Monday, January 18, 2010

Can Aluminium Containers Be Used For Baking In A Convection Oven Is It Possible To Generate Electricity Using A Refrigerant?

Is it possible to generate electricity using a refrigerant? - can aluminium containers be used for baking in a convection oven

- ORC (Organic Rankine Cycle)
- Refrigerant is pentane (bp 36.1 C)
- The thermal cycle is connected to a heat source. Heat exchanger. if the liquid (> BP) at warm temperatures, high pressure gas, is composed of a valve when released from a turbine. then there is a capacitor, and a pump the liquid in the hot region and push the cycle continues.

- (The heat source is actually a container with molten salt and the heat of a hot spring water that is heated by solar parabolic trough solar power is concentrated.
Can - aluminum foil (or mirror) is used to sunlight in order to reflect the black tube, where the water flowed through.

Let me know whether this method works.

If you do not have any experience in this area - they may have a typical cost for the entire system to calculate (to which a cost-effective process for renewable energy.) I do not know how a generator turbine at low prices + shipping though.

Help me. CHEERS!

* As you probably guessed, I am a student moving mechanical engineering

2 comments:

billruss... said...

Where the molten salt is that? Hot water is certainly warm enough to melt the salt.

Of course, you can use a gas heat and use it to drive a turbine. And because its only source of hot water makes a gas with low boiling point.

.

ratatapl... said...

I have something red, eclectic, a few years ago about the existence of a generator, solar pool. Basically, it was to describe a closed cycle turbine thermodynamics. The vector flow (do not use the liquid in the circuit, but the transport) of heat was liquid salts. The biggest advantage is the ability of salt to heat during the day, save for the requirements in the night when the sun is not present. There are likely to clarify many questions, but you can see on the site, whether all the information ENEA. Good luck.
I can not help myself, but just out of school without ever having worked in the field

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