Thermal-Hydraulic Analysis of Parabolic Trough Collectors Using Straight Conical Strip Inserts with Nanofluids
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background and Mathematical Model of PTCs
2.1. Geometrical, Hydraulic and Thermal Mathematical Expressions
2.2. Absorber Material and Thermal Fluid Properties
2.3. Description of Straight Conical Strip Inserts
3. Numerical Modeling
- ▪
- At the inlet boundary, uniform temperature and fixed velocity values were applied, along with the turbulence flow properties such as turbulent kinetic energy and specific dissipation rate based on the Re number and thermo-physical properties of heat transfer fluid. However, the pressure was applied as a zero gradient boundary condition.
- ▪
- At the outlet boundary, the flow was fully developed. Thus, the velocity and temperature were applied as zero gradients, as well as all turbulence characteristics (specific dissipation rate and turbulent kinetic energy). The pressure is applied at fixed values with a zero boundary condition.
- ▪
- At solid walls, the condition of no-slip is applied for velocity and a zero fixed value for turbulent kinetic energy, whereas a very large fixed value for the specific turbulence dissipation rate () is used, as recommended by Menter [73], as given below: According to the following expression based on the distance between the first cell and solid wall the density and dynamic viscosity of the heat transfer fluid is given by:
3.1. Mesh Independence Study
3.2. Numerical Model Validation
4. Results and Discussions
4.1. Heat Transfer Performance
4.2. Receiver Hydraulic Characteristics
4.3. Performance Evaluation Criterion
4.4. Thermal Losses
4.5. Overall Collector Efficiency
4.6. Thermal Exergy Efficiency
5. Conclusions
- ▪
- The use of straight conical strips enhanced the Nusselt number by 47.13% whereas using nanofluids alone improved the Nusselt number by 15.57%. However, an improvement of 57.48% was observed for the Nusselt number by combining the swirl inserts and nanofluids. This combination also resulted in the maximum reduction of thermal losses by 23.7%.
- ▪
- The improvement in the Nusselt number comes at the expense of an increase in the pressure drop. Swirl generators and nanofluids alone increased the pressure drop by 258.42% and 231.18%, respectively. However, when these were combined, the pressure drop reached as high as 348.03%.
- ▪
- All the examined cases showed different levels of enhancements in the overall thermal efficiency and thermal exergy efficiency. For the combined case of nanofluid with optimum swirl generator configuration, the overall thermal efficiency improved by 14.62% and the thermal exergy efficiency increased by 14.47%.
- ▪
- The gain in improvement of all tested parameters was found to be more sensitive to the insert geometry and the number of inserts as opposed to the nanofluids. Thus, it can be concluded that swirl inserts are a better candidate than nanofluids for thermal performance improvement in PTC systems.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Nomenclature
Latin Symbols | |
Collector aperture area, m2 | |
Nanofluid specific heat capacity, J/kg·K | |
Fluid specific heat capacity, J/kg·K | |
Solid specific heat capacity, J/kg·K | |
Absorber tube inner diameter, m | |
Absorber tube outer diameter, m | |
Outer surface diameter of the glass envelope, m | |
Available solar exergy, W | |
Useful output exergy, W | |
