Abstract

The development of electricity storage solutions is crucial to support the integration of variable renewable electricity sources in electricity systems. This study experimentally characterizes a state-of-the-art full-scale electrical thermal energy storage (ETES) system in outdoor conditions. The system integrates a 600 kWhth high-temperature latent heat storage module and a 13 kWe Stirling engine. The heat storage module uses an 88Al12Si metallic alloy as the phase change material to store electricity converted to thermal energy by a resistive heater in charging mode. The Stirling engine uses hydrogen as the working fluid for re-electrification (discharging). The system uses liquid sodium as the heat transfer fluid between the latent heat storage module and both the charging (electrical heater) and discharging (engine) sub-systems. Over the characterization period, the ETES prototype produced stable electricity at an average rate of 10.5 ± 1 kW for 13 consecutive hours daily with overall and power block first-law efficiencies of 23 % and 25 %, respectively. The effective storage utilization ratio varied between 0.58 and 0.94 depending on the discharge parameters. The response time was <5 s for output power regulation. The results highlight the potential of this latent heat thermal energy storage system to satisfy long-duration electricity storage applications and therefore contribute to the stabilization of electricity grids.

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