scholarly journals An Innovative Calcium Looping Process as Energy Storage System Integrated With a Solar-Powered Supercritical CO2 Brayton Cycle

2021 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
Author(s):  
Salvatore F. Cannone ◽  
Andrea Lanzini ◽  
Stefano Stendardo

Coupling solar thermal energy with the hybrid TC/CG-ES (thermochemical/compressed gas energy storage) is a breakthrough option used to overcome the main challenge of solar energy, i.e., intermittent resource and low density. This paper proposes an innovative storage system that improves the competitiveness of solar thermal energy technologies compared to conventional fossil-based power plants, potentially leading to deep decarbonization of the energy and industrial sectors. This study uses thermochemical energy storage based on the calcium looping (CaL) process and takes advantage of a number of factors: high energy density (2 GJ/m3), absence of heat loss (seasonal storage), high operation temperature (high efficiency of the power plant), and use of cheap and environmentally friendly reactant feedstock (CaO/CaCO3). This work deals with the integration of the solar CaL storage system with an unconventional supercritical CO2 (s-CO2) Brayton cycle. We analyze different s-CO2 Brayton cycle layouts suitable for direct integration with the storage system. Energy integration via pinch analysis methodology is applied to the whole system to optimize the internal heat recovery and increase the efficiency of the system. A parametric study highlights how the integration of solar CaL with an intercooling Brayton cycle shows better results than the combination with the Rankine cycle that we investigated previously, resulting in net and global system efficiencies equal to 39.5 and 51.5%. Instead, the new calculated net and global system efficiencies are 44.4 and 57.0%, respectively, for TC-CG-ES coupled with the Brayton power cycle.

2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (25) ◽  
pp. 15042-15047 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhihang Wang ◽  
Raul Losantos ◽  
Diego Sampedro ◽  
Masa-aki Morikawa ◽  
Karl Börjesson ◽  
...  

Molecules capable of reversible storage of solar energy have recently attracted increasing interest. Here, a liquid azobenzene molecule has been studied for solar thermal energy storage applications and integrated into flow-chemistry devices.


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