Flow friction factor | |
Friction factor of pure fluid | |
The focal line, m | |
Solar beam radiation, W/m2 | |
H | Strip height, m |
Ambient heat transfer coefficient, W/m2·K | |
Fluid thermal conductivity, W/m·K | |
Fluid thermal conductivity, W/m·K | |
Nanofluid thermal conductivity, W/m·K | |
Solid thermal conductivity, W/m·K | |
Solar tube length, m | |
Mass flow rate, kg/s | |
Nu | Nusselt number |
Nusselt number of the pure fluid | |
Prandtl number | |
Thermal losses, W | |
Available solar energy, W | |
Useful thermal energy, W | |
Reynolds number, | |
Ambient temperature, K | |
Average fluid temperatures of inlet and outlet, K | |
Mean fluid temperature, K | |
Inlet fluid temperature, K | |
Outer surface temperature of the solar receiver, K | |
Outer surface temperature of the glass envelope, K | |
Outlet fluid temperature, K | |
Sky temperature, K | |
Sun temperature, K | |
Inner wall temperature, K | |
Bulk fluid velocity, m/s | |
Total nanofluid volume, m3 | |
Base fluid volume, m3 | |
Solid particle volume, m3 | |
Wind speed, m/s | |
Aperture width, m | |
Pumping power, W | |
Distance from the solid wall to the first cell, m | |
Mean non-dimensional distance | |
Greek symbols | |
Solar receiver emissivity | |
Glass envelope emissivity | |
Power-block electrical efficiency | |
Exergy efficiency | |
Overall collector efficiency | |
Fluid dynamic viscosity, Pa·s | |
Nanofluid dynamic viscosity, Pa·s | |
Nanofluid kinematic viscosity, m2/s | |
ρnf | Nanofluid density, kg/m3 |
ρf | Fluid density, kg/m3 |
ρs | Solid density, kg/m3 |
Stefan-Boltzmann constant, W/m2 K4 | |
Volume fraction | |
Rim angle, Degree | |
Wall shear stress, Pa | |
Flow pressure drop, Pa | |
θ | Strip angle, degree |
Abbreviations | |
CFD | Computational fluid dynamics |
HTF | Heat transfer fluid |
Launder and Sharma | |
MCRT | Monte Carlo ray tracing |
Performance evaluation criterion | |
PTC | Parabolic trough collector |
Shear stress transport | |
Open FOAM | Open field operation and manipulation |
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Ref. | Technique Used | Achievements |
---|---|---|
Mwesigye et al. [19] | Twisted tape type with wall-detached | The heat transfer coefficient and friction factor increased from 1.05 to 2.69 and 1.6 to 14.5, respectively. Moreover, due to the presence of twisted tapes, the difference in the temperature of the tube in the circumferential direction was reduced by 68%. However, the thermal efficiency increased by 5%–10% at a twist ratio larger than 1 and entropy generation was reduced by 58.8%. |
Bellos and Tzivanidis [20] | Star flow | A 1% increase in the thermal efficiency was recorded. |
Song et al. [21] | Helical screw tape inserts with core rod | The maximum temperature was reduced by six times and heat losses by three times. However, the pressure drop increased by four times in the typical receiver and 23 times for the helical screw tape inserts. |
Chang et al. [22] | Twisted tapes | The heat transfer and friction factor improved significantly by decreasing clearance and twisted ratios. This decrease caused the Nusselt number to increase by 2.9 times and the friction factor by 1.24, much larger than the smooth receiver. |
Zheng et al. [23] | Dimpled twisted tapes | Heat transfer showed a significant increase with inserts. However, the dimple side provided better heat transfer performance than the protrusion side, showing that the heat transfer coefficient increased by 25.53%, with a 29.1% reduction in the average entropy generation. |
