Abstract

The thermal storage capability is an important asset of state-of-the-art concentrating solar power plants. The use of thermochemical materials, such as redox oxides, for hybrid sensible/thermochemical storage in solar power plants offers the potential for higher specific volume and mass storage capacity and as a consequence reduced levelized cost of electricity making such plants more competitive. For the techno-economic system analysis, three candidate redox materials were analyzed for their cost reduction potential: cobalt-based, manganese–iron–based, and perovskite-based oxide materials. As a reference process the use of inert commercial bauxite particles (sensible-only storage) was considered. A solar thermal power plant with a nominal power of 125 MWe and a storage capacity of 12 h was assumed for the analysis. For each storage material a plant layout was made, taking the specific thermophysical properties of the material into account. Based on this layout a particle break-even cost for the specific material was determined, at which levelized cost of electricity parity is achieved with the reference system. Cost factors mainly influenced by the material selection are storage cost and steam generator cost. The particle transport system cost has only a minor impact. The results show differences in the characteristics of the materials, for example, regarding the impact on storage size and cost and the steam generator cost. Regarding the economic potential of the candidate redox materials, the perovskite-based particles promise to have advantages, as they might be produced from inexpensive raw materials.

Highlights

  • The use of thermochemical energy storage (TCS) materials, such as redox pair oxides, for hybrid sensible/thermochemical storage in concentrated solar power (CSP) plants (Wong, 2011) can potentially reduce the levelized cost of electricity (LCOE) and make such plants more competitive

  • In the techno-economic system analysis three candidate redox materials were analyzed for their cost reduction potential: cobaltbased, manganese–iron–based, and perovskite-based oxide materials

  • These cases were compared to a reference process using inert bauxite particles

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The use of thermochemical energy storage (TCS) materials, such as redox pair oxides, for hybrid sensible/thermochemical storage in concentrated solar power (CSP) plants (Wong, 2011) can potentially reduce the levelized cost of electricity (LCOE) and make such plants more competitive. The Co3O4/CoO and (Mn0.75Fe0.25)3O4/ (Mn0.75Fe0.25)2O3 systems considered so far belong to the class of so-called stoichiometric (or phase change) redox oxides (Bulfin et al, 2017a) In such materials, all the cations of the multivalent metal are transformed from the higher to the lower oxidation state during reduction upon heating and vice versa during oxidation upon cooling, at distinct, reduction/oxidation equilibrium temperatures where “abrupt” oxygen release/ uptake takes place in a stoichiometric proportion accompanied by the respective weight loss/gain and endothermal/exothermal effects (Figures 4, 5). For the particular case selected in the present study for oxidation with air, δ 0.13

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