A new hot-salt pump has been developed for molten-salt solar power tower applications that will reduce the capital cost of the plant, eliminate many of the piping, valve and sump problems associated with the handling of molten salt, and improve the reliability of a critical part of the operating system of the plant. Previous systems required that the pumps in these plants be housed in shallow sumps that were gravity fed by the storage tanks. This new pump arrangement will eliminate the sump level-control valves and the potential for overflowing the pump sump vessels. Until now, only cantilever pumps were qualified for hot molten-salt service because no suitable bearing materials had been tested. This paper describes the successful qualification of a long-shafted pump with salt-lubricated bearings tested for over 5000 hours with nitrate salt at
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Development of a High-Temperature, Long-Shafted, Molten-Salt Pump for Power Tower Applications
Daniel L. Barth,
Daniel L. Barth
Nagle Pumps, Inc., 1249 Center Avenue, Chicago Heights, IL 60411
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Earl E. Rush
Earl E. Rush
Search for other works by this author on:
Daniel L. Barth
Nagle Pumps, Inc., 1249 Center Avenue, Chicago Heights, IL 60411
James E. Pacheco
William J. Kolb
Earl E. Rush
Contributed by the Solar Energy Division of THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS for publication in the ASME JOURNAL OF SOLAR ENERGY ENGINEERING. Manuscript received by the ASME Solar Energy Division, Nov. 2000; final revision, Nov. 2001. Associate Editor T. Mancini.
J. Sol. Energy Eng. May 2002, 124(2): 170-175 (6 pages)
Published Online: April 24, 2002
Article history
Received:
November 1, 2000
Revised:
November 1, 2001
Online:
April 24, 2002
Citation
Barth, D. L., Pacheco, J. E., Kolb, W. J., and Rush, E. E. (April 24, 2002). "Development of a High-Temperature, Long-Shafted, Molten-Salt Pump for Power Tower Applications ." ASME. J. Sol. Energy Eng. May 2002; 124(2): 170–175. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.1464126
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