Proof of concept of the CaO/Ca(OH)2 reaction in a continuous heat-exchanger BFB reactor for thermochemical heat storage in CSP plants
Author(s) -
Sylvie Rougé,
Yolanda A. Criado,
Arthur Huille,
J.C. Abánades
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
aip conference proceedings
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.177
H-Index - 75
eISSN - 1551-7616
pISSN - 0094-243X
DOI - 10.1063/1.4984454
Subject(s) - dehydration , chemistry , mass transfer , dehydration reaction , work (physics) , thermodynamics , chemical kinetics , lime , reactivity (psychology) , batch reactor , mass fraction , kinetics , chemical engineering , materials science , chromatography , organic chemistry , catalysis , metallurgy , medicine , biochemistry , physics , alternative medicine , quantum mechanics , pathology , engineering
Proceedings of the 22nd SolarPACES 2016 International Conference, Abu Dhabi, UAEThe CaO/Ca(OH)2 hydration/dehydration reaction has long been identified as a attractive method for storing CSP heat. However, the technology applications are still at laboratory scale (TG or small fixed beds). The objective of this work is to investigate the hydration and dehydration reactions performance in a bubbling fluidized bed (BFB) which offers a good potential with regards to heat and mass transfers and upscaling at industrial level. The reactions are first investigated in a 5.5 kW batch BFB, the main conditions are the bed temperature (400-500°C), the molar fraction of steam in the fluidizing gas (0-0.8), the fluidizing gas velocity (0.2-0.7 m/s) and the mass of lime in the batch (1.5-3.5 kg). To assist in the interpretation of the experimental results, a standard 1D bubbling reactor model is formulated and fitted to the experimental results. The results indicate that the hydration reaction is mainly controlled by the slow kinetics of the CaO material tested while significant emulsion-bubble mass-transfer resistances are identified during dehydration due to the much faster dehydration kinetics. In the continuity of these preliminary investigations, a continuous 15.5 kW BFB set-up has been designed, manufactured and started with the objective to operate the hydration and dehydration reactions in steady state during a few hours, and to investigate conditions of faster reactivity such as higher steam molar fractions (up to 1), temperatures (up to 600°C) and velocities (up to 1.5 m/s).The financial support provided by the European Commission under the 7th Framework Program (StoRRe Project GA 282677) is acknowledged.Peer reviewe
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