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A Novel Absorptive/Reflective Solar Concentrator for Heat and Electricity Generation: An Optical and Thermal Analysis

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posted on 2025-08-06, 11:48 authored by Xian-long Meng, Nazmi Sellami, Andrew R. Knox, Andrea Montecucco, Jonathan Siviter, Paul Mullen, Ali Ashraf, Antonio Samarelli, Lourdes F. Llin, Douglas J. Paul, Wen-guang Li, Manosh C. Paul, Duncan H. Gregory, Guang Han, Min Gao, Tracy Sweet, Robert Freer, Feridoon Azough, Robert Lowndes, Xin-lin Xia, Tapas K. Mallick
The Crossed Compound Parabolic Concentrator (CCPC) is one of the most efficient non-imaging solar concentrators used as a stationary solar concentrator or as a second stage solar concentrator. In this study, the CCPC is modified to demonstrate for the first time a new generation of solar concentrators working simultaneously as an electricity generator and thermal collector. The CCPC is designed to have two complementary surfaces, one reflective and one absorptive, and is named as an absorptive/reflective CCPC (AR-CCPC). Usually, the height of the CCPC is truncated with a minor sacrifice of the geometric concentration. These truncated surfaces rather than being eliminated are instead replaced with absorbent surfaces to collect heat from solar radiation. The optical efficiency including absorptive/reflective part of the AR-CCPC was simulated and compared for different geometric concentration ratios varying from 3.6x to 4x. It was found that the combined optical efficiency of the AR-CCPC 3.6x/4x remained constant and high all day long and that it had the highest total optical efficiency compared to other concentrators. In addition, the temperature distributions of AR-CCPC surfaces and the assembled solar cell were simulated based on those heat flux boundary conditions. It was shown that the addition of a thermal absorbent surface can increase the wall temperature. The maximum value reached 321.5 K at the front wall under 50° incidence. The experimental verification was also adopted to show the benefits of using absorbent surfaces. The initial results are very promising and significant for the enhancement of solar concentrator systems with lower concentrations.

Funding

China Scholarship Council (CSC)

EP/K022156/1

Engineering & Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)

History

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Rights

Open Access funded by Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council. Under a Creative Commons license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in this record.

Journal

Energy Conversion and Management

Publisher

Elsevier

Language

en

Citation

Vol. 114, pp. 142–153

Department

  • Engineering

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