This paper presents a thermal study of a cavity receiver designed for a Fresnel-type linear solar collector (LFC). The study utilizes a two-dimensional computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model implemented in ANSYS Fluent. The thermal behavior of air inside the cavity for a Fresnel collector is extensively examined. The receiver consists of a trapezoidal cavity with a set of six parallel absorber tubes, through which a thermal fluid circulates. The cavity has aluminum reflectors on the inner walls and glass window closing the aperture facing the primary reflectors of the solar collector. The two-dimensional numerical model represents a cross-section of the receiver, and aims to provide numerical results that allow to provide algebraic correlations for predicting heat losses in the receiver from the wall temperature of each of the six individual absorber tubes that compose it. The developed model is transient, utilizing the k-ε turbulent model. In addition, the study is completed with an analysis of the behavior of the air surrounding and inside the cavity, to evaluate its thermal performance. For this purpose, the velocity and temperature contours obtained with the two-dimensional model are discussed. Correlations are obtained to know the heat flux between the tubes and the heat loss through the window for any combination of temperatures for each pair of tubes, which has not been yet studied in the literature. The study reveals that radiative losses contribute to 81% of the total heat losses, with the outer tubes temperature being the main responsible for these losses. Furthermore, a dimensionless analysis examines the relationship between the Nusselt and Rayleigh numbers in comparison to reference problems based on canonical geometries dominated by buoyancy-driven flows. The performance is found to be similar to that of a downward hot flat plate.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e18692 | DOI Listing |
Integr Environ Assess Manag
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Faculty of Fine Arts, Design and Architecture Department of Landscape Architecture, Tekirdağ Namık Kemal University, Tekirdağ, Türkiye.
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Faculty of Arts and Science, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, 819-0395, Japan.
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Department of General and Medical Biochemistry, Faculty of Biology, University of Gdansk, Wita Stwosza 59, 80-308 Gdansk, Poland.
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Wild boars inhabit diverse climates, including frigid regions like Siberia, but their migration history and cold adaptation mechanisms into high latitudes remain poorly understood. We constructed the most comprehensive wild boar whole-genome variant dataset to date, comprising 124 samples from tropical to frigid zones, among which 47 Russian, 8 South Chinese and 3 Vietnamese wild boars were newly supplemented. We also gathered 75 high-quality RNA-seq datasets from 10 tissues of 6 wild boars from Russia and 6 from southern China.
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