6533b85efe1ef96bd12bf361

RESEARCH PRODUCT

A validated energy model of a solar dish-Stirling system considering the cleanliness of mirrors

Valerio Lo BranoGiuseppina CiullaChristina KalogeriAlessandro BuscemiChristian Chiaruzzi

subject

Stirling engine020209 energyEnergy balanceFOS: Physical sciencesStirling efficiency02 engineering and technologyApplied Physics (physics.app-ph)Management Monitoring Policy and Law7. Clean energylaw.inventionmirror soiling020401 chemical engineeringlawThermal0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineering0204 chemical engineeringSolar powerSettore ING-IND/11 - Fisica Tecnica Ambientalebusiness.industryMechanical EngineeringNumerical analysisExperimental dataBuilding and ConstructionPhysics - Applied Physicssolar concentratorGeneral EnergyElectricity generationEnvironmental scienceenergy analysinumerical modelbusinessEnergy (signal processing)Marine engineering

description

Solar systems based on the coupling of parabolic concentrating collectors and thermal engines (i.e. dish-Stirling systems) are among the most efficient generators of solar power currently available. This study focuses on the modelling of functioning data from a 32 kWe dish-Stirling solar plant installed at a facility test site on the University of Palermo campus, in Southern Italy. The proposed model, based on real monitored data, the energy balance of the collector and the partial load efficiency of the Stirling engine, can be used easily to simulate the annual energy production of such systems, making use of the solar radiation database, with the aim of encouraging a greater commercialisation of this technology. Introducing further simplifying assumptions based on our experimental data, the model can be linearised providing a new analytical expression of the parameters that characterise the widely used Stine empirical model. The model was calibrated against data corresponding to the collector with clean mirrors and used to predict the net electric production of the dish-Stirling accurately. A numerical method for assessing the daily level of mirror soiling without the use of direct reflectivity measures was also defined. The proposed methodology was used to evaluate the history of mirror soiling for the observation period, which shows a strong correlation with the recorded sequence of rains and dust depositions. The results of this study emphasise how desert dust transport events, frequent occurrences in parts of the Mediterranean, can have a dramatic impact on the electric power generation of dish-Stirling plants.

10.1016/j.apenergy.2019.114378http://arxiv.org/abs/2002.07078