Integrated cascading cycle solar thermal plants
10690121 ยท 2020-06-23
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F24S80/30
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03G6/068
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01K25/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03G6/065
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02E10/46
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F01K23/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03G6/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03G6/066
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01K23/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F03G6/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03G6/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01K23/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01K23/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
In one embodiment, a thermodynamic system includes multiple types of thermodynamic cycles and multiple types of solar thermal fields that provide thermal energy to the thermodynamic cycles.
Claims
1. A solar thermal power system comprising: multiple thermodynamic systems that operate different types of thermodynamic cycles at different temperature ranges; and multiple solar thermal plants that provide thermal energy to the thermodynamic systems, wherein the solar thermal plants are of different types and operate at different temperature ranges, the solar thermal plants being connected in series such that they each operate using the same solar collector fluid that is sequentially cycled through each plant in series.
2. The solar thermal power system of claim 1, wherein the thermodynamic systems operate simultaneously but are independent of each other so waste from one thermodynamic system does not drive another thermodynamic system.
3. The solar thermal power system of claim 1, wherein the solar thermal power system comprises three thermodynamic systems that operate three different thermodynamic cycles, the thermodynamic cycles including (i) a high temperature steam Rankine cycle, (ii) a medium temperature organic Rankine cycle, and (iii) a low temperature organic Rankine cycle, an absorption/refrigeration cycle, or a power/refrigeration cycle.
4. The solar thermal power system of claim 1, further comprising a separate heat exchanger for each thermodynamic system, the heat exchangers being arranged in series such that the solar collector fluid is sequentially cycled through each heat exchanger in series.
5. The solar thermal power system of claim 1, wherein solar thermal power system comprises three solar thermal plants including (i) a flat plate collector plant, (ii) an evacuation tube collector plant or a reflector type collector plant, and (iii) a parabolic trough collector plant.
6. A thermodynamic solar thermal power system comprising: multiple thermodynamic systems that operate different types of thermodynamic cycles at different temperature ranges, the thermodynamic systems being connected in series such that each thermodynamic system receives waste from another thermodynamic system and is driven by that waste, provides waste to another thermodynamic system that drives that thermodynamic system, or both; and multiple solar thermal plants of different types that provide thermal energy to the thermodynamic systems, wherein at least two of the solar thermal plants operate at different temperature ranges and are connected in series such that they operate using the same solar collector fluid that is sequentially cycled through the plants in series.
7. The solar thermal power system of claim 6, wherein the thermodynamic systems include a top thermodynamic system that operates a top cycle at a high temperature, a first bottoming thermodynamic system connected to the top thermodynamic system that operates a first bottoming cycle at a medium temperature, and a second bottoming thermodynamic system connected to the first bottoming thermodynamic system that operates second bottoming cycle at a low temperature.
8. The solar thermal power system of claim 7, wherein the top thermodynamic system comprises a gas turbine plant, a coal plant, or a nuclear power plant, and the first and second bottoming cycles comprise Rankine cycles.
9. The solar thermal power system of claim 7, wherein the solar thermal plants include a low temperature solar plant and a high temperature solar plant, wherein the low temperature solar plant heats the solar collector fluid to a first temperature and the high temperature solar plant further heats the collector fluid to a second higher temperature, the heat within the solar collector fluid then being provided to the second bottoming thermodynamic system.
10. The solar thermal power system of claim 7, wherein the solar thermal plants include a low temperature solar plant and a high temperature solar plant, wherein the low temperature solar plant heats the solar collector fluid to a first temperature and the high temperature solar plant further heats the collector fluid to a second higher temperature, the heat within the solar collector fluid then being provided to the first bottoming thermodynamic system.
11. The solar thermal power system of claim 10, further comprising a second high temperature solar plant that provides heat to waste from the top thermodynamic system before the waste is provided to the first bottoming thermodynamic system.
12. The solar thermal power system of claim 7, further comprising a third bottoming thermodynamic system that operates a third bottoming cycle, the third bottoming thermodynamic system being connected in series with the second bottoming thermodynamic system, the third bottoming cycle comprising an organic Rankine cycle, a Kalina cycle, a Goswami cycle, or an absorption/refrigeration cycle.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The present disclosure may be better understood with reference to the following figures. Matching reference numerals designate corresponding parts throughout the figures, which are not necessarily drawn to scale.
(2)
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(7) As described above, power conversion efficiency improvements are needed to reduce the costs of providing solar thermal power. Described herein are thermodynamic systems and methods that incorporate solar thermal energy. In some embodiments, the systems include multiple thermodynamic cycles and multiple energy sources so as to increase energy efficiency.
(8) In the following disclosure, various embodiments are described. It is to be understood that those embodiments are example implementations of the disclosed inventions and that alternative embodiments are possible. All such embodiments are intended to fall within the scope of this disclosure.
(9)
(10) A solar thermal plant that is based upon parabolic troughs typically uses solar collectors operating between about 300 C. and 400 C. coupled with a steam Rankine cycle. Heat from the collector fluid below 300 C. is typically not utilized because of the difficulty of operating a steam Rankine cycle at lower temperatures. As described herein, however, successively lower temperature thermodynamic cycles can be integrated into a system, each cycle operating in parallel and extracting heat from the lower temperature collector fluid exiting from the previous cycle with the final cycle operating at close to the ambient temperature. Such an innovation enables the use of lower temperature collectors to heat the collector fluid back to the highest temperature. For example, to heat the collector fluid from 50 C. to 400 C., the fluid can be heated from 50 C. to 90 C. in flat plate collectors at an efficiency of over 70%, from 100 C. to 200 C. in evacuated tube or reflector type collectors with an efficiency over 70%, and finally from 200 C. to 400 C. in parabolic trough collectors operating at an average efficiency of 55%, instead of all of the collector fluid being heated from 300 C. to 400 C. in parabolic trough collectors at an efficiency of 50%. This not only enables the extraction of more heat out of the collector fluid, but also enables one to capture solar heat at a higher overall efficiency. In order to do so, multiple thermodynamic cycles can be integrated into the system, each capable of using successively lower temperatures. For example, a steam Rankine cycle can be followed by an organic Rankine cycle, which can be followed by another organic Rankine cycle and/or an absorption refrigeration cycle.
(11) In
(12) The collector fluid flows from the low temperature solar collector 12, to the medium temperature solar collector 14, to the high temperature solar collector 16, and then on to multiple heat exchangers. In the embodiment of
(13) In the embodiment of
(14) In addition to parallel combination of thermodynamic cycles, a series of bottoming cycles can be used to maximize the output from the heat input to the system. An example of such a system 30 is shown in
(15) As is further shown in
(16) In recent years there have been substantial improvements in thermodynamic cycles employing multi-component working fluids and a combination of heat exchange operations to reduce irreversible losses typical of conventional Rankine cycles. Generally these improved thermodynamic cycles can be used as bottoming cycles and can provide demonstrable and substantial improvements in overall thermodynamic system efficiency. At lower available temperatures, bottoming cycles can be of different types, such as the organic Rankine or Kalina cycles for the production of electric power, the Goswami cycle for the production of electric power as well as cooling and/or ice, and the absorption/refrigeration cycle for the production of refrigeration/ice. A bottoming cycle, such as the Kalina or the Goswami cycle, typically uses two interactive subsystems. The first involves a heat acquisition process for a multi-component working fluid. The second subsystem incorporates a distillation/condensation process. The efficiency improvement provided by the bottoming cycle is the result of the use of a multi-component working fluid mixture whose components have different boiling points at the same pressure. In the heat acquisition subsystem, the bottoming cycle closes the mismatch between the enthalpy-temperature characteristics of the heat source and working fluid, e.g., an ammonia/water mixture, as the fluid passes through the heat exchanger. The energy losses of a typical Rankine cycle power plant are reduced by the addition of the bottoming cycle, taking advantage of the changing temperature-enthalpy characteristics of the multi-component working fluid as it evaporates.
(17) The quest for increased efficiencies, reduced costs, and mitigation of environmental concerns in electric power generation is a driving force for adding bottoming cycles, assisted by solar thermal energy, to a conventional power plant, such as a gas turbine power plant. Disclosed below are systems that combine a high temperature power cycle, such as a fossil fuel-based (gas turbine power system or a coal or oil fired system) system, a nuclear power cycle, or a concentrating solar power cycle, with a cascade of cycles that utilize the maximum possible amount of thermal energy of the original source including supplementary heat from a solar energy system and even ambient thermal energy to produce as output electrical power or a combination of electrical power and refrigeration outputs. The cascade of bottoming cycles can comprise one or more Rankine cycles using steam, organic fluids, or other fluids, a Kalina cycle, a Goswami cycle based on a variety of combinations of working fluids and/or an absorption/refrigeration cycle in order to improve the overall power output, and other outputs such as cooling/refrigeration/ice and low quality heat. The thermal energy needed to drive the system can come from the heat rejected from a top cycle and/or from a solar thermal plant, such as a concentrating solar thermal plant, an evacuated tube, or a flat plate solar thermal plant. A concentrating solar thermal collector system, such as a central receiver system, can provide the needed thermal energy to the topping cycle or independently drive the bottoming cycles. A combination of different types of solar collectors can be used at different points in the cycle or cycles to give the maximum efficiency of solar collection.
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(19) In addition to the first and second bottoming cycles 54 and 56, the system 50 includes one or more further bottoming cycles that is/are fed by the waste from the second bottoming cycle. If two or more further bottoming cycles are used, they can be said to operate in parallel (whereas the first and second bottoming cycles 54 and 56 operate in series). As shown in
(20) The system 50 additionally includes a low temperature solar field 64, which can comprise an evacuated tube solar thermal plant, a flat plate solar thermal plant, or a concentrator solar thermal plant. By way of example, the low temperature solar field 64 heats the collector fluid to approximately 200 C. The low temperature solar field 64 provides the heated collector fluid to a high temperature solar field 66, which can comprise a concentrator solar thermal plant, which further heats the collector fluid to approximately 400 C. That heat is provided back to the system to the second bottoming cycle 56 using a heat exchanger 68. Notably, the heat could instead be provided to the top cycle 52 or the first bottoming cycle 54 depending upon the temperature of the collector fluid that leaves the high temperature solar field 66.
(21) For the system 50 shown in
.sub.system=(.sub.1+.sub.2+.sub.3+.sub.4)(.sub.1.sub.2+.sub.1.sub.3+.sub.2.sub.3+.sub.1.sub.4+.sub.2.sub.4+.sub.3.sub.4)+(.sub.1.sub.2.sub.3+.sub.1.sub.2.sub.4+.sub.1.sub.3.sub.4+.sub.2.sub.3.sub.4)(.sub.1.sub.2.sub.3.sub.4).
Assuming efficiencies of .sub.1=25% for a gas turbine, .sub.2=25% for a first Rankine cycle, .sub.3=20% for a second Rankine cycle, and .sub.4=15% for the further bottoming cycle, the overall system efficiency would be:
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(23) If a cascading thermodynamic cycle arrangement results in a power block efficiency of a CSP plant of 50% (up from the present single cycle power block efficiency of about 35%) and the cascading solar collector system provides an average efficiency of 55% (as opposed to the present parabolic trough system average efficiency of 50%), the overall efficiency of the complete CSP plant will be 27.5%, as opposed to the present overall efficiency of about 17%.
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