Abstract

High temperature storage is a key factor for compensating the fluctuating energy supply of solar thermal power plants, and thus enables renewable base load power. In thermochemical energy storage, the thermal energy is stored as the reaction enthalpy of a chemically reversible gas-solid reaction. Metal oxides are suitable candidates for thermochemical energy storage for solar thermal power plants, due to their high reaction temperatures and use of oxygen as a gaseous reaction partner. However, it is crucial to extract both sensible and thermochemical energy at these elevated temperatures to boost the overall system efficiency. Therefore, this study focuses on the combined extraction of thermochemical and sensible energy from a metal oxide and its effects on thermal power and energy density during discharging. A counter-current moving bed, based on manganese-iron-oxide, was investigated with a transient, one-dimensional model using the finite element method. A nearly isothermal temperature distribution along the bed height was formed, as long as the gas flow did not exceed a tipping point. A maximal energy density of 933 kJ/kg was achieved, when ( Mn , Fe ) 3 O 4 was oxidized and cooled from 1050 ° C to 300 ° C . However, reaction kinetics can limit the thermal power and energy density. To avoid this drawback, a moving bed reactor based on the investigated manganese-iron oxide should combine direct and indirect heat transfer to overcome kinetic limitations.

Highlights

  • High temperature thermal energy storage is one key factor for further proliferation of concentrated solar power (CSP) plants

  • Since a heat transfer of sensible and thermochemical energy between metal oxide particles and a counter-current gas stream occurs, the moving bed can be divided into three sections: 1

  • A 1D moving bed simulation for thermochemical energy storage has been validated with experimental data of a packed bed reactor

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Summary

Introduction

High temperature thermal energy storage is one key factor for further proliferation of concentrated solar power (CSP) plants. Thermochemical energy storage is a promising option for thermal energy storage, next to latent or sensible energy storage. In this concept the reaction enthalpy of a reversible gas-solid reaction is utilized as thermal energy storage, which potentially enables loss-free energy storage in the form of the separated products and offers the advantage of high energy densities [1,2]. The endothermic reaction (charging phase) can be driven by concentrated solar thermal energy, while the exothermic reaction (discharging phase) recovers the stored thermochemical energy during hours of high energy demand or low solar irradiation. The separate storage of gas and solid for thermochemical energy storage systems involves complex gas handling, e.g., for the CaO/CO2 or CaO/H2O reaction systems

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