- 1Department of Mechanical Engineering, Universidad Técnica Federico Santa María, Santiago, Chile
- 2CSIRO Energy Centre, Canberra, NSW, Australia
- 3School of Environment, Science and Engineering, Southern Cross University, Lismore, NSW, Australia
- 4Centro de Investigación e Innovación en Energía y Gas—CIIEG, PROMIGAS S.A. E.S.P., Barranquilla, Colombia
The challenges encountered while concentrating solar radiation from multiple heliostats into a relatively small receiver have inspired numerous aiming methodologies to distribute such concentrated radiation. Likewise, this concentrated radiation, denominated heat flux, needs to satisfy certain constraints that primarily depend on the receiver geometry, its building materials, the operating mass flow of the heat transfer fluid, and the overall solar radiation conditions. A recent study has demonstrated the effectiveness of an aiming strategy wherein a group of heliostats use a single parameter for the entire cluster and achieve the desired heat flux profile by adjusting the tuning parameters. Along similar lines, the current study was conducted to find the optimal values and the effect of two such parameters. The first parameter limits how far the aiming point of the heliostat can move from the equator line of the receiver, while the second represents its direction (upward or downward) from this line toward the edge of the receiver. Each section of a solar field was subdivided; both parameters were estimated for each subgroup, and their effect on the heat flux profile was determined. Furthermore, a parametric study was conducted using three sets of constraints for the optimization procedure. This procedure resulted in a heat flux profile that accomplished the constraints given by the allowable flux density for the receiver during the design day. The improvement using the optimal tuning parameters for the design scenario reached around 27%. Further analysis of the set of optimal values showed an adequate performance of the system at different times of the day and different days of the year. Finally, this study demonstrates how the calculated values function as a starting point for implementing the aiming methodology in different solar field and receiver combinations.
1 Introduction
Concentrating power technologies are confronted with the challenge of improving operational consistency, reducing operational costs, and providing competitive solutions against fossil fuel-based technologies (Papaelias et al., 2018). For solar power tower systems, there exists an additional challenge of assigning an aiming point to each heliostat on a large solar field from a power tower traditionally approached from an optimization perspective, which seeks to minimize spillage under the constraints given by the receiver integrity and actual radiation conditions (Wang et al., 2017; Ashley et al., 2019).
A highly prevalent practice in tower plants for the receiver controller is to regulate the outlet temperature by adjusting the mass flow of the molten salt (Buck and Schwarzbözl, 2018). A solar field controller is used to determine all the aiming points and consequently the setpoints for the local controllers that act upon each heliostat. During transient atmospheric disturbances, heliostats are defocused when needed while increasing the mass flow to protect the receiver. The dynamic performance of a concentrating solar power (CSP) receiver depends on a range of factors such as the mass flow of the molten salt, the aiming strategy, and the available solar radiation. Furthermore, the effect of passing clouds over the solar field has been affirmed as one of the most significant disturbances to the system (Crespi et al., 2018). Such effects impact energy production in addition to the loss of revenue caused by using conservative thermal stress limits (González-Gómez et al., 2021). Therefore, alternative control strategies have been devised to improve the thermal energy intercepted by the receiver by using the solar field to adapt to unstable weather conditions.
A noteworthy advantage of closed-loop control is its ability to compensate for disturbances. Thus, recent studies have endeavored to tackle the aim point search as a closed-loop control problem. These studies have demonstrated that using a heliostat grouping strategy to reduce the dimension of the problem can be advantageous (Acosta et al., 2021) as such grouping has also proven meritorious for optimization (Oberkirsch et al., 2021). Dynamic aiming strategies, which compensate for disturbances in the solar field caused by the stochastic nature of weather conditions, have been of interest in academic literature. For instance, in (García et al., 2018), a feedback-loop aiming strategy, using groups of heliostats, restores the solar receiver to a steady state after transient operations caused by clouds. Recently, in (Speetzen and Richter, 2021), a reduced optimization is formulated as an integer linear programming problem where groups of heliostats are used to accelerate the run-time to compute a solution. In (Wang et al., 2021), an algorithm is proposed to match flux distributions to local values of allowable flux on the receiver through an efficient use of ray-tracing and aiming strategy optimization.
