Thermo-Electric Energy Storage with Solar Heat Integration: Exergy and Exergo-Economic Analysis

A Thermo-Electric Energy Storage (TEES) system is proposed to provide peak-load support (1⁻2 daily hours of operation) for distributed users using small/medium-size photovoltaic systems (4 to 50 kWe). The purpose is to complement the PV with a reliable storage system that cancompensate the...

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Main Authors: Daniele Fiaschi, Giampaolo Manfrida, Karolina Petela, Lorenzo Talluri
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-02-01
Series:Energies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/12/4/648
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spelling doaj-7c0ae1b02d5d4c348475eea408934dae2020-11-25T01:06:41ZengMDPI AGEnergies1996-10732019-02-0112464810.3390/en12040648en12040648Thermo-Electric Energy Storage with Solar Heat Integration: Exergy and Exergo-Economic AnalysisDaniele Fiaschi0Giampaolo Manfrida1Karolina Petela2Lorenzo Talluri3Department of Industrial Engineering, Università degli Studi di Firenze, Florence, ItalyDepartment of Industrial Engineering, Università degli Studi di Firenze, Florence, ItalyInstitute of Thermal Technology, Silesian University of Technology, Gliwice, PolandDepartment of Industrial Engineering, Università degli Studi di Firenze, Florence, ItalyA Thermo-Electric Energy Storage (TEES) system is proposed to provide peak-load support (1&#8315;2 daily hours of operation) for distributed users using small/medium-size photovoltaic systems (4 to 50 kWe). The purpose is to complement the PV with a reliable storage system that cancompensate the produc tivity/load mismatch, aiming at off-grid operation. The proposed TEES applies sensible heat storage, using insulated warm-water reservoirs at 120/160 &#176;C, and cold storage at &#8722;10/&#8722;20 &#176;C (water and ethylene glycol). The power cycle is a trans-critical CO<sub>2</sub> unit including recuperation; in the storage mode, a supercritical heat pump restores heat to the hot reservoir, while a cooling cycle cools the cold reservoir; both the heat pump and cooling cycle operate on photovoltaic (PV) energy, and benefit from solar heat integration at low&#8315;medium temperatures (80&#8315;120 &#176;C). This allows the achievement of a marginal round-trip efficiency (electric-to-electric) in the range of 50% (not considering solar heat integration).The TEES system is analysed with different resource conditions and parameters settings (hot storage temperature, pressure levels for all cycles, ambient temperature, etc.), making reference to standard days of each month of the year; exergy and exergo-economic analyses are performed to identify the critical items in the complete system and the cost of stored electricity.https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/12/4/648energy storagethermo-electricsupercritical CO<sub>2</sub>solar energy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniele Fiaschi
Giampaolo Manfrida
Karolina Petela
Lorenzo Talluri
spellingShingle Daniele Fiaschi
Giampaolo Manfrida
Karolina Petela
Lorenzo Talluri
Thermo-Electric Energy Storage with Solar Heat Integration: Exergy and Exergo-Economic Analysis
Energies
energy storage
thermo-electric
supercritical CO<sub>2</sub>
solar energy
author_facet Daniele Fiaschi
Giampaolo Manfrida
Karolina Petela
Lorenzo Talluri
author_sort Daniele Fiaschi
title Thermo-Electric Energy Storage with Solar Heat Integration: Exergy and Exergo-Economic Analysis
title_short Thermo-Electric Energy Storage with Solar Heat Integration: Exergy and Exergo-Economic Analysis
title_full Thermo-Electric Energy Storage with Solar Heat Integration: Exergy and Exergo-Economic Analysis
title_fullStr Thermo-Electric Energy Storage with Solar Heat Integration: Exergy and Exergo-Economic Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Thermo-Electric Energy Storage with Solar Heat Integration: Exergy and Exergo-Economic Analysis
title_sort thermo-electric energy storage with solar heat integration: exergy and exergo-economic analysis
publisher MDPI AG
series Energies
issn 1996-1073
publishDate 2019-02-01
description A Thermo-Electric Energy Storage (TEES) system is proposed to provide peak-load support (1&#8315;2 daily hours of operation) for distributed users using small/medium-size photovoltaic systems (4 to 50 kWe). The purpose is to complement the PV with a reliable storage system that cancompensate the produc tivity/load mismatch, aiming at off-grid operation. The proposed TEES applies sensible heat storage, using insulated warm-water reservoirs at 120/160 &#176;C, and cold storage at &#8722;10/&#8722;20 &#176;C (water and ethylene glycol). The power cycle is a trans-critical CO<sub>2</sub> unit including recuperation; in the storage mode, a supercritical heat pump restores heat to the hot reservoir, while a cooling cycle cools the cold reservoir; both the heat pump and cooling cycle operate on photovoltaic (PV) energy, and benefit from solar heat integration at low&#8315;medium temperatures (80&#8315;120 &#176;C). This allows the achievement of a marginal round-trip efficiency (electric-to-electric) in the range of 50% (not considering solar heat integration).The TEES system is analysed with different resource conditions and parameters settings (hot storage temperature, pressure levels for all cycles, ambient temperature, etc.), making reference to standard days of each month of the year; exergy and exergo-economic analyses are performed to identify the critical items in the complete system and the cost of stored electricity.
topic energy storage
thermo-electric
supercritical CO<sub>2</sub>
solar energy
url https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/12/4/648
work_keys_str_mv AT danielefiaschi thermoelectricenergystoragewithsolarheatintegrationexergyandexergoeconomicanalysis
AT giampaolomanfrida thermoelectricenergystoragewithsolarheatintegrationexergyandexergoeconomicanalysis
AT karolinapetela thermoelectricenergystoragewithsolarheatintegrationexergyandexergoeconomicanalysis
AT lorenzotalluri thermoelectricenergystoragewithsolarheatintegrationexergyandexergoeconomicanalysis
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