Skip to main content
U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Review and Future Perspective of Central Receiver Design and Performance

Conference ·
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4984395· OSTI ID:1372038
Concentrating solar power (CSP) technology provides a commercial solar option to the utility-scale electricity market. CSP is unique in its ability to include low-cost thermal storage; thus, it can generate electricity when the sun is not available and dispatch electricity to meet varying load requirements. Within the suite of CSP technologies, the central receiver design represents the state-of-the-art technology, promising low cost, high performance, and dispatchable energy production. Current total capacity of central receiver plants worldwide is about 1.0 gigawatt (electric) with operating plants in Spain and the United States, as well as projects under construction in Asia, the Middle East, and North Africa. Central receiver technology has been under development since the 1950s, and a variety of central receiver designs have been explored. A distinguishing feature is the heat transfer medium. Central receiver designs exist that use dense fluids, gases, and solid particles in this role. Water/steam and molten salt receivers have been adopted in current commercial plants and are often coupled with a steam-Rankine power cycle with an operating temperature of less than 600 degrees C. Many new central receiver concepts, such as the volumetric air, supercritical carbon dioxide (sCO2), solid particle, and liquid-metal receiver designs, are under active research and development (R&D). New designs target operating temperatures generally higher than 700 degrees C-800 degrees C -- and even above 1000 degrees C -- so that higher-performance power cycles such as the sCO2-Brayton cycle or air-Brayton/steam-Rankine combined cycle can be used to promote greater overall system efficiency. Central receiver thermal storage provides dispatchability unavailable from variable-output renewables such as solar photovoltaic and wind power. Case study analysis of the California grid shows that there is a limit on the amount of non-dispatchable renewable generation that the grid can accommodate, beyond which overgeneration, spillage, and instability may occur. Energy storage may well become a necessity in some areas in order to maintain reliability. Next-generation central receiver technologies will have higher operating temperatures and additional features that allow higher-efficiency power generation and deliver other cost-performance advantages. The underlying innovations will come from areas such as multi-physics modeling, high-temperature materials, novel power cycles and heat exchanger designs, and collector field sensing and performance monitoring technologies. Technology innovation is expected to improve the cost and performance of central receiver designs. To deliver value as a generation and storage option, central receiver technology must also be supported by flexible and robust financial models and comprehensive energy and ancillary service markets justifying the capital-intensive investment. Progress in these areas will position CSP central receiver technology for future deployment.
Research Organization:
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), Golden, CO (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE), Solar Energy Technologies Office (EE-4S)
DOE Contract Number:
AC36-08GO28308
OSTI ID:
1372038
Report Number(s):
NREL/CP-5500-66781
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

References (21)

Innovation in concentrated solar power journal October 2011
Thermal Modeling of a Small-Particle Solar Central Receiver journal February 2000
Corrosion of austenitic and ferritic-martensitic steels exposed to supercritical carbon dioxide journal October 2011
Assessment of liquid metal technology status and research paths for their use as efficient heat transfer fluids in solar central receiver systems journal July 2013
Thermodynamic Study of Advanced Supercritical Carbon Dioxide Power Cycles for Concentrating Solar Power Systems journal June 2013
Review of high-temperature central receiver designs for concentrating solar power journal January 2014
Wind effect on the performance of solid particle solar receivers with and without the protection of an aerowindow journal October 2009
Development and Evaluation of a Prototype Solid Particle Receiver: On-Sun Testing and Model Validation journal January 2010
Test and evaluation of a solar powered gas turbine system journal October 2006
Performance Evaluation of the 200-kWth HiTRec-II Open Volumetric Air Receiver journal January 2003
Coupled radiation and flow modeling in ceramic foam volumetric solar air receivers journal September 2011
On-sun demonstration of a 750 °C heat transfer fluid for concentrating solar systems: Dense particle suspension in tube journal August 2015
Effect of directional dependency of wall reflectivity and incident concentrated solar flux on the efficiency of a cavity solar receiver journal November 2014
Numerical analysis of the influence of inclination angle and wind on the heat losses of cavity receivers for solar thermal power towers journal December 2014
Volumetric receivers in Solar Thermal Power Plants with Central Receiver System technology: A review journal May 2011
Liquid sodium versus Hitec as a heat transfer fluid in solar thermal central receiver systems journal September 2012
The “Porcupine”: A Novel High-Flux Absorber for Volumetric Solar Receivers journal May 1998
Structural Design Considerations for Tubular Power Tower Receivers Operating at 650°C
  • Neises, Ty W.; Wagner, Michael J.; Gray, Allison K.
  • ASME 2014 8th International Conference on Energy Sustainability collocated with the ASME 2014 12th International Conference on Fuel Cell Science, Engineering and Technology, Volume 1: Combined Energy Cycles, CHP, CCHP, and Smart Grids; Concentrating Solar Power, Solar Thermochemistry and Thermal Energy Storage; Geothermal, Ocean, and Emerging Energy Technologies; Hydrogen Energy Technologies; Low/Zero Emission Power Plants and Carbon Sequestration; Photovoltaics; Wind Energy Systems and Technologies https://doi.org/10.1115/ES2014-6603
conference October 2014
Assessment of the potential improvement due to multiple apertures in central receiver systems with secondary concentrators journal January 2006
A predictive CFD model for a falling particle receiver/reactor exposed to concentrated sunlight journal July 1999
Experimental and numerical evaluation of the performance and flow stability of different types of open volumetric absorbers under non-homogeneous irradiation journal March 1997

Similar Records

Chapter 11: Concentrating Solar Power
Book · Sun Jan 01 23:00:00 EST 2017 · OSTI ID:1372625

Real-time dispatch optimization for concentrating solar power with thermal energy storage
Journal Article · Fri Jun 24 20:00:00 EDT 2022 · Optimization and Engineering · OSTI ID:1874941

Integrated Thermal Energy Storage and Brayton Cycle Equipment Demonstration (Integrated TESTBED) Project Design Basis
Conference · Wed Feb 28 23:00:00 EST 2024 · OSTI ID:2564982