Modelling and simulation of Concentrated Solar Power Plant in Ber’Alganam area (Azzawia-Libya)

Authors

  • Ibrahim A. Abuashe Aeronautical engineering, Faculty of engineering, Azzawia University, Azzawia-Libya
  • Essaied M. Shuia Faculty of engineering, Subratha University, Subratha-Libya
  • Hajer I. Aljermi Physical science, faculty of science, Azzawia University, Azzawia Libya

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51646/jsesd.v9i2.4

Abstract

 Ths paper aims to conduct modeling and simulation of a Concentrated Solar Power (CSP) Plant in Ber’Alganam area (Azzawia-Libya). Th thermal analysis of the solar power plant was carried out to identify its characteristics and present the monthly power curves according to measured solar radiation and meteorological data of Ber’Alganam (Azzawia-Libya). Th mathematical model of the plant was based on energy balance of each component used to develop the simulation tool using Matlab softare. Th simulation tool can be used to simulate the solar plant and achieve desired plots and results. Among many techniques used in the fild of solar power generation, the Concentrated Solar Power (CSP) technology using Parabolic Trough Collector (PTC) or (PT) has been selected. As a sample case, a 30 MW CSP plant was proposed to present the hourly performance and productivity through entire year. Th study offred a description of two more technologies; thermal energy storage (TES) and backup boiler in order to enhance and stabilize the CSP plant and the continuous production throughout daytime and estimate the amount of fuel needed for this issue, the results shows, the annual power output by both solar source, TES system, and the backup boiler are 91513, 318.36, and 4690.45 MWh/year, respectively, with respect the solar multiplier is 1.5. The study also concerned with the amount of emissions avoided by using CSP plants, the study estimated that, 18516.4 tons of emissions could be annually avoided by CSP plant rather than conventional plant that uses a natural gas as the energy source. Th results demonstrate that, the Ber’Alganam is a good location to construct CSP plants,
according to the productivity indicators.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

References

. Lippke, F., “Simulation of the part-load behavior of a 30Mwe SEGS plant”, Tech.rep. SAND–95-1293, Sandia National Labs., Albuquerque, NM (United States), 1995.

. Forristall, R., “Heat Transfer Analysis and Modeling of a Parabolic Trough Solar Receiver Implemented in Engineering Equation Solver”. National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), Colorado, 2003.

. Forristall, R. “Heat Transfer Analysis and Modeling of a Parabolic Trough Solar Receiver Implemented in Engineering Equation Solver.” National Renewable Energy Laboratory, NREL/TP-550-34169, October 2003.

. Stuetzle, T., “Automatic control of the 30 Mwe SEGS VI parabolic trough plant”, Master’s thesis, University of WisconsinMadison, College of Engineering, 2002.

. Stuetzle, T., Blair, N., Mitchell, J., and Beckman, W., “Automatic control of a 30 MWe SEGS VI parabolic trough plant”. Solar energy, 76(1-3), pp. 187–193. 225, 2004.

. GDP growth rate 2009, February 2011, http://data.worldbank.org/indicator.

. Solar Energy Generating Systems, 26 November 2010.

. IRENA, “Concentrating Solar Power”, Volume 1: Power Sector, Issue 2/5, 2012.

. Miguel G. S., Corona B., Servert J., Lopez D., Cerrajero E., Gutierrez F. and, Lasheras M.,” Technical and Environmental Analysis of Parabolic Trough Concentrating Solar Power (CSP) Technologies”, Th Handbook of Environmental Chemistry 34, ISBN 978-3-319-17099-2, DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-17100-5, Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016.

. Patnode, A. M., “Simulation and Performance Evaluation of Parabolic Trough Solar Power Plants”, 2006.

. Duffi John A., and Beckman, William A. Solar Engineering of Thrmal Processes. 2nd edition. New York: John Wiley

and Sons, Inc., 1991.

. Iqbal, M., “An Introduction to Solar Radiation”, Ontario: Academic Press Canada, 1983.

. Dudley, V., Kolb, G. J., Mahoney, A. R., Mancini, T. R., Matthews, C. W., Sloan, M., and Kearney, D., “Test

Results: SEGS LS-2 Solar Collector. Sandia National Laboratories”, SAND94-1884, December 1994.

. [Price, Henry (Microsof Excel program). Excelergy. Last updated 2005.

. Channiwala S.A. and Ekbote A.,” A Generalized Model to Estimate Field Size for Solar-Only Parabolic Trough Plant”, SASEC2015 Thrd Southern African Solar Energy Conference 11 – 13 May 2015.

. ILF consulting Engineering, Great Man-Made River Project,” Gadames-Zwara-Az Zawiyah Water system, Contract No. 40115-A-530-00-CT-CT-1001.

. Poullikkas A., Kourtis G., Hadjipaschalis I. An overview of CSP cooling systems. Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Renewable Energy Sources & Energy Effiency, May 2011, Nicosia, Cyprus.

. International Energy Agency (IEA), “CO2 emissions from fuel combustion”, Edition 2012.

. Air pollution from electricity-generating large combustion plants (PDF), Copenhagen: European Environment Agency (EEA), 2008, ISBN 978-92-9167-355-1, archived from the original on 16 July 2011.

Downloads

Published

2020-12-31

How to Cite

[1]
I. . Abuashe, E. . Shuia, and H. . . Aljermi, “Modelling and simulation of Concentrated Solar Power Plant in Ber’Alganam area (Azzawia-Libya)”, jsesd, vol. 9, no. 2, pp. 11–28, Dec. 2020.

Issue

Section

Articles