EFFECT OF WORKING-FLUID MIXTURES ON ORGANIC RANKINE CYCLE SYSTEM: HEAT TRANSFER AND COST ANALYSISasme-orc2015 Tracking Number 65 Presentation: Session: Session 1: Working fluids Room: 1A Europe Session start: 11:00 Mon 12 Oct 2015 Oyeniyi Oyewunmi oao12@imperial.ac.uk Affifliation: Imperial College London Christos Markides c.markides@imperial.ac.uk Affifliation: Imperial College London Topics: - System Design and Optimization (Topics), - Simulation and Design Tools (Topics), - Components (Topics), - Working Fluids (Topics), - I prefer Oral Presentation (Presentation Preference) Abstract: The present paper considers the employment of working-fluid mixtures in organic Rankine cycle (ORC) systems with respect to heat transfer performance, component sizing and costs, using two sets of fluid mixtures: n-pentane + n-hexane and R-245fa + R-227ea. Due to their non-isothermal phase-change behaviour, these zeotropic working-fluid mixtures promise reduced exergy losses, and thus improved cycle efficiencies and power outputs over their respective pure-fluid components. Although the fluid-mixture cycles do indeed show a thermodynamic improvement over the pure-fluid cycles, the heat transfer and cost analyses reveal that they require larger evaporators, condensers and expanders; thus, the resulting ORC systems are also associated with higher costs, leading to possible compromises. In particular, 70 mol% n-pentane + 30 mol% n-hexane and equimolar R-245fa + R-227ea mixtures lead to the thermodynamically optimal cycles, whereas pure n-pentane and pure R-227ea have lower costs amounting to 14% and 5% per unit power output over the thermodynamically optimal mixtures, respectively. |