Widespread adoption of renewable energy technologies will arguably benefit from the availability of economically viable distributed thermal power conversion systems. For this reason, considerable efforts have been dedicated in recent years to R&D over mini-organic Rankine cycle (ORC) power plants, thus with a power capacity approximately in the 3–50 kW range. The application of these systems for waste heat recovery from diesel engines of long-haul trucks stands out because of the possibility of achieving economy of production. Many technical challenges need to be solved, as the system must be sufficiently efficient, light, and compact. The design paradigm is therefore completely different from that of conventional stationary ORC power plants of much larger capacity. A high speed turbine is arguably the expander of choice, if high conversion efficiency is targeted, thus high maximum cycle temperature. Given the lack of knowledge on the design of these turbines, which depends on a large number of constraints, a novel optimal design method integrating the preliminary design of the thermodynamic cycle and that of the turbine has been developed. The method is applicable to radial inflow, axial and radial outflow turbines, and to superheated and supercritical cycle configurations. After a limited number of working fluids are selected, the feasible design space is explored by means of thermodynamic cycle design calculations integrated with a simplified turbine design procedure, whereby the isentropic expansion efficiency is prescribed. Starting from the resulting design space, optimal preliminary designs are obtained by combining cycle calculations with a 1D mean-line code, subject to constraints. The application of the procedure is illustrated for a test case: the design of turbines to be tested in a new experimental setup named organic rankine cycle hybrid integrated device (ORCHID) which is being constructed at the Delft University of Technology, Delft, The Netherlands. The first turbine selected for further design and construction employs siloxane MM (hexamethyldisiloxane, C6H18OSi2), supercritical cycle, and the radial inflow configuration. The main preliminary design specifications are power output equal to 11.6 kW, turbine inlet temperature equal to 300 °C, maximum cycle pressure equal to 19.9 bar, expansion ratio equal to 72, rotational speed equal to 90 krpm, inlet diameter equal to 75 mm, minimum blade height equal to 2 mm, degree of reaction equal to 0.44, and estimated total-to-static efficiency equal to 77.3%. Results of the design calculations are affected by considerable uncertainty related to the loss correlations employed for the preliminary turbine design, as they have not been validated yet for this highly unconventional supersonic and transonic mini turbine. Future work will be dedicated to the extension of the method to encompass the preliminary design of heat exchangers and the off-design operation of the system.
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August 2017
Research-Article
Method for the Preliminary Fluid Dynamic Design of High-Temperature Mini-Organic Rankine Cycle Turbines
Sebastian Bahamonde,
Sebastian Bahamonde
Propulsion & Power,
Delft University of Technology,
Kluyverweg 1,
Delft 2629 HS, The Netherlands
e-mail: S.Bahamonde@tudelft.nl
Delft University of Technology,
Kluyverweg 1,
Delft 2629 HS, The Netherlands
e-mail: S.Bahamonde@tudelft.nl
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Matteo Pini,
Matteo Pini
Propulsion & Power,
Delft University of Technology,
Kluyverweg 1,
Delft 2629 HS, The Netherlands
e-mail: M.Pini@tudelft.nl
Delft University of Technology,
Kluyverweg 1,
Delft 2629 HS, The Netherlands
e-mail: M.Pini@tudelft.nl
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Carlo De Servi,
Carlo De Servi
Propulsion & Power,
Delft University of Technology,
Kluyverweg 1,
Delft 2629 HS, The Netherlands
e-mail: C.M.DeServi@tudelft.nl
Delft University of Technology,
Kluyverweg 1,
Delft 2629 HS, The Netherlands
e-mail: C.M.DeServi@tudelft.nl
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Antonio Rubino,
Antonio Rubino
Propulsion & Power,
Delft University of Technology,
Kluyverweg 1,
Delft 2629 HS, The Netherlands
e-mail: A.Rubino@tudelft.nl
Delft University of Technology,
Kluyverweg 1,
Delft 2629 HS, The Netherlands
e-mail: A.Rubino@tudelft.nl
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Piero Colonna
Piero Colonna
Professor
Propulsion & Power,
Delft University of Technology,
Kluyverweg 1,
Delft 2629 HS, The Netherlands
e-mail: P.Colonna@tudelft.nl
Propulsion & Power,
Delft University of Technology,
Kluyverweg 1,
Delft 2629 HS, The Netherlands
e-mail: P.Colonna@tudelft.nl
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Sebastian Bahamonde
Propulsion & Power,
Delft University of Technology,
Kluyverweg 1,
Delft 2629 HS, The Netherlands
e-mail: S.Bahamonde@tudelft.nl
Delft University of Technology,
Kluyverweg 1,
Delft 2629 HS, The Netherlands
e-mail: S.Bahamonde@tudelft.nl
Matteo Pini
Propulsion & Power,
Delft University of Technology,
Kluyverweg 1,
Delft 2629 HS, The Netherlands
e-mail: M.Pini@tudelft.nl
Delft University of Technology,
Kluyverweg 1,
Delft 2629 HS, The Netherlands
e-mail: M.Pini@tudelft.nl
Carlo De Servi
Propulsion & Power,
Delft University of Technology,
Kluyverweg 1,
Delft 2629 HS, The Netherlands
e-mail: C.M.DeServi@tudelft.nl
Delft University of Technology,
Kluyverweg 1,
Delft 2629 HS, The Netherlands
e-mail: C.M.DeServi@tudelft.nl
Antonio Rubino
Propulsion & Power,
Delft University of Technology,
Kluyverweg 1,
Delft 2629 HS, The Netherlands
e-mail: A.Rubino@tudelft.nl
Delft University of Technology,
Kluyverweg 1,
Delft 2629 HS, The Netherlands
e-mail: A.Rubino@tudelft.nl
Piero Colonna
Professor
Propulsion & Power,
Delft University of Technology,
Kluyverweg 1,
Delft 2629 HS, The Netherlands
e-mail: P.Colonna@tudelft.nl
Propulsion & Power,
Delft University of Technology,
Kluyverweg 1,
Delft 2629 HS, The Netherlands
e-mail: P.Colonna@tudelft.nl
1Corresponding author.
Contributed by the Turbomachinery Committee of ASME for publication in the JOURNAL OF ENGINEERING FOR GAS TURBINES AND POWER. Manuscript received November 1, 2016; final manuscript received January 6, 2017; published online March 28, 2017. Editor: David Wisler.
J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power. Aug 2017, 139(8): 082606 (14 pages)
Published Online: March 28, 2017
Article history
Received:
November 1, 2016
Revised:
January 6, 2017
Citation
Bahamonde, S., Pini, M., De Servi, C., Rubino, A., and Colonna, P. (March 28, 2017). "Method for the Preliminary Fluid Dynamic Design of High-Temperature Mini-Organic Rankine Cycle Turbines." ASME. J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power. August 2017; 139(8): 082606. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4035841
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