Heat Rejection Concepts for Brayton Power Conversion Systems
Author(s) -
John Siamidis,
Lee S. Mason,
Duane Beach,
James R. Yuko
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
2nd international energy conversion engineering conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2004-5653
Subject(s) - brayton cycle , nuclear engineering , waste heat , heat sink , radiator (engine cooling) , heat pipe , mechanical engineering , water cooling , materials science , heat transfer , engineering , heat exchanger , environmental science , mechanics , physics
This paper describes potential heat rejection design concepts for closed Brayton cycle (CBC) power conversion systems. Brayton conversion systems are currently under study by NASA for Nuclear Electric Propulsion (NEP) applications. The Heat Rejection Subsystem (HRS) must dissipate waste heat generated by the power conversion system due to inefficiencies in the thermal-to-electric conversion process. Space Brayton conversion system designs tend to optimize at efficiencies of about 20 to 25% with radiator temperatures in the 400 to 600 K range. A notional HRS was developed for a 100 kWe-class Brayton power system that uses a pumped sodium-potassium (NaK) heat transport loop coupled to a water heat pipe radiator. The radiator panels employ a sandwich construction consisting of regularly-spaced circular heat pipes contained within two composite facesheets. Heat transfer from the NaK fluid to the heat pipes is accomplished by inserting the evaporator sections into the NaK duct channel. The paper evaluates various design parameters including heat pipe diameter, heat pipe spacing, and facesheet thickness. Parameters were varied to compare design options on the basis of NaK pump pressure rise and required power, heat pipe unit power and radial flux, radiator panel areal mass, and overall HRS mass.
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