CFD and exergy analysis of subcritical/supercritical CO2 based naturally circulated solar thermal collector
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2022
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd
Abstract
Solar water heating system is inefficient during winter due to the chances of water freezing and higher viscosity at low temperatures. Several investigations are being done to increase the efficiency of the solar water heater using various secondary fluids for different climatic conditions. This paper emphasises on the study of heat transfer and fluid flow behavior of CO<inf>2</inf> based naturally circulated indirect solar water heating system. Subcritical (liquid and vapour) and supercritical CO<inf>2</inf> are considered as loop fluid, and the results are compared with water based system. Three-dimensional computational fluid dynamics simulations are carried out for two different weather conditions i.e., winter (278 K) and summer (305 K). Results are obtained for 33° collector inclination angle from horizontal at various operating pressures 50–70 bar for subcritical and 80–100 bar for supercritical CO<inf>2</inf>. The CO<inf>2</inf> based system yields very high Reynolds number (subcritical liquid: ∼160 times; subcritical vapour: ∼204 times; supercritical vapour: ∼260 times) and very high Nusselt number (subcritical liquid: ∼14 times; subcritical vapour: ∼19.5 times; supercritical vapour: ∼48 times) compared to water based system. Supercritical CO<inf>2</inf> based system exhibits 12% higher energy efficiency compared to water. Whereas, subcritical vapour based system exhibits 140% higher exergy efficiency relative to water based system. © 2022 Elsevier Ltd
Description
Keywords
Computational fluid dynamics, Energy efficiency, Exergy, Flow of fluids, Liquids, Reynolds number, Solar heating, Solar water heaters, Supercritical fluid extraction, CFD analysis, Exergy Analysis, Natural-Circulation Loop, Solar thermal collector, Solar water heating systems, Subcritical supercritical, Supercritical, Supercritical carbondioxides, Supercritical CO 2, Water-based systems, Carbon dioxide, carbon dioxide, computational fluid dynamics, efficiency measurement, energy efficiency, heat transfer, heating, instrumentation, summer, viscosity
Citation
Renewable Energy, 2022, 189, , pp. 865-880
