A two-cavity reactor for solar chemical processes: Heat transfer model and application to carbothermic reduction of ZnO

Christian Wieckert, Robert Palumbo, Ulrich Frommherz

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

56 Scopus citations

Abstract

A 5 kW two-cavity beam down reactor for the solar thermal decomposition of ZnO with solid carbon has been developed and tested in a solar furnace. Initial exploratory experiments show that it operates with a solar to chemical energy conversion efficiency of about 15% when the solar flux entering the reactor is 1300 kW/m2, resulting in a reaction chamber temperature of about 1500 K. The solid products have a purity of nearly 100% Zn. Furthermore, the reactor has been described by a numerical model that combines radiant and conduction heat transfer with the decomposition kinetics of the ZnO-carbon reaction. The model is based on the radiosity exchange method. For a given solar input, the model estimates cavity temperatures, Zn production ra4tes, and the solar to chemical energy conversion efficiency. The model currently makes use of two parameters which are determined from the experimental results: conduction heat transfer through the reactor walls enters the model as a lumped term that reflects the conduction loss during the experiments, and the rate of the chemical reaction includes an experimentally determined term that reflects the effective amount of ZnO and CO participating in the reactor. The model output matches well the experimentally determined cavity temperatures. It suggests that reactors built with this two-cavity concept already on this small scale can reach efficiencies exceeding 25%, if operated with a higher solar flux or if one can reduce conduction heat losses through better insulation and if one can maintain or improve the effective amount of ZnO and CO that participates in the reaction.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)771-787
Number of pages17
JournalEnergy
Volume29
Issue number5-6
DOIs
StatePublished - 2004

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
Financial support from the BFE—Swiss Federal Office of Energy—is gratefully acknowledged. We thank A. Berman for fruitful discussions concerning the ZnO–C-kinetics and S. Kräupl, M. Brack, P. Häberling, B. Schaffner, A. Steinfeld and D. Wuillemin for discussions and their help prior to and during the experiments. Experiments were performed at the Solar Furnace, Paul Scherrer Institute, Villigen, Switzerland.

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'A two-cavity reactor for solar chemical processes: Heat transfer model and application to carbothermic reduction of ZnO'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this