Alapfogalmak
Thermal energy storage systems, such as using vertical tanks filled with salt, have significant limitations in their ability to efficiently convert stored heat into usable electricity, with average round-trip efficiencies of only around 10%.
Kivonat
The article discusses the limitations and inefficiencies of using thermal energy storage systems, such as vertical tanks filled with salt, to store heat and then convert it back into electricity. The author provides a detailed analysis of the underlying thermodynamics and the practical challenges involved.
Key highlights:
- Using Carnot's formula, the theoretical maximum efficiency of converting the stored heat into electricity in a 20°C environment is only 62%. The rest is lost as waste heat.
- As the thermal storage medium cools down during discharge, the temperature difference between the storage and the environment decreases, leading to a further drop in efficiency. At 30°C, the efficiency can be as low as 3%.
- Accounting for real-world energy losses during conversion and power generation, the average round-trip efficiency of such a thermal energy storage system is estimated to be around 10%, resulting in a 90% energy loss.
- The author argues that this poor efficiency is one of the reasons why concentrated solar power stations, like the Ivanpah Solar Power Facility, have failed to become a viable solution to the energy predicament.
- The author also discusses the broader context of the increasing energy cost of energy, where the efficiency of the entire industrial civilization is declining as the fossil fuel industry taps into lower-quality reserves.
- The author suggests that thermal storage could be more practical for residential and small-scale commercial use, such as for heating, hot water, or process heat, but not for large-scale electricity generation.
Statisztikák
Theoretical maximum efficiency of converting stored heat into electricity in a 20°C environment: 62%
Efficiency at 250°C inner temperature: 44%
Efficiency at 30°C inner temperature: 3%
Estimated average round-trip efficiency of a thermal energy storage system: 10%
Idézetek
"Without going too much into the details, the limiting factors of such a system are the temperature at which the heat enters the engine, and the temperature of the environment into which the engine exhausts its waste heat."
"Adding insult to injury heat also tends to dissipate during storage, or the time spent between "loading" the heat battery and "discharging" it. (Oh, that damned second law of thermodynamics, again…)"
"Folks, we are talking about a 90% energy loss here... How come this "idea" hasn't received a Nobel-prize yet…?"