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Analysis of an innovative direct steam generation‐based parabolic trough collector plant hybridized with a biomass boiler
Author(s) -
Alhayek Bashar,
AgelinChaab Martin,
Reddy Bale
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
international journal of energy research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.808
H-Index - 95
eISSN - 1099-114X
pISSN - 0363-907X
DOI - 10.1002/er.3785
Subject(s) - parabolic trough , boiler (water heating) , exergy , process engineering , rankine cycle , power station , nuclear engineering , electricity generation , steam electric power station , working fluid , thermal energy storage , waste management , solar energy , degree rankine , environmental science , exergy efficiency , organic rankine cycle , engineering , mechanical engineering , combined cycle , waste heat , power (physics) , electrical engineering , thermodynamics , heat exchanger , physics , turbine
Summary Direct steam generation (DSG) is the process by which steam is directly produced in parabolic trough fields and supplied to a power block. This process simplifies parabolic trough plants and improves cost effectiveness by increasing the permissible temperature of the working fluid. Similar to all solar‐based technologies, thermal energy storage is needed to overcome the intermittent nature of solar. In the present work, an innovative DSG‐based parabolic trough collector (PTC) plant hybridized with a biomass boiler is proposed and analyzed in detail. Two additional configurations comprising indirect steam generation PTC plants were also analyzed to compare their energy and exergy performance. To consider a wide range of operation, the share of biomass input to the hybridized system is varied. Energy and exergy analyses of DSG are conducted and compared with an existing indirect steam generation PTC power plants such as Andasol. The analyses are conducted on a 50 MW regenerative reheat Rankine cycle. The results obtained indicate that the proposed DSG‐based PTC plant is able to increase the overall system efficiency by 3% in comparison with indirect steam generation when linked to a biomass boiler that supplies 50% of the energy.

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