heat pipes have a significant problem at temps over 700 F.
Back in 1990 , there was a replacement heat pipe airheater supplied in Maryland. Max fluegas temp = 750 F. The boiler started up after the new air heater was installed . Immediately after startup, the control room operator heard pop - pop- pop etc. The end caps of the individual heat pipe tubes were shot off the tubes like cannon shells, penetrated the casing of the boiler, flying around the plant. The plant was shut down pronto.
It seems the japanes mfr of the heat pipe tubes told the US boiler mfr ( in japanese notes) that these tubes contain water plus a corrosion inhibitor. The inhibitor breaks down to a series of child molecules above 700 F, yielding many more moles of vapor than originally expected, and a mcu higher heat pipe pressure. Unfortunately, the US boiler mfr does not read japanese. The pressure in the heat pipe tubes increased to 2-3 times the original design pressure, and the endcaps failed.
The ASME code then changed it rules, requiring each heat pipe tube to a have a relief valve or burst disk if used in section I or VIII service. That basically ended the US market for heat pipes.
Using a heat pipe results in a "indirect heat exchanger " arrangement, and the effectiveness of this is the product of the effectiveness of teh 2 sections. So if each section is 80% effective, the global effectiveness is 81%. So it is better in HRSG applications to use a direct heat exchanger using steam . Better cycle efficiency can be had if you use a ammonia water mixgture ( Kalina cycle), but it costs big bucks.