Reduced Order Modeling of a Fluidized Bed Particle Receiver for Concentrating Solar Power with Thermal Energy Storage: Article No. 113322

Keaton Brewster, Janna Martinek, Federico Municchi, Winfred Arthur-Arhin, Jesse Fosheim, Zhiwen Ma, Gregory Jackson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Oxide particles can serve as both the heat transfer and thermal energy storage (TES) media for next-generation concentrating solar power (CSP) plants where high-temperature TES enables dispatchable electricity from efficient power cycles with firing temperatures above 600 degrees C. Transferring heat to flowing particles at such high temperatures in a MW-scale central tower receiver remains a challenge for the CSP community. For indirect receivers with external walls to contain the particles, maintaining wall temperatures below the limits of structural metal alloys requires high heat transfer coefficients between the wall and the moving particle stream. Bubbling fluidization of downward-flowing particles can sustain high bed-wall heat transfer coefficients (> 1000 W m-2 K-1). Using experimentally calibrated correlations for bed-wall heat transfer and vertical particle dispersion, this study implements an axially discretized zonal model of a counterflow fluidized bed receiver to explore how bubbling fluidization may enable indirect cavity particle receivers. High bed-wall heat transfer coefficients support solar fluxes on angled cavity walls > 200 kW m-2 at peak aperture fluxes of 980 kW m-2 while maintaining external wall temperatures < 950 degrees C. Lateral particle dispersion enables hotter particles near the receiver leading edge to mix with cooler particles further from the leading edge to lower maximum external wall temperatures. Parametric studies identify how mass fluxes, particle dispersion, and solar concentrations impact indirect receiver thermal efficiency and uniformity for a CSP plant. These studies provide a basis for the design of indirect fluidized-bed cavity receivers that can maintain particle outlet temperatures for TES above 750 degrees C.
Original languageAmerican English
Number of pages16
JournalSolar Energy
Volume289
DOIs
StatePublished - 2025

NREL Publication Number

  • NREL/JA-5700-92598

Keywords

  • axial dispersion
  • concentrating solar power
  • fluidized bed
  • particle receivers
  • thermal energy storage

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