scholarly journals Application of Phase Change Material and Artificial Neural Networks for Smoothing of Heat Flux Fluctuations

Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (12) ◽  
pp. 3531
Author(s):  
Tomasz Tietze ◽  
Piotr Szulc ◽  
Daniel Smykowski ◽  
Andrzej Sitka ◽  
Romuald Redzicki

The paper presents an innovative method for smoothing fluctuations of heat flux, using the thermal energy storage unit (TES Unit) with phase change material and Artificial Neural Networks (ANN) control. The research was carried out on a pilot large-scale installation, of which the main component was the TES Unit with a heat capacity of 500 MJ. The main challenge was to smooth the heat flux fluctuations, resulting from variable heat source operation. For this purpose, a molten salt phase change material was used, for which melting occurs at nearly constant temperature. To enhance the smoothing effect, a classical control system based on PID controllers was supported by ANN. The TES Unit was supplied with steam at a constant temperature and variable mass flow rate, while a discharging side was cooled with water at constant mass flow rate. It was indicated that the operation of the TES Unit in the phase change temperature range allows to smooth the heat flux fluctuations by 56%. The tests have also shown that the application of artificial neural networks increases the smoothing effect by 84%.

Energies ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 1022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaohong Liu ◽  
Yuekuan Zhou ◽  
Chun-Qing Li ◽  
Yaolin Lin ◽  
Wei Yang ◽  
...  

This paper investigates the energy performances of a hybrid system composed of a phase change materials-ventilated Trombe wall (PCMs-VTW) and a photovoltaic/thermal panel integrated with phase change material (PV/T-PCM). Equivalent overall output energy (QE) was proposed for energy performance evaluation regarding different energy forms, diversified conversions and hybrid thermal storages. This study focuses on parameters’ optimization of the PV/T-PCM system and parameters in the PCMs-VTW are kept optimal. Based on the experimentally validated numerical modelling, nine trial experiments have been conducted following Taguchi L9 (34) standard orthogonal array. The higher the better concept was implemented and the optimal combination of operating parameters was thereafter identified by using signal-to-noise (S/N) ratio and Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) method. The results show that QE is highly dependent on the mass flow rate, followed by the diameter of active cooling water pipe. However, the inlet cooling water temperature and the thickness of PCM have limited influence on QE. The optimal combination of each factor was identified as B3A3C2D1 (mass flow rate of 1 kg/s, diameter of water pipe of 0.6 m, inlet cooling water temperature of 15 °C and the thickness of PCM of 20 mm) with the highest QE of 20,700 kWh.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (0) ◽  
pp. 1-5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saulius Pakalka ◽  
Kęstutis Valančius ◽  
Matas Damonskis

The paper presents an experimental study of the influence of heat transfer fluid (HTF) mass flow rate on phase change materials (PCM) behaviour. The experimental study was performed on a specially designed test bench. Research object – PCM based thermal energy storage unit which consists of a stainless steel tank with dual circuit tube-fin copper heat exchanger. The tank (storage volume) was filled with phase change material RT82. The experiment was carried out using three different mass flow rates of HTF: high – 0.25 kg/s, medium – 0.125 kg/s, low – 0.05 kg/s. The analysis showed that in the case of high and medium mass flow rates the melting/solidification process highly depends on the temperature of inlet HTF. Influence of mass flow rate is higher in the case of low mass flow rate.


Author(s):  
Yu Rao ◽  
Frank Dammel ◽  
Peter Stephan

Comparative experiments were conducted in order to investigate the effects of the mass flow rate and wall heating flux on the cooling performance of water-based suspensions of microencapsulated phase change material (MEPCM) flowing through rectangular minichannels. MEPCM particles with an average size of 4.97 μm were used to form suspensions with mass concentrations ranging from 0% to 20%. The comparative experiments were performed for varying mass flow rates in the laminar region and varying thermal conditions. It was found out that the mass flow rate and wall heating flux play a significant role in the cooling performance of MEPCM suspensions. It is believed that the decreased thermal conductivity of MEPCM suspensions with the concentration and the different thermally developing flow patterns are mainly responsible for the dependence of the cooling performance of MEPCM suspensions of those parameters.


