NBF: Supercritical Carbon Dioxide Brayton-Cycle Turbines
NBF: Supercritical Carbon Dioxide Brayton-Cycle Turbines
http://nextbigfuture.com/2011/03/superc ... ayton.html
Thermal to electric conversion efficiency increased by 50% over steam cycle. That is quite an improvement! It seems to be more compact and less service intensive too!
Thermal to electric conversion efficiency increased by 50% over steam cycle. That is quite an improvement! It seems to be more compact and less service intensive too!
This will help for conventional (fission) nuclear power as well as coal and natural gas. Consider it a 50% increase in the production of electricity with current resource consumption.
The CO2 version seems to be better than the Helium one, which is just as well as Helium seems to have supply constraints. CO2 is that nasty and evil gas that we're supposed to make less of anyways. It makes sense to find another industrial use for it.
The CO2 version seems to be better than the Helium one, which is just as well as Helium seems to have supply constraints. CO2 is that nasty and evil gas that we're supposed to make less of anyways. It makes sense to find another industrial use for it.
That could be some hella nice IP if it works economically.
Haven't they been trying to do this for awhile?
http://www.inl.gov/technicalpublication ... 906955.pdf
I wonder what's changed. I'll have to look closer.
Also a somewhat interesting read: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supercriti ... on_dioxide
Haven't they been trying to do this for awhile?
http://www.inl.gov/technicalpublication ... 906955.pdf
I wonder what's changed. I'll have to look closer.
Also a somewhat interesting read: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supercriti ... on_dioxide
n*kBolt*Te = B**2/(2*mu0) and B^.25 loss scaling? Or not so much? Hopefully we'll know soon...
They have a very detailed paper online
http://prod.sandia.gov/techlib/access-c ... 100171.pdf
The paper is from August 2010. It looks like they have done a huge amount of work on this and it is nearing the point of commercial viability.
The paper is from August 2010. It looks like they have done a huge amount of work on this and it is nearing the point of commercial viability.
Giorgio, I fully agree! I know of a few small communities here that have small plants for producing hot water for heating, but they dont produce power. This could change that. Since it is not only cheaper to maintain, but also more efficient, it could really make very small power plants economical. I really hope that this is ready for the market.
I am also wondering what this could mean for some fusion and some fission reactor concepts that are just barely breaking even. They might all of a sudden become feasible again.
Heck, you could probably use waste heat from some factories to economically get back some of the energy that was used there.
Really sounds almost to good to be true....
I am also wondering what this could mean for some fusion and some fission reactor concepts that are just barely breaking even. They might all of a sudden become feasible again.
Heck, you could probably use waste heat from some factories to economically get back some of the energy that was used there.
Really sounds almost to good to be true....
I was thinking waste heat application as well. That alone is an ENORMOUS market.
The size factor also plays big. Imagine weight savings in an all electric ship...The current method is with LM-2500's and support equipment. These units look like they would take up significantly less real-estate and weight for equivalent power generation.
My little imaginary hands are rubbing excitedly. Now if I start getting the mental Muh-ha-ha's, I guess I should worry.
The size factor also plays big. Imagine weight savings in an all electric ship...The current method is with LM-2500's and support equipment. These units look like they would take up significantly less real-estate and weight for equivalent power generation.
My little imaginary hands are rubbing excitedly. Now if I start getting the mental Muh-ha-ha's, I guess I should worry.

Probably the same article...
http://www.physorg.com/news/2011-03-sup ... bines.html
The density of energy extraction would lend itself to cooling polywells...
Uh, anyone know how insulating supercritical CO2 is at these conditions ??
The density of energy extraction would lend itself to cooling polywells...
Uh, anyone know how insulating supercritical CO2 is at these conditions ??