Heat Transfer to Supercritical Water in Advanced Power Engineering Applications: An Industrial Scale Test Rig

Gerrit A. Schatte, Andreas Kohlhepp, Tobias Gschnaidtner, Christoph Wieland, Hartmut Spliethoff

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

10 Scopus citations

Abstract

Heat transfer to supercritical water in heated tubes and channels is relevant for steam generators in conventional power plants and future concepts for supercritical nuclear and solar-thermal power plants. A new experimental facility, the high pressure evaporation rig, setup at the Institute for Energy Systems (Technische Universität München) aims to provide heat transfer data to fill the existing knowledge gaps at these conditions. The test rig consists of a closed-loop high pressure cycle, in which de-ionized water is fed to an instrumented test section heated by the application of direct electrical current. It is designed to withstand a maximum pressure of 380 bar at 580 °C in the test section. The maximum power rating of the system is 1 MW. The test section is a vertical tube (material: AISI A213/P91) with a 7000 mm heated length, a 15.7 mm internal diameter, and a wall thickness of 5.6 mm. It is equipped with 70 thermocouples distributed evenly along its length. It enables the determination of heat transfer coefficients in the supercritical region at various steady-state or transient conditions. In a first series of tests, experiments are conducted to investigate normal and deteriorated heat transfer (DHT) under vertical upward flow conditions. The newly generated data and literature data are used to evaluate different correlations available for modeling heat transfer coefficients at supercritical pressures.

Original languageEnglish
Article number062002
JournalJournal of Energy Resources Technology, Transactions of the ASME
Volume140
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jun 2018

Keywords

  • experiments
  • flexible operation
  • heat transfer
  • power plants
  • steam generator
  • supercritical water

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Heat Transfer to Supercritical Water in Advanced Power Engineering Applications: An Industrial Scale Test Rig'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this