Zhu et al. [24] | Wavy tape | The heat losses and entropy generation were reduced by 17.5%–33.1% and 30.2%–81.8% respectively. |
Bellos et al. [25] | Twelve-fin geometries | The large length and thickness provided better thermal and hydraulic performances. However, the length of the fins was more important than the thickness, in which the enhancement index was found to be 1.483. |
Xiangtao et al. [26] | Pin fins arrays | Nusselt number increased by 9% and thermal performance factor increased up to 12% with the optimum case of 8 mm as the fin diameter at a Reynolds number of 4036. |
Bellos et al. [27] | Multiple cylindrical inserts | The thermal losses were reduced by 5.63% with a 26.88% enhancement in the heat transfer coefficient. |
Arshad et al. [28] | Internal toroidal rings | Nusselt number and thermal efficiency increased by 3.74% and 2.33 times, respectively. |
Rawani et al. [29] | Serrated twisted tape and metal foam | 5% and 3% increase in the thermal efficiency when using serrated twisted tape and metal foam, respectively. |
Bellos et al. [30] | Eccentric inserts | A 1% increase in the thermal efficiency was reported. |
Liu et al. [31] | Inclined conical strip inserts | A 5% enhancement in the thermal efficiency was recorded. |
Yılmaz et al. [32] | Wire coil inserts | 183% improvement in heat transfer performance with a 0.4% increment in the thermal efficiency was reported. |
Kumar and Reddy [33] | Metal foams | 3.71% increase in the net energy efficiency and 2.32% in the exergy efficiency. However, the temperature difference was reduced from 47% to 72%, compared to the plain absorber. |
Suresh et al. [34] | Modified twisted tapes | The Nusselt number was enhanced by 5%–40%, 11%–101% and 7%–77% in typical twisted tape, twisted tape with attached rings and twisted tapes with modified attached rings, respectively. |
Xiao et al. [35] | Curved-twisted baffles | 0.52% and 0.22% increase in the overall efficiency and exergy efficiency, respectively. |
Bellos et al. [27] | Internal fins and nanofluids | 0.76% enhancements in the thermal efficiency after using 6% CuO-thermal oil nanofluids. They also reported that the thermal efficiency increased by 1.1% when using internal fins. Moreover, the use of nanofluid and internal fins increased the thermal efficiency by 1.54%. |
Property | Value | Property | Value |
---|---|---|---|
Inner diameter of absorber tube, Di | 0.066 m | Focal length, | 1.84 m |
Outer diameter of absorber tube, Do | 0.07 m | Aperture width, wa | 8.0 m |
Solar receiver length, L | 4.0 m | Rim angle, | 95° |
Solar beam irradiation, Gb | 1000 W/m2 | Wind speed, V | 0.5 m/s |
Absorber specific heat capacity | 512 J/kg·K | Absorber density | 8050 kg/m3 |
Absorber thermal conductivity | 17.3 W/m·K | Ambient temperature, Tam | 300 K |
T (K) | μ (Pa·s) | ρ (kg/m3) | Cp (J/kg·k) | k (W/m·k) | Pr | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
400 | 0.000732 | 975.8 | 1850.5 | 0.1243 | 10.89 | Abed et al. [5] |
Name | ρ (kg/m3) | Cp (J/kg·k) | k (W/m·k) | Particle Type | Size (nm) | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SiO2 | 2200 | 765 | 1.4 | Sphere | 20 | Bellos and Tzivanidis [53], Al-damook et al. [54] |
Dudley et al. [45] | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pr | Gb (W/m2) | Tin (°C) | Tout (°C) | Tout (°C) | Deviation (%) | Tout (°C) | Deviation (%) | |
