Influence of different adsorbates on the efficiency of thermochemical energy storage

ENERGY SCIENCE & ENGINEERING(2017)

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Abstract
The main influencing parameter on the efficiency of adsorptive thermochemical energy storage is the efficiency of the desorption process, which is influenced by the process conditions, for example, desorption time and desorption temperature, and the working pair (adsorbent-adsorbate). Due to constrained process requirements, for example, hours of sun shine and low desorption temperatures available from a flat plate solar collector (333-373K), the only possibility to increase the efficiency is to change the working pair. The reference working pair water-zeolite 13X needs high desorption temperatures of 500K and high heat inputs per mass adsorbent (1080kJkg(-1)) in the desorption process to reach the maximum efficiency of 79% and maximum energy density of 844kJkg(-1). Therefore, the goal is to reach efficiencies in the same range as the maximum efficiency of water-zeolite 13X for desorption temperatures lower than 500K with the usage of different adsorbates. Four systems of alcohol as adsorbate on activated carbon are compared with the reference working pair. The usage of alcohols on activated carbon allows for highly efficient adsorptive storage even at low desorption temperatures between 360 and 450K. The maximum efficiency is shifted to higher desorption temperatures with increasing carbon chain length of the alcohol. At low desorption temperatures, the energy density and efficiency of methanol, ethanol, and propanol are higher than the energy density of the reference system. Hence, the alcohol systems on activated carbon are viable alternative approaches for regulating these process parameters.
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Key words
Adsorption,efficiency,energy density,thermal energy storage
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