This study was conducted with the objective of devising a dynamic aiming methodology suitable for working under closed-loop control strategies. The proposed method entails an optimization procedure for two tuning parameters, one that limits how far the aiming point of the heliostat can move from the equator line of the receiver
2 Methodology
This study is predicated on the results obtained by a series of coupled numerical models and algorithms for representing the performance of a solar power tower. The methodology adopted in this study is systematically illustrated in Figure 1. First, a combined algorithm was created, which comprised an optical model and the aiming methodology linked to an optimization routine through a cost function. The optimization yielded a set of tuning parameters, and the ones that maximized the cost function were recorded. Next, the whole optimization loop was executed using a design scenario. Finally, the performance of the optimal values was tested under several off-design scenarios to derive appropriate conclusions about its possible implementation under different configurations of solar field and receiver.
2.1 Optical Model of the Heliostat Field and the Central Receiver
In this study, solar radiation interaction with a field of heliostats and its reflection toward the central receiver were investigated (see Figure 2A). The model takes into consideration 1) the position of the Sun, 2) the location of the heliostats in the solar field, 3) the blocking and shading effect, 4) optical properties of the heliostat mirrors, 5) atmospheric conditions, and 6) the target coordinates on the receiver. The model uses a convolution-based method formulated previously (Kiera, 1989; Schwarzbözl et al., 2009). It was chosen as it requires less computing power than its ray-tracing alternatives. This optical model is primarily characterized by the heat flux (HF) calculation presented in Eq. 1 (Schwarzbözl et al., 2009), where
FIGURE 2. (A) Scheme of solar radiation reflected from the heliostat field toward the receiver (B) Solar field layout. Adapted from (Flesch et al., 2017) (C) Flow paths within the studied receiver. The squared marked line represents flow path 1 going from panel 1 through 7 (D) AFD for the studied receiver at different times and days.
This study used the southern hemisphere solar field layout presented by (Flesch et al., 2017). Table 1 and Figure 2B present the primary characteristics of the central receiver used in this study. The central receiver comprises 12 panels, and thus, the solar field is also divided into 12 sections, as shown in Figure 2C. The models were validated in two previous studies (Soo Too et al., 2019; García et al., 2020). The combination of this solar field, receiver, and operating conditions was considered the “on-design scenario,” which is discussed later while elaborating on the performance of the tuning optimization.
The operation of central receivers requires compliance with important constraints. The most noteworthy constraints include the corrosion of the panel tubes and the thermal stresses. Consequently, different studies have developed a single parameter known as the allowable flux density (AFD), which groups both constraints (Vant-Hull, 2002; Liao et al., 2014; Sánchez-González et al., 2016). Accordingly, Figure 2D shows the AFD curves for the selected combination of receiver and solar field at different times of the day and different seasons of the year. These profiles were derived from the methodology presented in (Sánchez-González et al., 2020), in which thermal stress and corrosion constraints in molten-salt receivers are translated into flux limits.
2.2 Aiming Methodology Onto the Receiver
The aiming methodology employed in this paper, proposed in (García et al., 2020), groups the aiming points of the heliostats into several clusters and uses an algorithm based on the working principle of a control valve (see Figure 3A). This methodology allows reducing the degrees of freedom to achieve an appropriate flux distribution, avoid exceeding the AFD, and allow the possibility of using closed-loop control strategies through a wide range of approaches. Figure 3B shows the primary sequence of equations used in the methodology for determining the aiming points of each heliostat. In general, the methodology consists of calculating each aiming point in accordance with its movement (
FIGURE 3. (A) Aiming methodology representation using the valve analogy. Adapted from (García et al., 2020) (B) Primary relations among equations within the aiming methodology calculation
2.3 Base Case
For
FIGURE 4. Heat flux distribution along flow path 1 using the aiming methodology with the default tuning parameters for
2.4 Optimization Procedure
As stated in previous sections, the objective was to find suitable values for variables
• For variable
• For variable
FIGURE 5. (A) Examples of subgroups gn and fn used for the optimization of variables
For optimization, the angle
2.4.1 Cost Function
The output cost function, the ratio between the area below the flux distribution
2.4.2 Constraints
During optimization, three different kinds of constraints were taken into consideration. First, the obtained flux distribution was not allowed to go over the AFD at any point. Second, the value of
• Configuration 1: the
• Configuration 2: this constraint makes the
• Configuration 3: this scenario withdraws the constraint and lets freely the optimization algorithm determine the
2.4.3 Optimization Algorithm
The surrogate optimization algorithm, which is recommended when the objective function is time-consuming, was used in this study. It was realized using the Global Optimization Toolbox of MATLAB (MathWorks, 2021). This algorithm attempts a global optimum using fewer objective function evaluations by balancing exploration and speed.
