Experimental Studies on Thermal Performance of a Pebble Bed High-Temperature Heat Exchanger

1985 ◽  
Vol 107 (3) ◽  
pp. 722-727 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Yoshikawa ◽  
H. Kajiyama ◽  
T. Okamura ◽  
S. Kabashima ◽  
H. Yamasaki ◽  
...  
1996 ◽  
Vol 62 (604) ◽  
pp. 4248-4253
Author(s):  
Satoshi UEOKA ◽  
Kunio YOSHIKAWA ◽  
Suwat RAVEEVONGANOTHAI ◽  
Susumu SHIODA ◽  
Saburou IKEDA ◽  
...  

1992 ◽  
Vol 58 (553) ◽  
pp. 2898-2903
Author(s):  
Yutaka ABE ◽  
Noboru AMIJI ◽  
Saburou IKEDA ◽  
Yoshikazu DOHZONO ◽  
Tetsurou FUSHIMI ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 2116 (1) ◽  
pp. 012095
Author(s):  
M. Fuchs ◽  
D. Heinrich ◽  
X. Luo ◽  
S. Kabelac

Abstract Due to increased distribution of high-temperature processes in energy and process plants, more efficient and compact high-temperature heat exchangers are being developed. The additive manufacturing allows the construction of compact sizes and application-specific requirements. To evaluate the thermal performance of these heat exchangers, experimental investigations are evident. This study presents a test rig for testing compact high-temperature heat exchangers as well as a first set of thermal performance data of an additively manufactured plate-fin heat exchanger. The test rig can provide a maximum fluid temperature of 900°C and a maximum mass flow rate of 0.8 kg/min. A steam unit can add steam to the fluid stream to evaluate the influence of gas radiation on the thermal performance. The capabilities of this test rig are being tested with the plate-fin heat exchanger, varying the mass flow rate between 0.2 - 0.52 kg/min at a hot and cold inlet temperature of 750°C and 250°C. The overall effectiveness of the heat exchanger is approx. 0.9.


2013 ◽  
Vol 50 (1) ◽  
pp. 886-895 ◽  
Author(s):  
Min Zeng ◽  
Ting Ma ◽  
Bengt Sundén ◽  
Mohamed B. Trabia ◽  
Qiuwang Wang

Author(s):  
Valery Ponyavin ◽  
Taha Mohamed ◽  
Mohamed Trabia ◽  
Yitung Chen ◽  
Anthony E. Hechanova

Ceramics are suitable for use in high temperature applications as well as corrosive environment. These characteristics were the reason behind selection silicone carbide for a high temperature heat exchanger and chemical decomposer, which is a part of the Sulphur-Iodine (SI) thermo-chemical cycle. The heat exchanger is expected to operate in the range of 950°C. The proposed design is manufactured using fused ceramic layers that allow creation of micro-channels with dimensions below one millimeter. A proper design of the heat exchanges requires considering possibilities of failure due to stresses under both steady state and transient conditions. Temperature gradients within the heat exchanger ceramic components induce thermal stresses that dominate other stresses. A three-dimensional computational model is developed to investigate the fluid flow, heat transfer and stresses in the decomposer. Temperature distribution in the solid is imported to finite element software and used with pressure loads for stress analysis. The stress results are used to calculate probability of failure based on Weibull failure criteria. Earlier analysis showed that stress results at steady state operating conditions are satisfactory. The focus of this paper is to consider stresses that are induced during transient scenarios. In particular, the cases of startup and shutdown of the heat exchanger are considered. The paper presents an evaluation of the stresses in these two cases.


2009 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 41-48
Author(s):  
Zheshu Ma ◽  
Zhenhuan Zhu

Indirectly or externally-fired gas-turbines (IFGT or EFGT) are novel technology under development for small and medium scale combined power and heat supplies in combination with micro gas turbine technologies mainly for the utilization of the waste heat from the turbine in a recuperative process and the possibility of burning biomass or 'dirty' fuel by employing a high temperature heat exchanger to avoid the combustion gases passing through the turbine. In this paper, by assuming that all fluid friction losses in the compressor and turbine are quantified by a corresponding isentropic efficiency and all global irreversibilities in the high temperature heat exchanger are taken into account by an effective efficiency, a one dimensional model including power output and cycle efficiency formulation is derived for a class of real IFGT cycles. To illustrate and analyze the effect of operational parameters on IFGT efficiency, detailed numerical analysis and figures are produced. The results summarized by figures show that IFGT cycles are most efficient under low compression ratio ranges (3.0-6.0) and fit for low power output circumstances integrating with micro gas turbine technology. The model derived can be used to analyze and forecast performance of real IFGT configurations.


2012 ◽  
Vol 33 (10) ◽  
pp. 853-870 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valery Ponyavin ◽  
Yitung Chen ◽  
Taha Mohamed ◽  
Mohamed Trabia ◽  
Anthony E. Hechanova ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Zhiwen Ma ◽  
Janna Martinek

Concentrating solar power (CSP) technology is moving toward high-temperature and high-performance design. One technology approach is to explore high-temperature heat-transfer fluids and storage, integrated with a high-efficiency power cycle such as the supercritical carbon dioxide (s-CO2) Brayton power cycle. The s-CO2 Brayton power system has great potential to enable the future CSP system to achieve high solar-to-electricity conversion efficiency and to reduce the cost of power generation. Solid particles have been proposed as a possible high-temperature heat-transfer medium that is inexpensive and stable at high temperatures above 1,000°C. The particle/heat exchanger provides a connection between the particles and s-CO2 fluid in the emerging s-CO2 power cycles in order to meet CSP power-cycle performance targets of 50% thermal-to-electric efficiency, and dry cooling at an ambient temperature of 40°C. The development goals for a particle/s-CO2 heat exchanger are to heat s-CO2 to ≥720°C and to use direct thermal storage with low-cost, stable solid particles. This paper presents heat-transfer modeling to inform the particle/s-CO2 heat-exchanger design and assess design tradeoffs. The heat-transfer process was modeled based on a particle/s-CO2 counterflow configuration. Empirical heat-transfer correlations for the fluidized bed and s-CO2 were used in calculating the heat-transfer area and optimizing the tube layout. A 2-D computational fluid-dynamics simulation was applied for particle distribution and fluidization characterization. The operating conditions were studied from the heat-transfer analysis, and cost was estimated from the sizing of the heat exchanger. The paper shows the path in achieving the cost and performance objectives for a heat-exchanger design.


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