2022 Annual Meeting
(657h) Optimal Design of Solar Systems for Decarbonizing Industrial Process Heat Applications
Authors
In the last decade, solar photovoltaic (PV) technology costs have decreased from about $5.50/W in 2010 to about $1/W in 2020 [6]. Due to this significant reduction in the costs of PV and the relatively stable costs of CST (e.g., parabolic trough collectors), the question became relevant of whether PV could be more cost effective for IPH systems versus CST. In this paper, we present formal deterministic global optimization-based approaches to address this question. Specifically, we utilize a differentiable model for solar IPH hybridization [5] that was developed specifically for formal investment decision making and has been shown to be an effective tool for the optimal design of CST and thermal energy storage (TES) systems coupled to IPH systems. In addition to the CST and TES system models, new models for PV and battery storage were developed. We then employed these models within a comparative technoeconomic assessment based on the lifecycle savings of four IPH hybridization choices: parabolic trough CST with TES, fixed-axis PV with TES, one-axis tracking PV with TES, and one-axis tracking PV with battery storage. Three geographic locations across the US are also considered: coastal New England, Coloradoâs high plains, and Californiaâs central valley. In each location, despite the signifÂicant cost reductions in PV, CST with TES is still the superior technology for solar IPH hybridization. A brief analysis of these results and opportunities for innovation in this space will also be discussed.
References
[1] US Energy Information Administration. Use of enÂergy explained: Energy use in industry, 2022. URL https://www.eia.gov/energyexplained/use-of-energy/industry-in-depth.php.
[2] US Environmental Protection Agency. Renewable heating and cooling: Renewable industrial process heat, 2022. URL https://www.epa.gov/rhc/renewable-industrial-process-heat.
[3] Shahjadi Hisan Farjana, Nazmul Huda, MA Parvez Mahmud, and R Saidur. Solar process heat in industrial systemsâa global review. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, 82:2270â2286, 2018. doi: 10.1016/j.rser.2017.08.065.
[4] Parthiv Kurup and Craig Turchi. Initial investigation into the potential of CSP industrial process heat for the southwest United States. Technical report, NREL, 2015.
[5] Matthew D. Stuber. A differentiable model for optimizing hybridization of industrial process heat systems with concentrating solar thermal power. Processes, 6(7):76, jun 2018. doi: 10.3390/pr6070076.
[6] David Feldman, Vignesh Ramasamy, Ran Fu, Ashwin Ramdas, Jal Desai, and Robert Margolis. US solar photovoltaic system and energy storage cost benchmark: Q1 2020. Technical report, National Renewable Energy LaboÂratory, 2021. URL https://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy21osti/77324.pdf.