SwRI Receives $9.9 Million from U.S. DOE to Improve Solar Plant Efficiency

SAN ANTONIO--()--Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) has been awarded $4.9 million by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) as part of a $9.9 million continuation contract to manufacture and test a high-efficiency supercritical CO2 (sCO2) hot gas turbo-expander and compact heat exchangers for concentrating solar power (CSP) plants.

The award was given through DOE’s SunShot Initiative, a collaborative national effort to make the cost of solar energy competitive with other forms of energy by the end of the decade. This award continues a previous DOE project to design the sCO2 expander. SwRI will lead a team of industry collaborators that includes Aramco Services Company, Bechtel Marine Propulsion Corporation, Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI), General Electric, and Thar Energy.

“This project is one of eight DOE-funded sCO2 power cycle projects that are currently being executed at SwRI,” said Dr. Klaus Brun, program director of the Machinery Program in SwRI’s Mechanical Engineering Division.

The highly cyclical nature of CSP plant operation requires an sCO2 hot gas turbo-expander to operate at high temperatures and pressures over a wide range of load conditions while maintaining high efficiency, handling rapid transient heat input swings, and offering very fast start-up to optimize the plant’s online availability. Similar sCO2 expanders also have the potential to significantly improve the efficiency of waste heat recovery-, nuclear-, and fossil-fueled power plants.

“Over the last two years, SwRI and its industry collaborators have developed a highly efficient, multi-stage axial flow sCO2 hot gas turbo-expander that advances the state of the art from laboratory size to a full mega-watt scale prototype,” said Dr. Jeff Moore, manager of the Rotating Machinery Dynamics Section in SwRI’s Mechanical Engineering Division, and principal investigator of the project.

A second objective of the project is to optimize novel compact heat exchangers for sCO2 applications to drastically reduce manufacturing costs. The scalable sCO2 expander design and improved heat exchanger will close two critical technology gaps and potentially provide a major pathway to achieve power at $0.06 per kilowatt hour, increasing energy conversion efficiency to more than 50 percent, and potentially reducing total power block cost to below $1,200 per kilowatt installed. Conventional steam-based CSP systems typically operate at less than 35 percent efficiency. These efficiencies also will allow solar plants to be competitive with conventional fossil-fueled power plants.

The project, which will be conducted in two phases, began in late December 2014 and will continue through mid-2016.

For more information about this research, contact Moore at jeff.moore@swri.org or (210) 522-5812, or visit machinery.swri.org/.

For more information, contact Deborah S. Deffenbaugh, (210) 522-2046, Communications Department, Southwest Research Institute, P.O. Drawer 28510, San Antonio, TX 78228-0510.

Editors: An image to accompany this release is available at: http://www.swri.org/press/2015/sunshot.htm.

About the SunShot Initiative

The U.S. Department of Energy SunShot Initiative is a collaborative national effort that aggressively drives innovation to make solar energy fully cost-competitive with traditional energy sources before the end of the decade. Through SunShot, the Energy Department supports efforts by private companies, universities, and national laboratories to drive down the cost of solar electricity to $0.06 kilowatt-hour. Learn more at http://energy.gov/sunshot.

About SwRI:

SwRI is an independent, nonprofit, applied research and development organization based in San Antonio, Texas, with nearly 2,800 employees and an annual research volume of $549 million. Southwest Research Institute and SwRI are registered marks in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. For more information about Southwest Research Institute, please visit newsroom.swri.org or www.swri.org.

http://www.swri.org/9what/releases/2015/sunshot.htm

Contacts

Southwest Research Institute
Deborah S. Deffenbaugh, 210-522-2046
dsdeffenbaugh@swri.org

Release Summary

SwRI will lead a team of industry collaborators to develop a high-efficiency supercritical CO2 hot gas turbo-expander and compact heat exchangers for concentrating solar power plants.

Contacts

Southwest Research Institute
Deborah S. Deffenbaugh, 210-522-2046
dsdeffenbaugh@swri.org