scholarly journals Comparative exergy analysis of the cascade cooling system for alternative refrigerant couples

2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 115-119
Author(s):  
Erkan DİKMEN ◽  
Arzu ŞENCAN ŞAHİN
Author(s):  
Joy Nondy ◽  
Tapan Kr. Gogoi

Abstract In this paper, a combined power and cooling system is thermodynamically analyzed. The system consists of a natural gas-fired gas turbine (GT) plant integrated with a heat recovery steam generator (HRSG), two steam turbines (STs), one organic Rankine cycle (ORC) and two absorption cooling systems (ACSs). With certain given input parameters, the GT plant produces net power of 36.06 MW, the two STs contribute 17.07 MW while from the ORC, 7.18 MW of net power was obtained. From the steam-operated ACS-I, a net 10.36 MW of cooing could be produced. Again, from the GT exhaust operated ACS-II, it was possible to generate additional 3.37 MW of cooling. From exergy analysis, it was found that the total irreversibility was the highest in the GT cycle with a net contribution of 180.412 MW followed by 4.178 MW from the HRSG, 3.561 MW from the ORC, 1.743 MW from ACS-I, 1.186 MW from ST-I, 0.812 MW from ACS-II, 0.175 MW from ST-II. The exergy efficiencies of the GT cycle, ORC, ACS-I and ACS-II were found 22.00%, 65.48%, 18.95% and 14.4% respectively. Regarding the power and cooling output, it can be concluded that these results are specific to the selected operating parameters. Further investigation is required, where, other similar configurations may be considered to make a final comment on the suitability of the proposed configuration from energy output and economic point of view.


2008 ◽  
Vol 130 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Amip J. Shah ◽  
Van P. Carey ◽  
Cullen E. Bash ◽  
Chandrakant D. Patel

The modeling of recirculation patterns in air-cooled data centers is of interest to ensure adequate thermal management of computer racks at increased heat densities. Most metrics that describe recirculation are based exclusively on temperature inside the data center, and therefore fail to provide adequate information regarding the energy efficiency of the thermal infrastructure. This paper addresses this limitation through an exergy analysis of the data center thermal management system. The approach recognizes that the mixing of hot and cold streams in the data center airspace is an irreversible process and must therefore lead to a loss of exergy. Experimental validation in a test data center confirms that such an exergy-based characterization in the cold aisle reflects the same recirculation trends as suggested by traditional temperature-based metrics. Further, by extending the exergy-based model to include irreversibilities from other components of the thermal architecture, it becomes possible to quantify the amount of available energy supplied to the cooling system that is being utilized for thermal management purposes. The energy efficiency of the entire data center cooling system can then be collapsed into the single metric of net exergy loss. When evaluated against a ground state of the external ambience, this metric enables an estimate of how much of the energy emitted into the environment could potentially be harnessed in the form of useful work. Thus, this paper successfully demonstrates that the proposed exergy-based approach can provide a foundation upon which the data center cooling system can be simultaneously evaluated for thermal manageability and energy efficiency.


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