Description And Characterization Of A 114-Kw(E) High-Flux Solar Simulator

JOURNAL OF SOLAR ENERGY ENGINEERING-TRANSACTIONS OF THE ASME(2021)

Cited 2|Views10
No score
Abstract
A high-flux solar simulator is essential for evaluating solar thermal components under controlled and adjustable flux input conditions. This study presents a newly built high-flux solar simulator composed of 19 individual units. Each unit includes a xenon short-arc lamp (each consuming up to 6 kW electricity power) coupled with a truncated ellipsoidal reflector, a cooling blower, and a power module. The power module yields a current in the range of 50-160 A. The number of lamps in use is flexible, which allows for a wide range of radiation flux (10%-100%) on the focal plane. The radiation power, peak value, flux distribution on the circular target plane, and conversion efficiency are evaluated based on a flux mapping method. The results indicate that the proposed solar simulator is capable of achieving thermal power of 23.3 kW, peak flux in excess of 1.78 MW/m(2), a stagnation temperature exceeding 2360 degrees C, and average irradiance of 773.4 kW/m(2) on the focal plane (diameter of 260 mm). The electro-thermal conversion efficiency of the simulator is 35.7%. A ray-tracing method was employed, and the simulation results were found to be in good agreement with those in the experiments. An experimental test of a volumetric ceramic receiver was conducted, and the results indicate the availability and applicability of the high-flux solar simulator when carrying out studies about solar receivers.
More
Translated text
Key words
measurement, radiation, solar, testing
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined