Publication | Open Access
Development of Solid Particle Thermal Energy Storage for Concentrating Solar Power Plants that Use Fluidized Bed Technology
66
Citations
6
References
2014
Year
EngineeringEnergy EfficiencyEnergy ConversionEnergy RecoveryThermal Energy StorageEfficiency MetricsPhotovoltaicsEnergy Storage MaterialsChemical EngineeringStorage SystemsRenewable Energy StorageEnergy Storage DeviceSolar Thermal EnergyMaterials ScienceElectrical EngineeringSolar PowerEnergy StorageEnergy Storage SystemHeat TransferSolar CoolingHigh Temperature MaterialsThermal EngineeringHigh TemperatureEnergy Conversion MaterialsSolid Particles
The National Renewable Energy Laboratory is developing a thermal energy storage (TES) system that uses solid particles as the storage medium for a concentrating solar power plant. This paper focuses on the particle-TES performance in terms of three efficiency metrics: first-law efficiency, second-law efficiency, and storage effectiveness. The paper presents the derivation of the efficiency expression and their application in assessing the particle-TES performance and design. The particle-TES system uses low-cost stable materials that withstand high temperature at a fraction of the cost of the salt and metal containment vessels for high-temperature TES. Cost analysis indicates that particle TES costs less than $10/kWhth, which is less than half the cost of the current molten-salt-based TES and just a fraction of liquid heat transfer fluid storage at a similar high temperature of >700 °C, due to its low cost of storage medium and containment. The fluidized-bed TES can hold hot particles of > 800 °C with >95% exergetic efficiency, storage effectiveness, and thermal efficiency.
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