In this paper,exergy analysis method is developed to assess a Rankine cycle system,by using supercritical CO2 as working fluid and powered by solar energy.The proposed system consists of evacuated solar collectors,throttling valve,high-temperature heat exchanger,low-temperature heat exchanger,and feed pump.The system is designed for utilize evacuated solar collectors to convert solar energy into mechanical energy and hence electricity.In order to investigate and estimate exergy performance of this system,the energy,entropy,exergy balances are developed for the components.The exergy destructions and exergy efficiency values of the system components are also determined.The results indicate that solar collector and high temperature heat exchanger which have low exergy efficiencies contribute the largest share to system irreversibility and should be the optimization design focus to improve system exergy effectiveness.Further,exergy analysis is a useful tool in this regard as it permits the performance of each process to be assessed and losses to be quantified.Exergy analysis results can be used in design,optimization,and improvement efforts.
A comprehensive performance evaluation of a solar assisted transcritical CO2-based Rankine cycle system is made with exergy analysis method. The actual thermal data taken from the all-day experiment of the system are utilized to determine energy transfer and the exergy destructions in each component of the system. In addition, a hypothetical carbon dioxide expansion turbine is introduced, then two thermodynamic models for solar transcritical carbon dioxide Rankine cycles with a throttling valve (experiment) and with an expansion turbine have been established with exergy analysis method. The obtained results clearly show that solar collector contributes the largest share to system irreversibility and entropy generation in the all-day working state, and the exergy improvement potential of solar collector is the maximum in the working state. So this component should be the optimization design focus to improve system exergy effectiveness. For the cycle with the turbine, the energy efficiency and the entropy generation are not much higher than the cycle with throttling valve, but the exergy efficiency of the cycle with turbine is twice of the cycle with throttling valve. It provides more guidance when the transcritical CO2-based Rankine system is in a large-scale solar application.