SwRI receives $9.9 million from U.S. DOE to improve solar plant efficiency
Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) has been awarded $4.9 million by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) as part of a $9.9 million continuation contract to manufacture and test a high-efficiency supercritical CO2 (sCO2) hot gas turbo-expander and compact heat exchangers for concentrating solar power (CSP) plants.
The award was given through DOE’s SunShot Initiative, a collaborative national effort to make the cost of solar energy competitive with other forms of energy by the end of the decade. This award continues a previous DOE project to design the sCO2 expander. SwRI will lead a team of industry collaborators that includes Aramco Services Company, Bechtel Marine Propulsion Corporation, Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI), General Electric, and Thar Energy.
The highly cyclical nature of CSP plant operation requires an sCO2 hot gas turbo-expander to operate at high temperatures and pressures over a wide range of load conditions while maintaining high efficiency, handling rapid transient heat input swings, and offering very fast start-up to optimize the plant’s online availability. Similar sCO2 expanders also have the potential to significantly improve the efficiency of waste heat recovery-, nuclear-, and fossil-fueled power plants.
A second objective of the project is to optimize novel compact heat exchangers for sCO2 applications to drastically reduce manufacturing costs. The scalable sCO2 expander design and improved heat exchanger will close two critical technology gaps and potentially provide a major pathway to achieve power at $0.06 per kilowatt hour, increasing energy conversion efficiency to more than 50 percent, and potentially reducing total power block cost to below $1,200 per kilowatt installed. Conventional steam-based CSP systems typically operate at less than 35 percent efficiency. These efficiencies also will allow solar plants to be competitive with conventional fossil-fueled power plants.
The above is an excerpt of SwRI receives $9.9 million from U.S. DOE to improve solar plant efficiency Press Release by SwRI. Image Credit: SwRI.