar collector could be employed. A trough solar collector is an elongated shell having a parabolic cross-sectional shape. A conduit extends along the focus of the parabolic trough, and for the sake of efficiency the conduit is encased within an evacuated glass tube. The conduit at the focus of the parabolic trough may replace the heater 16. In this case, the compressed Brayton working fluid leaving recuperator 15 flows through the conduit of the trough solar collector, wherein the Brayton working fluid is heated, the fluid then being ducted to turbine 11.
It may be desirable to provide the conduit with fins, or honeycombs or an accordion shape to work as heat trap structures to increase the temperature of the Brayton working fluid in the conduit pipe. This “heat trap” captures the solar radiation more efficiently and causes the solar radiation to be trapped inside and not be re radiated or reflected (bounced) out, therefore increasing the temperature of the Brayton working fluid. Whereas state of the art solar trough collectors currently use black selective paint or coating to increase efficiencies, at this time these black paints or selective coatings break down at high temperatures and cannot sustain the higher temperature desired in this application or configuration.
It is contemplated that a conduit could be used to guide the Brayton working fluid from the recuperator 15 to the focus of the parabolic solar collector 28 and then on to the turbine 11, thereby replacing the heater 16.
An MHD electrode system includes, as usual, a nonelectrically-conductive enclosure through which the ionized Brayton working fluid flows, and a nozzle at one end for introducing the ionized plasma into the enclosure. The pressure of the Brayton working fluid is preferably sufficient to create a supersonic flow through the nozzle, since the faster the flow the more efficiently electricity is produced. Magnets, which are preferably super conductive magnets, extend along the length of the enclosure to create a field perpendicular to the longitudinal direction of the enclosure. If necessary, insulation may be interposed between the magnets and the enclosure to protect the magnets from excessive heat. Electrodes are located within the enclosure in contact with the Brayton working fluid, and wires extend from the electrodes to the exterior of the enclosure for tapping electricity.
In the MHD enclosure some, but not all, of the kinetic energy of the MHD working fluid is converted into electrical energy. The gas stream leaving the MHD enclosure is still hot, and the heat of this gas can be transmitted, possibly using a heat pipe or pipes 36, to the heater 16 for heating the compressed Brayton Brayton working fluid. In this arrangement, electricity is produced both by the MHD system 37 as well by the alternator 12.
It is to be appreciated that the foregoing is a description of a preferred embodiment of the invention to which modifications and variations may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, the entire apparatus can be mounted on top of the receiver 28 at the focal point of the collector. In order to upwardly scale the (electrical generating capacity of the solar energy conversion system, the solar receiver may employ a solar furnace to heat the Brayton working fluid.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61045427 | Apr 2008 | US |