ATHLET extensions for the simulation of supercritical carbon dioxide driven power cycles

Kerntechnik ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 84 (5) ◽  
pp. 390-396 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Hofer ◽  
M. Buck ◽  
J. Starflinger
Author(s):  
John J. Dyreby ◽  
Sanford A. Klein ◽  
Gregory F. Nellis ◽  
Douglas T. Reindl

Continuing efforts to increase the efficiency of utility-scale electricity generation has resulted in considerable interest in Brayton cycles operating with supercritical carbon dioxide (S-CO2). One of the advantages of S-CO2 Brayton cycles, compared to the more traditional steam Rankine cycle, is that equal or greater thermal efficiencies can be realized using significantly smaller turbomachinery. Another advantage is that heat rejection is not limited by the saturation temperature of the working fluid, facilitating dry cooling of the cycle (i.e., the use of ambient air as the sole heat rejection medium). While dry cooling is especially advantageous for power generation in arid climates, the reduction in water consumption at any location is of growing interest due to likely tighter environmental regulations being enacted in the future. Daily and seasonal weather variations coupled with electric load variations means the plant will operate away from its design point the majority of the year. Models capable of predicting the off-design and part-load performance of S-CO2 power cycles are necessary for evaluating cycle configurations and turbomachinery designs. This paper presents a flexible modeling methodology capable of predicting the steady state performance of various S-CO2 cycle configurations for both design and off-design ambient conditions, including part-load plant operation. The models assume supercritical CO2 as the working fluid for both a simple recuperated Brayton cycle and a more complex recompression Brayton cycle.


Author(s):  
Ty W. Neises ◽  
Michael J. Wagner ◽  
Allison K. Gray

Research of advanced power cycles has shown supercritical carbon dioxide power cycles may have thermal efficiency benefits relative to steam cycles at temperatures around 500–700°C. To realize these benefits for CSP, it is necessary to increase the maximum outlet temperature of current tower designs. Research at NREL is investigating a concept that uses high-pressure supercritical carbon dioxide as the heat transfer fluid to achieve a 650°C receiver outlet temperature. At these operating conditions, creep becomes an important factor in the design of a tubular receiver and contemporary design assumptions for both solar and traditional boiler applications must be revisited and revised. This paper discusses lessons learned for high-pressure, high-temperature tubular receiver design. An analysis of a simplified receiver tube is discussed, and the results show the limiting stress mechanisms in the tube and the impact on the maximum allowable flux as design parameters vary. Results of this preliminary analysis indicate an underlying trade-off between tube thickness and the maximum allowable flux on the tube. Future work will expand the scope of design variables considered and attempt to optimize the design based on cost and performance metrics.


2006 ◽  
Vol 154 (3) ◽  
pp. 283-301 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vaclav Dostal ◽  
Pavel Hejzlar ◽  
Michael J. Driscoll

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eric Clementoni

Abstract Supercritical carbon dioxide (sCO2) Brayton power cycles are typically designed to operate with compressor inlet conditions near the critical point to take advantage of the high density of the fluid at these conditions. While designing the cycle to operate here improves cycle efficiency, it also creates challenges for designing the compressor and predicting off-design compressor performance due to real gas fluid properties near the critical point. Multiple compressor performance map evaluation methodologies which incorporate real gas corrections have been proposed in literature with only limited evaluation of the accuracy of these methods compared to operational data from compressors designed for sCO2 power cycles. This paper evaluates compressor performance from the 100 kWe Integrated System Test (IST), which was operated at the Naval Nuclear Laboratory, over a range of compressor inlet conditions and rotational speeds relative to one real gas performance map correction methodology and assesses the impact of additional terms proposed in literature for improving the accuracy of off-design performance predictions.


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