Abstract
A gaseous flow is employed as heat transfer fluid (HTF) in a parabolic trough solar collector (PTSC) for simultaneous production of cooling at three different levels of temperature to meet the demands of air conditioning, refrigeration, and ultra-low-temperature refrigeration required to ensure the efficacy of some special vaccines. The combined system consists of five subsystems including PTSC, Kalina cycle (KC), ejector refrigeration cycle (ERC), cascaded refrigeration cycle (CRC), and absorption refrigeration cycle (ARC). A simulation through an engineering equation solver (EES) is conducted to assess the impact of internal tube diameter of absorber and solar irradiation on rise of HTF temperature and mass flowrate of Kalina cycle fluid. It is determined that for given solar irradiation, the temperature of HTF goes down when internal diameter of absorber tube is enlarged. The influence of weather conditions; solar irradiation and ambient temperature, type of HTF, and concentration of ammonia–water basic solution on thermal and exergy efficiencies of three-stage cooling cycle (TSC) are examined. The TSC with helium-operated PTSC delivers better results than air and CO2. Exergy analysis shows that solar collector (30.26%) dissipates the highest exergy, followed by the ejector (12.5%) and vapor generator subsystem (7.61%). The type of CRC fluid pair affects TSC cycle refrigeration capacity and cooling exergy efficiency. The promotion of solar irradiation from 850 to 1200 W/m2 increases the cooling exergy efficiency of the three-stage cycle from 6.72% to 9.52% when the evaporator temperature is set at −45 °C and CRC employs NH3-propylene.