48.4 | 27.92 | 801.3 | 151.7 | 166.2 | 168.337 | −1.286 | 171.347 | −3.097 |
49.8 | 19.93 | 888.6 | 198.2 | 215.5 | 213.294 | 1.024 | 215.425 | 0.035 |
51.1 | 12.02 | 920.5 | 301 | 314.2 | 313.809 | 0.124 | 314.833 | −0.201 |
55.6 | 11.37 | 929.4 | 313.8 | 324.8 | 325.340 | −0.166 | 326.375 | −0.485 |
55.8 | 8.95 | 940.4 | 384 | 395 | 395.446 | −0.113 | 396.435 | −0.363 |
50.9 | 14.85 | 935.7 | 252.1 | 268 | 266.868 | 0.422 | 267.360 | 0.239 |
39.8 | 42.7 | 817.5 | 101 | 120.8 | 127.859 | −5.844 | 136.211 | −12.757 |
50.1 | 19.32 | 854.5 | 203.1 | 219.2 | 217.292 | 0.870 | 219.364 | −0.075 |
50 | 19.29 | 867.6 | 203.4 | 219.6 | 217.825 | 0.808 | 219.210 | 0.178 |
48.2 | 42.9 | 922 | 100.8 | 121.1 | 125.409 | −3.558 | 131.945 | −8.955 |
51.6 | 9.55 | 927.6 | 354.4 | 367.8 | 366.507 | 0.352 | 367.572 | 0.062 |
Mean Deviations (%): | −0.670 | −2.311 |
Case | Nu Number | Enhancement (%) |
---|---|---|
Pure absorber | 674.83 | - |
H30-θ30°-N1 | 831.25 | 23.17 |
H30-θ30°-N2 | 896.55 | 32.85 |
H30-θ30°-N3 | 959.88 | 42.24 |
H30-θ30°-N4 | 992.89 | 47.13 |
6% SiO2-TO | 779.95 | 15.57 |
H30-θ30°-N4+6% SiO2-TO | 1062.78 | 57.4 |
Case | ΔP/L | Enhancement (%) |
---|---|---|
Pure absorber | 169.09 | - |
H30-θ30°-N1 | 218.18 | 29.03 |
H30-θ30°-N2 | 363.63 | 115.053 |
H30-θ30°-N3 | 454.54 | 168.81 |
H30-θ30°-N4 | 606.06 | 258.42 |
6% SiO2-TO | 560 | 231.18 |
H30-θ30°-N4+6% SiO2-TO | 757.57 | 348.03 |
Case | Specific Thermal Losses (W/m) | Reduction (%) |
---|---|---|
Pure absorber | 333.26 | − |
H30-θ30°-N1 | 274.29 | −17.6 |
H30-θ30°-N2 | 269.21 | −19.2 |
H30-θ30°-N3 | 267.206 | −19.82 |
H30-θ30°-N4 | 258.88 | −22.3 |
6% SiO2-TO | 280.85 | −15.72 |
H30-θ30°-N4+6% SiO2-TO | 254.3 | −23.7 |
Case | Overall Thermal Efficiency (%) | Improvement (%) |
---|---|---|
Pure absorber | 48.61 | - |
H30-θ30°-N1 | 52.81 | 8.637 |
H30-θ30°-N2 | 53.08 | 9.184 |
H30-θ30°-N3 | 53.57 | 10.19 |
H30-θ30°-N4 | 53.84 | 10.74 |
6% SiO2-TO | 53.05 | 9.18 |
H30-θ30°-N4+6% SiO2-TO | 55.72 | 14.62 |
Case | Thermal Exergy Efficiency (%) | Improvement (%) |
---|---|---|
Pure absorber | 35.36 | - |
H30-θ30°-N1 | 38.43 | 8.67 |
H30-θ30°-N2 | 38.63 | 9.22 |
H30-θ30°-N3 | 38.98 | 10.24 |
H30-θ30°-N4 | 39.18 | 10.79 |
6% SiO2-TO | 38.557 | 9.02 |
H30-θ30°-N4+6% SiO2-TO | 40.48 | 14.4 |
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Abed, N.; Afgan, I.; Iacovides, H.; Cioncolini, A.; Khurshid, I.; Nasser, A. Thermal-Hydraulic Analysis of Parabolic Trough Collectors Using Straight Conical Strip Inserts with Nanofluids. Nanomaterials 2021, 11, 853. https://doi.org/10.3390/nano11040853
Abed N, Afgan I, Iacovides H, Cioncolini A, Khurshid I, Nasser A. Thermal-Hydraulic Analysis of Parabolic Trough Collectors Using Straight Conical Strip Inserts with Nanofluids. Nanomaterials. 2021; 11(4):853. https://doi.org/10.3390/nano11040853
Chicago/Turabian StyleAbed, Nabeel, Imran Afgan, Hector Iacovides, Andrea Cioncolini, Ilyas Khurshid, and Adel Nasser. 2021. "Thermal-Hydraulic Analysis of Parabolic Trough Collectors Using Straight Conical Strip Inserts with Nanofluids" Nanomaterials 11, no. 4: 853. https://doi.org/10.3390/nano11040853
APA StyleAbed, N., Afgan, I., Iacovides, H., Cioncolini, A., Khurshid, I., & Nasser, A. (2021). Thermal-Hydraulic Analysis of Parabolic Trough Collectors Using Straight Conical Strip Inserts with Nanofluids. Nanomaterials, 11(4), 853. https://doi.org/10.3390/nano11040853