Hybrid energy converter based on swirling combustion chambers: the hydrocarbon feeding analysis

This manuscript reports the latest investigations about a miniaturized hybrid energy power source, compatible with thermal/electrical conversion, by a thermo-photovoltaic cell, and potentially useful for civil and space applications. The converter is a thermally-conductive emitting parallelepiped el...

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Main Author: Angelo Minotti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIMS Press 2017-05-01
Series:AIMS Energy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.aimspress.com/energy/article/1433/fulltext.html
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spelling doaj-4188c282253a466ea0729601572bce1b2020-11-25T00:00:41ZengAIMS PressAIMS Energy2333-83342017-05-015350651610.3934/energy.2017.3.506energy-04-00506Hybrid energy converter based on swirling combustion chambers: the hydrocarbon feeding analysisAngelo Minotti0School of Aerospace Engineering, University of Rome “La Sapienza”, Via Salaria 851, Rome 00138, ItalyThis manuscript reports the latest investigations about a miniaturized hybrid energy power source, compatible with thermal/electrical conversion, by a thermo-photovoltaic cell, and potentially useful for civil and space applications. The converter is a thermally-conductive emitting parallelepiped element and the basic idea is to heat up its emitting surfaces by means of combustion, occurred in swirling chambers, integrated inside the device, and/or by the sun, which may work simultaneously or alternatively to the combustion. The current upgrades consist in examining whether the device might fulfill specific design constraints, adopting hydrocarbons-feeding. Previous papers, published by the author, demonstrate the hydrogen-feeding effectiveness. The project’s constraints are: 1) emitting surface dimensions fixed to 30 × 30 mm, 2) surface peak temperature T > 1000 K and the relative ∆T < 100 K (during the combustion mode), 3) the highest possible delivered power to the ambient, and 4) thermal efficiency greater than 20% when works with solar energy. To this end, a 5 connected swirling chambers configuration (3 mm of diameter), with 500 W of injected chemical power, stoichiometric conditions and detailed chemistry, has been adopted. Reactive numerical simulations show that the stiff methane chemical structure obliges to increase the operating pressure, up to 10 atm, and to add hydrogen, to the methane fuel injection, in order to obtain stable combustion and efficient energy conversion.http://www.aimspress.com/energy/article/1433/fulltext.htmlmeso-combustorhybrid energy-convertermethane-hydrogen/air combustionwhirl flowfluid-structure interactioncomputational fluid dynamicsdetailed chemistry
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Angelo Minotti
spellingShingle Angelo Minotti
Hybrid energy converter based on swirling combustion chambers: the hydrocarbon feeding analysis
AIMS Energy
meso-combustor
hybrid energy-converter
methane-hydrogen/air combustion
whirl flow
fluid-structure interaction
computational fluid dynamics
detailed chemistry
author_facet Angelo Minotti
author_sort Angelo Minotti
title Hybrid energy converter based on swirling combustion chambers: the hydrocarbon feeding analysis
title_short Hybrid energy converter based on swirling combustion chambers: the hydrocarbon feeding analysis
title_full Hybrid energy converter based on swirling combustion chambers: the hydrocarbon feeding analysis
title_fullStr Hybrid energy converter based on swirling combustion chambers: the hydrocarbon feeding analysis
title_full_unstemmed Hybrid energy converter based on swirling combustion chambers: the hydrocarbon feeding analysis
title_sort hybrid energy converter based on swirling combustion chambers: the hydrocarbon feeding analysis
publisher AIMS Press
series AIMS Energy
issn 2333-8334
publishDate 2017-05-01
description This manuscript reports the latest investigations about a miniaturized hybrid energy power source, compatible with thermal/electrical conversion, by a thermo-photovoltaic cell, and potentially useful for civil and space applications. The converter is a thermally-conductive emitting parallelepiped element and the basic idea is to heat up its emitting surfaces by means of combustion, occurred in swirling chambers, integrated inside the device, and/or by the sun, which may work simultaneously or alternatively to the combustion. The current upgrades consist in examining whether the device might fulfill specific design constraints, adopting hydrocarbons-feeding. Previous papers, published by the author, demonstrate the hydrogen-feeding effectiveness. The project’s constraints are: 1) emitting surface dimensions fixed to 30 × 30 mm, 2) surface peak temperature T > 1000 K and the relative ∆T < 100 K (during the combustion mode), 3) the highest possible delivered power to the ambient, and 4) thermal efficiency greater than 20% when works with solar energy. To this end, a 5 connected swirling chambers configuration (3 mm of diameter), with 500 W of injected chemical power, stoichiometric conditions and detailed chemistry, has been adopted. Reactive numerical simulations show that the stiff methane chemical structure obliges to increase the operating pressure, up to 10 atm, and to add hydrogen, to the methane fuel injection, in order to obtain stable combustion and efficient energy conversion.
topic meso-combustor
hybrid energy-converter
methane-hydrogen/air combustion
whirl flow
fluid-structure interaction
computational fluid dynamics
detailed chemistry
url http://www.aimspress.com/energy/article/1433/fulltext.html
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