Phenomenological Studies on Sodium for CSP Applications: A Safety Review.

Autor: Armijo, Kenneth M., Andraka, Charles E.
Předmět:
Zdroj: AIP Conference Proceedings; 2016, Vol. 1734 Issue 1, p1-9, 9p, 1 Diagram, 1 Chart
Abstrakt: Sodium Heat transfer fluids (HTF) such as sodium, can achieve temperatures above 700?C to obtain power cycle performance improvements for reducing large infrastructure costs of high-temperature systems. Current concentrating solar power (CSP) sensible HTF's (e.g. air, salts) have poor thermal conductivity, and thus low heat transfer capabilities, requiring a large receiver. The high thermal conductivity of sodium has demonstrated high heat transfer rates on dish and towers systems, which allow a reduction in receiver area by a factor of two to four, reducing reradiation and convection losses and cost by a similar factor. Sodium produces saturated vapor at pressures suitable for transport starting at 600?C and reaches one atmosphere at 870?C, providing a wide range of suitable operating conditions that match proposed high temperature, isothermal power cycles. This advantage could increase the efficiency while lowering the cost of CSP tower systems. Although there are a number of desirable thermal performance advantages associated with sensible sodium, its propensity to rapidly oxidize presents safety challenges. This investigation presents a literature review that captures historical operations/handling lessons for advanced sodium receiver designs, and the current state-of-knowledge related to sodium combustion behavior. Technical and operational solutions addressing sodium safety and applications in CSP will be discussed, including unique safety hazards and advantages using latent sodium. Lessons obtained from the nuclear industry with sensible and latent systems will also be discussed in the context of safety challenges and risk mitigation solutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index