Thermo-economic analysis of steam accumulation and solid thermal energy storage in direct steam generation concentrated solar power plants
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Published version
Author(s)
Al Kindi, Abdullah
Sapin, PAUL
Pantaleo, Antonio
Wang, KAI
Markides, Christos
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
In direct steam generation (DSG) concentrated solar power (CSP) plants, a common thermal energy storage (TES) option relies on steam accumulation. This conventional option is constrained by temperature and pressure limits, and delivers saturated or slightly superheated steam at reduced pressure during discharge, which is undesirable for part-load turbine operation. However, steam accumulation can be integrated with sensible-heat storage in concrete to provide higher-temperature superheated steam at higher pressure. In this paper, this conventional steam accumulation option (existing) and an integrated concrete-steam TES option (extended) are described and analysed, and their thermo-economic performance are compared taking the 50-MW Khi Solar One DSG CSP plant in South Africa as a case study. The results show that the extended option with five 10-m long, square cross-section concrete blocks, each with 3600 equally spaced tubes, provides an additional TES capacity of 177 MWh compared to the existing configuration as a result of utilising most of the available thermal power in the solar receivers. Moreover, the extended option delivers 58 % more electricity with a 13 % enhancement in thermal
efficiency during TES discharging mode. With an estimated additional investment of $4.2M, the levelised costs of storage and electricity for Khi Solar One with the extended TES option are, respectively, 29 % and 6 % lower than those obtained with the existing TES option. With the extended TES option, the projected net present value of Khi Solar One increases by 73 %, from $41M to $71M, at an average electricity price of 280 $/MWh.
efficiency during TES discharging mode. With an estimated additional investment of $4.2M, the levelised costs of storage and electricity for Khi Solar One with the extended TES option are, respectively, 29 % and 6 % lower than those obtained with the existing TES option. With the extended TES option, the projected net present value of Khi Solar One increases by 73 %, from $41M to $71M, at an average electricity price of 280 $/MWh.
Date Issued
2022-12
Date Acceptance
2022-09-07
Citation
Energy Conversion and Management, 2022, 274, pp.1-27
ISSN
0196-8904
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Start Page
1
End Page
27
Journal / Book Title
Energy Conversion and Management
Volume
274
Copyright Statement
© 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
License URL
Sponsor
Engineering & Physical Science Research Council (EPSRC)
Grant Number
EP/R045518/1
Subjects
0906 Electrical and Electronic Engineering
0913 Mechanical Engineering
Energy
Publication Status
Published
Article Number
116222
Date Publish Online
2022-11-15