Optical characterization of heliostat facets based on Computational Optimization
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/94065Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Calvo Cruz, Nicolás; Monterreal, Rafael; López Redondo, Juana; Fernández Reche, Jesús; Enrique, Raúl; Martínez Ortigosa, PilarEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Solar power tower plants Optical characterization Computational Optimization
Fecha
2022-11-11Referencia bibliográfica
Cruz, N. C., Monterreal, R., Redondo, J. L., Fernández-Reche, J., Enrique, R., & Ortigosa, P. M. (2022). Optical characterization of heliostat facets based on Computational Optimization. Solar Energy, 248, 1-15.
Patrocinador
This work is part of the R&D project RTI2018-095993-B-I00, funded by MCIN/ AEI/10.13039/501100011033/ and ERDF (“A way to make Europe”). Part ot the research work of this article received ERDF funds from the Spanish government within the framework of the SOLTERMIN project (Ref. ENE2017-83973-R) of the Ministerio de Economía, Industria Competitividad (Spanish Ministry of Economy, Industry and Competitiveness). It has also been supported by the Andalusian Regional Government through the grant: “Proyectos de Excelencia” (P18-RT-1193), and the University of Almería through the grant: “Ayudas a proyectos de investigación I+D+I en el marco del Programa Operativo FEDER 2014-20” (UAL18-TIC-A020-B). N.C. Cruz is supported by the Ministry of Economic Transformation, Industry, Knowledge and Universities from the Andalusian government through the program “Plan Andaluz de Investigación, Desarrollo e Innovación (PAIDI 2021: POSTDOC 21_00124)”.Resumen
In solar power tower plants, knowing the optical quality of heliostats makes it possible to predict relevant information on the receiver surface, such as the irradiance concentration factor and spillage. However, there are no standardized routines for optical characterization in commercial facilities because the process is challenging, multidisciplinary, and time-demanding. This article revises the traditional optical characterization methodology followed at the Solar Platform of Almería (PSA). The process starts with the acquisition of the image of the studied optical system. After that, the picture must be fitted to an analytical model, which requires finding the variables that best reproduce the reality. The traditional method for accomplishing this task is iterative, semi-automatic, and contains trial-and-error components. This work studies how to replace this part with heuristic optimizers and considers using the state-of-the-art methods TLBO, UEGO, and Multi-Start Interior-Point (MSIP). Their effectiveness has been compared to the results manually achieved by an expert with three different heliostat facets. According to the results obtained, the parameter sets found by TLBO and UEGO outperform those obtained through the traditional method.