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Featured researches published by Simon Dieckmann.


SOLARPACES 2016: International Conference on Concentrating Solar Power and Chemical Energy Systems | 2017

LCOE reduction potential of parabolic trough and solar tower CSP technology until 2025

Simon Dieckmann; Jürgen Dersch; Stefano Giuliano; Michael Puppe; Eckhard Lüpfert; Klaus Hennecke; Robert Pitz-Paal; Michael Taylor; Pablo Ralon

Concentrating Solar Power (CSP), with an installed capacity of 4.9 GW by 2015, is a young technology compared to other renewable power generation technologies. A limited number of plants and installed capacity in a small challenging market environment make reliable and transparent cost data for CSP difficult to obtain. The International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) and the DLR German Aerospace Center gathered and evaluated available cost data from various sources for this publication in order to yield transparent, reliable and up-to-date cost data for a set of reference parabolic trough and solar tower plants in the year 2015 [1]. Each component of the power plant is analyzed for future technical innovations and cost reduction potential based on current R&D activities, ongoing commercial developments and growth in market scale. The derived levelized cost of electricity (LCOE) for 2015 and 2025 are finally contrasted with published power purchase agreements (PPA) of the NOOR II+III power plants in Moroc...


Journal of Solar Energy Engineering-transactions of The Asme | 2018

Integration of soiling-rate measurements and cleaning strategies in yield analysis of parabolic trough plants

Fabian Wolfertstetter; Stefan Wilbert; Juergen Dersch; Simon Dieckmann; Robert Pitz-Paal; Abdellatif Ghennioui

The issue of reflector soiling becomes more important as concentrating solar thermal power plants (CSP) are being implemented at sites subject to high dust loads. In an operational power plant, a trade-off between reducing cleaning costs and cleaning related collector availability on the one hand and keeping the solar field cleanliness (ξfield) high to minimize soiling induced losses on the other hand must be found. The common yield analysis software packages system advisor model (SAM) and greenius only allow the input of a constant mean ξfield and constant cleaning costs. This oversimplifies real conditions because soiling is a highly time-dependent parameter and operators might adjust cleaning activities depending on factors such as soiling rate and irradiance. In this study, time-dependent soiling and cleaning data are used for modeling the yield of two parabolic trough plant configurations at two sites in Spain and Morocco. We apply a one-year soiling rate dataset in daily resolution measured with the tracking cleanliness sensor (TraCS). We use this as a basis to model the daily evolution of the cleanliness of each collector of a solar field resulting from the application of various cleaning strategies (CS). The thus obtained daily average ξfield is used to modify the inputs to the yield analysis software greenius. The cleaning costs for each CS are subtracted from the projects financial output parameters to accurately predict the yield of a CSP project over its lifetime. The profits obtained with different CSs are compared in a parameter variation analysis for two sites and the economically best CS is identified. The profit can be increased by more than 2.6% by the application of the best strategy relative to a reference strategy that uses a constant cleaning frequency. The error in profit calculated with constant soiling and cleaning parameters compared to the simulation with variable soiling and cleaning can be as high as 9.4%. With the presented method, temporally variable soiling rates and CS can be fully integrated to CSP yield analysis software, significantly increasing its accuracy. It can be used to determine optimum cleaning parameters.


SOLARPACES 2016: International Conference on Concentrating Solar Power and Chemical Energy Systems | 2017

Simulation of hybrid solar power plants

Simon Dieckmann; Jürgen Dersch

Hybrid solar power plants have the potential to combine advantages of two different technologies at the cost of increased complexity. The present paper shows the potential of the software greenius for the techno-economic evaluation of hybrid solar power plants and discusses two exemplary scenarios. Depreciated Concentrated Solar Power (CSP) plants based on trough technology can be retrofitted with solar towers in order to reach higher steam cycle temperatures and hence efficiencies. Compared to a newly built tower plant the hybridization of a depreciated trough plant causes about 30% lower LCOE reaching 104


SOLARPACES 2015: International Conference on Concentrating Solar Power and Chemical Energy Systems | 2016

Integration of Solar Process Heat into an Existing Thermal Desalination Plant in Qatar