3 Results and Discussion
This section discusses the effects of the optimal values on the system’s performance under on- and off-design scenarios.
3.1 Optimal Values
Regarding the optimal values for the tuning parameters, Table 3 shows that the constraints for configurations 1 and 2 were realized. That is, for configuration 1, vector
FIGURE 6. Values for
3.2 On-Design Scenario Performance of the Optimal Values on the System
Figure 7 displays the flux profiles divided into several subplots to compare responses for all the previously established constraint configurations. It indicates that these behaved similarly to the base case, mainly for the first three panels. Nevertheless, regarding the last three panels, all the optimizations improved the response of the base case. In general, the performance of the base case was improved by 27%. For configuration 1, Figure 8A shows the 2-D heat flux distribution for the whole receiver; compared to the AFD in Figure 8B, the AFD was never exceeded for the whole receiver.
FIGURE 7. Heat flux distribution for each configuration and its comparison with the base case for flow path 1.
FIGURE 8. (A) 2-D heat flux distribution for configuration 1, and (B) the corresponding AFD at solar noon.
3.3 Off-Design Scenario Performance of the Optimal Values on the System
Another vital aspect analyzed in this study is the behavior of the aiming methodology under different scenarios. Using the same optimal values of
FIGURE 9. (A) Performance of the aiming strategy under different scenarios for DNI and time (B) Performance of the aiming strategy under different scenarios for DNI and time, using the same values for
As explained initially, the heat flux distribution of panel 7 was largely benefited from the optimized values calculated through the proposed methodology. Therefore, it is plausible to wonder if using the optimal values of
3.3.1 Different Solar Field and Receiver Configuration
Previous results have indicated that the obtained values can be extrapolated to different scenarios. The final analysis conducted in this study involved using the same values for
TABLE 6. Values for θ and m that allow using the same
4 Conclusion
This paper elaborates on the tuning procedure and main details required to set an aiming methodology of heliostats toward a central receiver. The effect of two parameters, one that limits how far the aiming point of the heliostat can move from the equator line of the receiver, and another one that represents its direction (upward or downward) is described in detail in addition to an approach to modify them to attain the desired flux profile and accomplish the flux limits for a safe operation of the central receiver. The optimized values of the tuning parameters improved the base case scenario by 27% and showed how the same values produced appropriate flux distribution under off-design scenarios. The results also evidenced the robustness and flexibility of the aiming methodology through implementation into a different configuration of solar field and receiver. Finally, it was shown that the set of calculated values can be used as initial parameters for different configurations.
Data Availability Statement
The original contributions presented in the study are included in the article/supplementary material, further inquiries can be directed to the corresponding author.
Author Contributions
JG, RB, RV and DA contributed to the conception and design of this study. JG, RB and DA prepared the methodology. JG, RB and YC prepared the formal analysis. RB was in charge of finding the resources. DA, DE, and PV contributed to the interpretation of the results. JG, DA, and RB prepared the original draft. YC, RV and RB provided review and editing.
Funding
The authors would like to express their sincere gratitude to the Chilean Government, which funded this research through a postdoctoral project supported by the Comisión Nacional de Investigación Científica y Tecnológica (CONICYT), the Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico y Tecnológico (FONDECYT), and Universidad Técnica Federico Santa María, postdoctoral grant number 3190542 (CONICYT FONDECYT/POSTDOCTORADO/3190542). The authors also express their sincere thanks for the financial support from the ANID/Fondap/15110019 “Solar Energy Research Center“-SERC-Chile.
Conflict of Interest
The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
Publisher’s Note
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Keywords: central receiver, aiming methodology, tuning analysis, optimization procedure, optimal heat flux
Citation: García J, Barraza R, Soo Too YC, Vásquez Padilla R, Acosta D, Estay D and Valdivia P (2022) Tuning Analysis and Optimization of a Cluster-Based Aiming Methodology for Solar Central Receivers. Front. Energy Res. 10:808816. doi: 10.3389/fenrg.2022.808816
Received: 04 November 2021; Accepted: 07 February 2022;
Published: 11 March 2022.
Edited by:
Kamal Mohammedi, M. Bougara University, AlgeriaReviewed by:
Runsheng Tang, Yunnan Normal University, ChinaTunde Bello-Ochende, University of Cape Town, South Africa
Copyright © 2022 García, Barraza, Soo Too, Vásquez Padilla, Acosta, Estay and Valdivia. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
*Correspondence: Rodrigo Barraza, rodrigo.barraza@usm.cl