Abstract

High-temperature thermal energy storage is becoming more and more important as a key component in concentrating solar power systems and as an economically viable large-scale energy storage solution. Ceramics and natural rocks based packed beds are one of the attracting solutions. For application temperatures above 600 °C, radiation heat transfer becomes the dominant heat transfer phenomenon and it greatly influences the performance of thermal storage systems. Coatings with different thermal properties (mainly thermal emissivity and thermal conductivity) could be exploited to modify the effective thermal properties of packed beds. In this work, we present a methodology to account for the thermal effect of a coating layer applied over the pebbles of a packed bed. The influences on the packed bed effective thermal conductivity of several characteristics of the coating material, packed bed arrangement, and filler material are investigated. The results show that low emissivity coatings could reduce the effective thermal conductivity of a rock based packed bed of about 58%, with respect to a similar uncoated solution, already at 800 °C. A low emissivity coating could also limit the increase in the thermal effective conductivity from the cold to the hot zone of the storage. Coatings would have a higher influence when applied in packed beds with large size particles, relatively high thermal conductivity of the substrate and void fraction. The application of different coatings, with various thermo-physical properties, in different parts of the storage could modify the effective thermal conductivity distribution and enable a partial control of the thermocline degradation, increasing the storage thermal efficiency.

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