ZHOU JIAOLE, LI HAO, WANG LI. Exergy Analysis of CO2 Centrifugal Reverse Brayton Cycle. [J]. Journal of refrigeration, 2024, 45(4): 93-103. DOI: 10.3969/j.issn.0253-4339.2024.04.093.
The centrifugal reverse Brayton cycle (CRBC) is a novel refrigeration cycle that harnesses the conversion of inertial potential energy to pressure energy
enabling efficient compression and expansion processes through centrifugal and centripetal flows of the working fluid within a rotating tube. This offers a promising potential for improving the refrigeration efficiency of conventional gas refrigeration cycles. Building on previous studies
this study employs a thermodynamic model to conduct a parametric analysis of the CRBC to explore the thermodynamic efficiency and loss distributions of the cycle
providing a theoretical foundation for system evaluation and enhancement. Results show that
under the same inlet air temperature
an optimization possibility exists for the heater inlet temperature. The system experiences substantial exergetic losses during the centrifugal isothermal compression flow
adiabatic compression
and centripetal adiabatic expansion flow
each at approximately 20%. Conversely
the exergetic losses during the air-cooling process and the centrifugal adiabatic compression process are comparatively low and demonstrate an inverse relationship with the inlet temperature of the gas heater. The exergetic efficiency of the CRBC reaches 19.2%
which significantly surpasses the values of 8.1% for the CO
2
reverse Brayton cycle
4.9% for the open-air reverse Brayton cycle
and 2.3% for the closed-air reverse Brayton cycle.