Abstract

The design, testing, and modelling of a high-temperature thermocline-type thermal energy storage (TES) are presented. The TES concept uses air as the heat-transfer fluid and combines sensible and latent heat for stabilizing the discharging outflow air temperature. A 42kWhth lab-scale prototype of 40cm diameter was fabricated, containing a 9cm high layer of encapsulated phase change material (AlSi12) on top of a 127cm high packed bed of sedimentary rocks with a mean diameter of about 3cm. A two-phase transient heat transfer model of the thermal storage cycle was numerically formulated and experimentally validated with measured thermoclines during charging and discharging obtained with the lab-scale prototype. The thermal inertia of the experimental setup and the radial variation of void fraction due to the small tank-to-particle diameter ratio affected the validation process. The outflow air temperature during discharging was stabilized around the melting temperature of AlSi12 of 575°C. The thermal losses stayed below 3.5% of the input energy for all the experimental runs.

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