Paper
22 December 2015 Experimental investigation of a nanofluid absorber employed in a low-profile, concentrated solar thermal collector
Qiyuan Li, Cheng Zheng, Sara Mesgari, Yasitha L. Hewakuruppu, Natasha Hjerrild, Felipe Crisostomo, Karl Morrison, Albert Woffenden, Gary Rosengarten, Jason A. Scott, Robert A. Taylor
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 9668, Micro+Nano Materials, Devices, and Systems; 96683P (2015) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2202513
Event: SPIE Micro+Nano Materials, Devices, and Applications, 2015, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Abstract
Recent studies [1-3] have demonstrated that nanotechnology, in the form of nanoparticles suspended in water and organic liquids, can be employed to enhance solar collection via direct volumetric absorbers. However, current nanofluid solar collector experimental studies are either relevant to low-temperature flat plate solar collectors (<100 °C) [4] or higher temperature (>100 °C) indoor laboratory-scale concentrating solar collectors [1, 5]. Moreover, many of these studies involve in thermal properties of nanofluid (such as thermal conductivity) enhancement in solar collectors by using conventional selective coated steel/copper tube receivers [6], and no full-scale concentrating collector has been tested at outdoor condition by employing nanofluid absorber [2, 6]. Thus, there is a need of experimental researches to evaluate the exact performance of full-scale concentrating solar collector by employing nanofluids absorber at outdoor condition.

As reported previously [7-9], a low profile (<10 cm height) solar thermal concentrating collector was designed and analysed which can potentially supply thermal energy in the 100-250 °C range (an application currently met by gas and electricity). The present study focuses on the design and experimental investigation of a nanofluid absorber employed in this newly designed collector. The nanofluid absorber consists of glass tubes used to contain chemically functionalized multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) dispersed in DI water. MWCNTs (average diameter of 6-13 nm and average length of 2.5-20 μm) were functionalized by potassium persulfate as an oxidant. The nanofluids were prepared with a MCWNT concentration of 50 ± 0.1 mg/L to form a balance between solar absorption depth and viscosity (e.g. pumping power). Moreover, experimentally comparison of the thermal efficiency between two receivers (a black chrome-coated copper tube versus a MWCNT nanofluid contained within a glass tubetube) is investigated.

Thermal experimentation reveals that while the collector efficiency reduced from 73% to 54% when operating temperature increased from ambient to 80 °C by employing a MWCNT nanofluid receiver, the efficiency decreased from 85% to 68% with same operating temperature range by employing black chrome-coated copper tube receiver. This difference can mainly be explained by the reflection optical loss off and higher thermal emission heat loss the front surface of the glass tube, yielding a 90% of transmittance to the MWCNT fluid and a 0.9 emissivity of glass pipe. Overall, an experimental investigation of the performance of a low profile solar collector with a direct volumetric absorber and conventional surface absorber is presented. In order to bring nanotechnology into industrial and commercial heating applications,
© (2015) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Qiyuan Li, Cheng Zheng, Sara Mesgari, Yasitha L. Hewakuruppu, Natasha Hjerrild, Felipe Crisostomo, Karl Morrison, Albert Woffenden, Gary Rosengarten, Jason A. Scott, and Robert A. Taylor "Experimental investigation of a nanofluid absorber employed in a low-profile, concentrated solar thermal collector", Proc. SPIE 9668, Micro+Nano Materials, Devices, and Systems, 96683P (22 December 2015); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2202513
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Cited by 7 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Receivers

Solar energy

Glasses

Copper

Absorption

Solar thermal energy

Compound parabolic concentrators

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