Title of article
Second-law analysis of molten-salt thermal energy storage in thermoclines
Author/Authors
Scott M. Flueckiger، نويسنده , , Suresh V. Garimella، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
11
From page
1621
To page
1631
Abstract
The cyclic operation of a molten-salt thermocline tank is simulated to investigate the influence of internal granule diameter and external
convection losses on tank performance. Practical constraints limiting thermocline tank height are taken into account. The authors
two-temperature model, developed in earlier work (Solar Energy, 84, 974–985, 2010) for the analysis of heat transfer and fluid flow in the
thermocline tank, is extended to monitor entropy generation and exergy transport. Storage performance is measured in terms of first- and
second-law efficiency definitions, as well as a first-law efficiency used in conjunction with an outflow temperature criterion. Reducing the
diameter of the fillerbed granules improves the thermocline tank performance by sustaining higher molten-salt outflow temperatures
throughout the discharge phase of the cycle, which results in greater operational efficiency. External convection losses strongly influence
entropy generation inside the tank fillerbed due to the development of radial temperature gradients and increased irreversible thermal
diffusion. Convection losses also result in lower tank efficiencies due to the reduction of hot molten salt available inside the tank. A comparison
of the different efficiency definitions employed in this work reveal that the ad hoc outflow temperature criterion used in past studies
provides an overly conservative assessment of thermocline performance.
2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords
Thermocline , molten salt , Exergy , Solar thermal energy
Journal title
Solar Energy
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
Solar Energy
Record number
941007
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