Simon Dieckmann; Ganesh Krishnamoorthy; Mahmoud Aboumadi; Yuvaraj Pandian; Jürgen Dersch; Dirk Krüger; Abdulsattar S. Al-Rasheed; Joachim Krüger; Ulrich Ottenburger

/MWh. The second hybrid scenario combines cost-efficient photovoltaics with dispatchable CSP technology. This hybrid plant offers very high capacity factors up to 69% based on 100% load from 8am to 11pm. The LCOE of the hybrid plant are only slightly lower (174 vs. 186


Energy Procedia | 2015

Pre-design of a mini CSP plant

Dirk Krüger; A. Kenissi; Simon Dieckmann; C. Bouden; A. Baba; Armando C. Oliveira; João Soares; E. Rojas Bravo; R. Ben Cheikh; F. Orioli; D. Gasperini; Klaus Hennecke; Heiko Schenk

/MWh) compared to the pure CSP plant because the capital expenditure for thermal storage and power block remains the same while the electricity output is much lower.Hybrid solar power plants have the potential to combine advantages of two different technologies at the cost of increased complexity. The present paper shows the potential of the software greenius for the techno-economic evaluation of hybrid solar power plants and discusses two exemplary scenarios. Depreciated Concentrated Solar Power (CSP) plants based on trough technology can be retrofitted with solar towers in order to reach higher steam cycle temperatures and hence efficiencies. Compared to a newly built tower plant the hybridization of a depreciated trough plant causes about 30% lower LCOE reaching 104


Energy Procedia | 2015

Annual performance calculations for CSP plants under different feed-in tariff schemes

Jürgen Dersch; Simon Dieckmann; Klaus Hennecke

/MWh. The second hybrid scenario combines cost-efficient photovoltaics with dispatchable CSP technology. This hybrid plant offers very high capacity factors up to 69% based on 100% load from 8am to 11pm. The LCOE of the hybrid plant are only slightly lower (174 vs. 186


International Journal of Low-carbon Technologies | 2018

Evaluation of the performance of hybrid CSP/Biomass Power Plants

João Soares; Armando C. Oliveira; Simon Dieckmann; Dirk Krüger; Francesco Orioli

/MWh) compared to the pure CSP plant because the capital expenditure for thermal storage and power block remains the same while the e...


Archive | 2017

Comparison of Soiling Rate Data from two Sites and ist Application to Yield Analysis

Fabian Wolfertstetter; Stefan Wilbert; Simon Dieckmann; Jürgen Dersch; Roman Affolter; Philipp Bellmann; Abdellatif Ghennioui

The water supply of many countries in the Middle East relies mainly on water desalination. In Qatar, the water network is completely fed with water from desalination plants. One of these power and desalination plants is located in Ras Abu Fontas, 20 km south of the capital Doha. The heat required for thermal desalination is provided by steam which is generated in waste heat recovery boilers (HRB) connected to gas turbines. Additionally, gas fired boilers or auxiliary firing in the HRBs are used in order to decouple the water generation from the electricity generation. In Ras Abu Fontas some auxiliary boilers run 24/7 because the HRB capacity does not match the demand of the desalination units. This paper contains the techno-economic analysis of two large-scale commercial solar field options, which could reduce the fuel consumption significantly. Both options employ parabolic trough technology with a nominal saturated steam output of 350 t/h at 15 bar (198°C, 240 MW). The first option uses direct steam generation without storage while the second relies on common thermal oil in combination with a molten salt thermal storage with 6 hours full-load capacity. The economic benefit of the integration of solar power depends mainly on the cost of the fossil alternative, and thus the price (respectively opportunity costs) of natural gas. At a natural gas price of 8 US-


Archive | 2017

Retrofitting of Existing Parabolic Trough Collector Power Plants with Molten Salt Tower Systems

Carlos Rendón; Simon Dieckmann; Mathias Weidle; Jürgen Dersch; Cristiano Teixeira Boura; Thomas Polklas; Marcus Kuschel; Ulf Herrmann

/MMBtu the internal rate of return on equity (IRR) is expected at about 5%.


Archive | 2015

Techno-Economic Evaluation of Renewable Energy Projectsusing the Software greenius

Jürgen Dersch; Simon Dieckmann

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Dirk Krüger

German Aerospace Center

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Heiko Schenk

German Aerospace Center

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A. Kenissi

German Aerospace Center

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