Author(s):  
Ayoub Gounni ◽  
Mustapha El Alami

In order to really assess the thermal performance of a wall incorporating phase change material (PCM), a reduced scale cavity has been monitored during two heating cycles. For each cycle, the heat source inside the test cell is switched “on” for 5 h and its setpoint is 38 °C and then switched off for 4 h. The outdoor air temperature is kept constant at a low temperature of 20 °C. Two walls are equipped with a PCM layer at different depths in order to study the optimal PCM location. The two other walls are wooden and glass to model a real building. The comparison between the four walls is made based on the absorbed heat fluxes and outside surface temperatures. The results show that the location of the PCM close to the heat source reaches its melting temperature and then reduces the surface temperature. At this location, the PCM layer stores the major part of the inlet heat flux. It takes 10 h to release the absorbed heat flux. However, the PCM layer, practically, does not have an effect on the surface temperatures and absorbed heat fluxes, when it is placed far from the heat source.


Author(s):  
Jean Batina ◽  
Serge Blancher ◽  
Tarik Kouskou

Purpose – Mathematical and numerical models are developed to study the melting of a Phase Change Material (PCM) inside a 2D cavity. The bottom of the cell is heated at constant and uniform temperature or heat flux, assuming that the rest of the cavity is completely adiabatic. The paper used suitable numerical methods to follow the interface temporal evolution with a good accuracy. The purpose of this paper is to show how the evolution of the latent energy absorbed to melt the PCM depends on the temperature imposed on the lower wall of the cavity. Design/methodology/approach – The problem is written with non-homogeneous boundary conditions. Momentum and energy equations are numerically solved in space by a spectral collocation method especially oriented to this situation. A Crank-Nicolson scheme permits the resolution in time. Findings – The results clearly show the evolution of multicellular regime during the process of fusion and the kinetics of phase change depends on the boundary condition imposed on the bottom cell wall. Thus the charge and discharge processes in energy storage cells can be controlled by varying the temperature in the cell PCM. Substantial modifications of the thermal convective heat and mass transfer are highlighted during the transient regime. This model is particularly suitable to follow with a good accuracy the evolution of the solid/liquid interface in the process of storage/release energy. Research limitations/implications – The time-dependent physical properties that induce non-linear coupled unsteady terms in Navier-Stokes and energy equations are not taken into account in the present model. The present model is actually extended to these coupled situations. This problem requires smoother geometries. One can try to palliate this disadvantage by constructing smoother approximations of non-smooth geometries. The augmentation of polynomials developments orders increases strongly the computing time. When the external heat flux or temperature imposed at the PCM is much greater than the temperature of the PCM fusion, one must choose carefully some data to assume the algorithms convergence. Practical implications – Among the areas where this work can be used, are: buildings where the PCM are used in insulation and passive cooling; thermal energy storage, the PCM stores energy by changing phase, solid to liquid (fusion); cooling and transport of foodstuffs or pharmaceutical or medical sensitive products, the PCM is used in the food industry, pharmaceutical and medical, to minimize temperature variations of food, drug or sensitive materials; and the textile industry, PCM materials in the textile industry are used in microcapsules placed inside textile fibres. The PCM intervene to regulate heat transfer between the body and the outside. Originality/value – The paper's originality is reflected in the precision of its results, due to the use of a high-accuracy numerical approximation based on collocation spectral methods, and the choice of Chebyshev polynomials basis in both axial and radial directions.


2019 ◽  
Vol 142 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nasrin Abdollahi ◽  
Masoud Rahimi

Abstract This paper presents an experimental investigation on a hybrid solar system, including a water-based photovoltaic (PV) solar module and a phase change material (PCM)-based cooling tower, for cooling of the module. Elimination of heat from the PV module was performed by the use of water in the back of the panel. The PCM-based cooling tower was used as a postcooling system. A composite oil consisting of 82 wt% coconut oil and 18 wt% sunflower oil has been used as a novel phase change material in the cooling tower. The helical tubes of the cooling tower were fabricated in two different curvature ratios of 0.054 and 0.032. The experiments were performed at three different water flow rates of 11.71, 16.13, and 19.23 mL/s. The cooling performance evaluation was carried out using the average surface temperature and output power of the photovoltaic panel. The results indicated that diminution of the average PV surface temperature relative to the reference temperature was 34.01 and 32.36 °C at a water flow rate of 19.23 mL/s for the cooling systems with helical tube curvature ratios 0.054 and 0.032, respectively. Furthermore, the highest electric output power was achieved for the cooling system with a helical tube curvature ratio of 0.054 at a water flow rate of 19.23 mL/s.


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