Using parabolic trough solar collectors as a means of renewable electricity generation is
increasing. However a main barrier to significant adoption lies in the initial investment cost. In
light of this, much work has been invested into improving efficiency or reducing the materials
required for construction. These two objectives tend to compete against each other when
considering the wind load on a collector. This work implements an optimisation work flow
utilising Kriging surrogate models to investigate the impact of gap sizes on both the optical
efficiency and wind loading on a trough collector. It is found that the introduction of a mirror
gap does appear to have a positive influence, both on the rotation moment fluctuations and lift
loads. However, the exact quantification of this impact could not be determined. The ordinary
Kriging models used in this work, appeared to be insufficient to capture the full model with
the given number of test points. It is recommended from this work that in future a more
complex universial Kriging methodology be used for such problems and more test points
formed potentially using a more simple simulation. The implemented NSGA-II multi-objective
optimisation algorithm does appear to provide suitable results based on the Kriging models
from which its objective evaluations are calculated. The final Pareto front mostly maximises
both the horizontal gap and vertical gap, although does enter into the domain for a horizontal
gap of roughly 0.215.
«
Using parabolic trough solar collectors as a means of renewable electricity generation is
increasing. However a main barrier to significant adoption lies in the initial investment cost. In
light of this, much work has been invested into improving efficiency or reducing the materials
required for construction. These two objectives tend to compete against each other when
considering the wind load on a collector. This work implements an optimisation work flow
utilising Kriging surrogate models...
»