William J. Kolb
Sandia National Laboratories
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Featured researches published by William J. Kolb.
Journal of Solar Energy Engineering-transactions of The Asme | 2002
James E. Pacheco; Steven K. Showalter; William J. Kolb
Thermal storage improves the dispatchability and marketability of parabolic trough power plants allowing them to produce electricity on demand independent of solar collection. One such thermal storage system, a thermocline, uses a single tank containing a fluid with a thermal gradient running vertically through the tank, where hotter fluid (lower density) is at the top of the tank and colder fluid is at the base of the tank. The thermal gradient separates the two temperature potentials. A lowcost filler material provides the bulk of the thermal capacitance of the thermal storage, prevents convective mixing, and reduces the amount of fluid required. In this paper, development of a thermocline system that uses molten-nitrate salt as the heat transfer fluid is described and compared to a two-tank molten salt system. Results of isothermal and thermal cycling tests on candidate materials and salt safety tests are presented as well as results from a small pilot-scale (2.3 MWh) thermocline. NOMENCLATURE A = cross sectional area of bed, m 2
Journal of Solar Energy Engineering-transactions of The Asme | 2002
Daniel L. Barth; James E. Pacheco; William J. Kolb; Earl E. Rush
A new hot-salt pump has been developed for moltensalt solar power tower applications that will reduce the capital cost of the plant, eliminate many of the piping, valve and sump problems associated with the handling of molten salt and improve the reliability of a critical part of the operating system of the plant. Previous systems required that the pumps in these plants be housed in shallow sumps that were gravity fed by the storage tanks. This new pump arrangement will eliminate the sumplevel control valves and the potential for overflowing the pump sump vessels. Until now only cantilever pumps were qualified for hot molten-salt service because no suitable bearing materials had been tested. This paper describes the successful qualification of a long-shafted pump with salt-lubricated bearings tested for over 5000 hours with nitrate salt at 565 °C. BACKGROUND
international conference on fuel cell science engineering and technology fuelcell collocated with asme international conference on energy sustainability | 2014
Joshua M. Christian; Clifford K. Ho; William J. Kolb; John W. Kelton; Daniel Ray
Cavity receivers have been an integral part of Concentrated Solar Power (CSP) plants for many years. However, falling solid particle receivers (SPR) which employ a cavity design are only in the beginning stages of on-sun testing and evaluation. A prototype SPR has been developed which will be fully integrated into a complete system to demonstrate the effectiveness of this technology in the CSP sector. The receiver is a rectangular cavity with an aperture on the north side, open bottom (for particle collection), and a slot in the top (particle curtain injection). The solid particles fall from the top of the cavity through the solar flux and are collected after leaving the receiver. There are inherent design challenges with this type of receiver including particle curtain opacity, high wall fluxes, high wall temperatures, and high heat losses. CFD calculations using ANSYS FLUENT were performed to evaluate the effectiveness of the current receiver design. The particle curtain mass flow rate needed to be carefully regulated such that the curtain opacity is high (to intercept as much solar radiation as possible), but also low enough to increase the average particle temperature by 200°C. Wall temperatures were shown to be less than 1200°C when the particle curtain mass flow rate is 2.7 kg/s/m which is critical for the receiver insulation. The size of the cavity was shown to decrease the incident flux on the cavity walls and also reduced the wall temperatures. A thermal efficiency of 92% was achieved, but was obtained with a higher particle mass flow rate resulting in a lower average particle temperature rise. A final prototype receiver design has been completed utilizing the computational evaluation and past CSP project experiences.Copyright
Journal of Solar Energy Engineering-transactions of The Asme | 2018
Clifford K. Ho; Joshua M. Christian; Julius Yellowhair; Kenneth Miguel Armijo; William J. Kolb; Sheldon M. Jeter; Matthew Golob; Clayton Nguyen
This paper evaluates the on-sun performance of a 1 MW falling particle receiver. Two particle receiver designs were investigated: obstructed flow particle receiver versus freefalling particle receiver. The intent of the tests was to investigate the impact of particle mass flow rate, irradiance, and particle temperature on the particle temperature rise and thermal efficiency of the receiver for each design. Results indicate that the obstructed flow design increased the residence time of the particles in the concentrated flux, thereby increasing the particle temperature and thermal efficiency for a given mass flow rate. The obstructions, a staggered array of chevron-shaped mesh structures, also provided more stability to the falling particles, which were prone to instabilities caused by convective currents in the free-fall design. Challenges encountered during the tests included nonuniform mass flow rates, wind impacts, and oxidation/deterioration of the mesh structures. Alternative materials, designs, and methods are presented to overcome these challenges. [DOI: 10.1115/1.4041100]
Archive | 2013
Charles E. Andraka; Joshua M. Christian; Cheryl M. Ghanbari; David Dennis Gill; Clifford K. Ho; William J. Kolb; Timothy A. Moss; Edward Smith; Julius Yellowhair
The Concentrating Solar Technologies Organization at Sandia National Laboratories has a long history of performing important research, development, and testing that has enabled the Concentrating Solar Power Industry to deploy full-scale power plants. Sandia continues to pursue innovative CSP concepts with the goal of reducing the cost of CSP while improving efficiency and performance. In this pursuit, Sandia has developed many tools for the analysis of CSP performance. The following capabilities document highlights Sandias extensive experience in the design, construction, and utilization of large-scale testing facilities for CSP and the tools that Sandia has created for the full characterization of heliostats. Sandia has extensive experience in using these tools to evaluate the performance of novel heliostat designs.
Archive | 2013
David Dennis Gill; William J. Kolb
A three year plan for thermal energy storage (TES) research was created at Sandia National Laboratories in the spring of 2012. This plan included a strategic goal of providing test capability for Sandia and for the nation in which to evaluate high temperature storage (>650%C2%B0C) technology. The plan was to scope, design, and build a flow loop that would be compatible with a multitude of high temperature heat transfer/storage fluids. The High Temperature Storage Loop (HTSL) would be reconfigurable so that it was useful for not only storage testing, but also for high temperature receiver testing and high efficiency power cycle testing as well. In that way, HTSL was part of a much larger strategy for Sandia to provide a research and testing platform that would be integral for the evaluation of individual technologies funded under the SunShot program. DOEs SunShot program seeks to reduce the price of solar technologies to 6/kWhr to be cost competitive with carbon-based fuels. The HTSL project sought to provide evaluation capability for these SunShot supported technologies. This report includes the scoping, design, and budgetary costing aspects of this effort
Archive | 2017
Mark Mehos; Craig Turchi; Judith Vidal; Michael J. Wagner; Zhiwen Ma; Clifford K. Ho; William J. Kolb; Charles E. Andraka; Alan Michael Kruizenga
international conference on fuel cell science engineering and technology fuelcell collocated with asme international conference on energy sustainability | 2016
Clifford K. Ho; Joshua M. Christian; Julius Yellowhair; Kenneth Miguel Armijo; William J. Kolb; Sheldon M. Jeter; Matthew Golob; Clayton Nguyen
Archive | 2012
Kathleen Pettit; William J. Kolb; David Dennis Gill; Ronald D. Briggs
Archive | 2016
Alan Michael Kruizenga; Charles E. Andraka; William J. Kolb