Directly-irradiated fluidized bed reactors are very promising in the context of concentrated solar power applications as they can be operated at process temperatures high enough to perform thermochemical storage with high energy density. The present study aims at experimentally investigating the direct interaction between a concentrated simulated solar radiation and a fluidized bed by measuring the time-resolved bed surface temperature with an infrared camera under different fluidization gas velocities. The effect of a localized generation of bubbles was investigated too, by injecting a chain of bubbles through a nozzle located just at the centre of the concentrated solar beam. The obtained results encourage the localized generation of bubbles, just at the larger value of the impinging radiative heat flux, as a strategy to reduce the overheating of the bed surface and, as a consequence, the energy losses related to fluidizing gas and radiative re-emission.
Thermal behaviour of fluidized beds directly irradiated by a concentrated solar radiation
Tregambi C.
;
2015-01-01
Abstract
Directly-irradiated fluidized bed reactors are very promising in the context of concentrated solar power applications as they can be operated at process temperatures high enough to perform thermochemical storage with high energy density. The present study aims at experimentally investigating the direct interaction between a concentrated simulated solar radiation and a fluidized bed by measuring the time-resolved bed surface temperature with an infrared camera under different fluidization gas velocities. The effect of a localized generation of bubbles was investigated too, by injecting a chain of bubbles through a nozzle located just at the centre of the concentrated solar beam. The obtained results encourage the localized generation of bubbles, just at the larger value of the impinging radiative heat flux, as a strategy to reduce the overheating of the bed surface and, as a consequence, the energy losses related to fluidizing gas and radiative re-emission.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.