12 March 2015

Beyond the battery


GE has an article about the next thing in energy storage:
The ability to store great amounts of energy for later use has been a vexing and urgent issue. No mechanism, save for pumped-hydro technology, currently exists at scale to economically store large quantities of electricity for later use, according to the IEA. Cracking the code could infuse the market with tens of billions of dollars and boost the case for renewables.
US-based Gravity Power aims to overcome pumped-hydro’s topography and land-mass hurdles by sending everything underground. Its system, which links two water-filled underground shafts, involves pistons that then pump water to a turbine to generate power, with the reverse flow pushing the pistons and storing the energy. The firm hopes to build a demonstration plant in Germany this year.
Solar-powered molten salt storage is another developing route, especially those that employ “power towers” that use less molten salt and can be cheaper than parabolic troughs. The Crescent Dunes power tower project, north of Las Vegas, Nevada, for example, focuses sunlight to heat a mixture of sodium and potassium nitrate atop a six-hundred-foot tower. The molten salt can be used immediately to steam water and activate a turbine to create power, or it can be stored in insulated tanks for later use. The hope is to create and/or store five hundred GWh of energy annually: enough to power some forty thousand homes annually in the US and even more households in more energy-conservative areas. Falling solar PV costs could soon make solar-power molten storage directly competitive with fossil fuels, according to a Clean Technica interview with Paddy Padmanathan, head of Saudi Arabia’s ACWA Power.
In the battery realm, scientists are working to surmount the limitations of large lithium-ion batteries, which can overheat and short-circuit. Tesla and Panasonic are betting on smaller, networked li-ion batteries that are interwoven with liquid cooling systems. Meanwhile, Stanford University researchers are using carbon nanostructures to create the batteries with a stable, pure lithium anode. The nanostructures keep the lithium stable as it heats and expands during charging cycles. According to the scientists, they also enable a higher degree of efficiency over a larger number of charging cycles.
Used batteries from electric vehicles also are being given a try as part of the Second Life Batteries alliance among Bosch, BMW, and Swedish power company Vattenfall. A large-scale energy storage system is being built in Hamburg, Germany using rehabilitated BMW li-ion EV batteries.
Some researchers are bypassing batteries altogether: MIT researchers Joel E. Schindal and John Kassakian are growing carbon nanotubes on the interior surfaces of ultra-capacitors, which can store large amounts of electricity and release it in single bursts. Traditionally, ultra-capacitor storage has not been able to compete with conventional lithium-ion batteries. Researchers believe nanotubes could change that. Energy storage capacity could soon be supercharged.
Rico says it's like science fiction, come to life...

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