Abstract

During phase change, phase change materials absorb or release latent heat at a nearly constant temperature. Latent heat thus can be stored and integrated with evaporation/condensation systems such as steam generators within a relatively narrow range of operating temperature. Storage units and systems have been proven at pilot scale but none to-date have been integrated in industrial processes. This remains a challenge, due to the size of the systems and to hurdles in design, permission and build. Here we integrate a megawatt-scale latent heat storage into a cogeneration power plant in Wellesweiler-Neunkirchen, Saarland, Germany. The storage produced superheated steam for at least 15 min at more than 300 °C at a mass flow rate of 8 tonnes per hour. This provided thermal power at 5.46 MW and results in 1.9 MWh thermal capacity. Our study demonstrates the feasibility of using latent heat storage in the industrial production of superheated steam.

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