Mitigation of Renewable Energy Source Production Variability in Residential Stock through Small-Scale Gas–Liquid Energy Storage Technology Application
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Gas–Liquid Energy Storage Prototype and Measurement Setup
- Pre-charging phase: the nitrogen pressure is brought to an initial pre-pressurization value of 2.65 bar, acting on the inlet placed on the device head, then the oil is made to flow inside the cylinder until it reaches the desired final pressure value, determined via reference to three pressure ratio (CR) values: 1.5, 2, and 2.5. Each of them is obtained by varying the flow of the inlet oil through a knob present in the compensated flow regulator placed in cascade to the pump.
- Stabilization pause: after reaching the final pressure, a five-minute break is taken. This time is used to allow the values of the various measured quantities (such as pressure and temperature) to stabilize.
- Discharge phase: the discharge phase is started by opening the outflow valve. This phase is maintained until the initial value of oil contained inside the cylinder is reached, which is the same as before the charging phase (equal to 0.2 liters).
- Final Pause: after the discharging phase, a further pause of five minutes is taken to return all the values to the initial levels.
2.2. Thermodynamic Model
- Gas behaves like a perfect gas;
- The temperature of the external environment is constant;
- The thermophysical properties of the cylinder material are constant over time;
- The temperature gradient is zero for each element in each direction;
- Processes occur at a near-steady state.
2.3. PV-GLES Coupling for Building Application/Application of PV-GLES Coupling in a Case Study Building
3. Results
3.1. Experimental Results and Model Validation
3.2. Thermodynamic Performance
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
- The simulated temperature trend differences from experimental results should be reduced, particularly during the discharge phase. The charging phase shows a faster temperature rise, settling relatively close to real values but diverging by 13% at the compression end.
- Smaller variations occur in simulations, with a delay of about 10 s in reaching peak pressure during charging and returning to initial pressure during discharging due to the chosen temporal discretization step.
- Higher compression ratios (p*) led to a greater maximum temperature (Tmax) reached by the gas during pressure increase: the Tmax increased by 19% as p* triplicated.
- Simulations starting from the same pressure exhibited overlapping curves; however, starting from a higher pressure (curve B, 100 bar) meant that the maximum temperature was reached faster (20 s) and it took longer (38 s) to return to the initial volume.
- The gas–liquid storage units required to meet domestic needs were 175 (energy density (ED) of 1.4107 kWh/m3, volume 0.25 m3), requiring a surface area of 22.70 m2 for installation; the same storage capacity can be met by 50 lead–acid batteries (12 V, 200 Ah, commercial dimensions), for which must be reserved a total volume of 1.49 m3.
- The lower energy efficiency of the GLES system in comparison to electrochemical energy storage can be attributed to the pressure ramps that it operates within.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Nomenclature
Abbreviations | |
GLES | Gas–liquid energy storage |
RES | Renewable energy source |
CAES | Compressed-air energy storage |
GLIDES | Ground-Level Integrated Diverse Energy Storage |
ORNL | Oak Ridge National Laboratory |
PV | Photovoltaic array |
PV-GIS | Photovoltaic array –geographical information system |
Symbols | |
Mass flow rate [kg/s] | |
ED | Energy density [kWh/m3] |
Heat transfer coefficient [W/m2 K] | |
RTE | Roundtrip efficiency [-] |
Height [m] | |
Lcompr | Compression work [J] |
Lelect,in | Total electrical work required [J] |
Lelect,out | Total electrical work provided [J] |
Expansion work [J] | |
Temperature [K] | |
Maximum temperature [K] | |
Volume [m3] | |
Empty storage volume [m3] | |
Specific heat capacity [J/kg K] | |
Mass [kg] | |
Pressure [Pa] | |
p* | Compression ratio [-] |
Time [s] | |
Thermal transmittance [W/m2 K] | |
ηM−P | Motor–pump efficiency [-] |
ηT−G | Turbine–generator efficiency [-] |
ηind | Indicated efficiency [-] |
Subscripts | |
Average | |
Base | |
External | |
Gas | |
Internal | |
Oil | |
External environment | |
Piston | |
Real | |
Total | |
Simulated | |
Tank | |
At constant volume |
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Measurement | Probe | Measuring Range | Accuracy |
---|---|---|---|
Gas temperature | IFM TT1250 Pt1000 class A RTD Thermometer (Monza, Italy) | −40 °C–>150 °C | ±(0.15 K + 0.002|𝑇|) |
Gas temperature | IFM TP9237 amplifier for temperature probes (Monza, Italy) | −50 °C–>300 °C | ±0.4% |
Gas pressure | Fox TR41/M3 Pressure transducer (Milan, Italy) | 0–10 bar | <1% of full scale |
Gas pressure | AFRISO RF63GlyD701 Pressure gauge (Güglingen, Germany) | 0–>16 bar | Accuracy class 1.6 |
Gas volume (through length) | Siko SGH10 length transducer (Buchenbach, Germany) | 4–20 mA | |
Oil temperature | IFM TT1250 Pt1000 class A RTD Thermometer (Monza, Italy) | −40 °C–>150 °C | ±(0.15 K + 0.002|𝑇|) |
Parameter | |
---|---|
Oil mass. | moil |
Gas mass | mgas |
Inlet flow oil | in, oil |
Discharge oil flow rate | out, oil |
Pressure | Pgas |
Outdoor temperature | Tout |
Gas temperature | Tgas |
Oil temperature | Toil |
Tank temperature in contact with gas | Tgas, tank |
Tank temperature in contact with oil | Toil, tank |
Parameter | Final Pressure 4 Bar | Final Pressure 5.3 Bar | Final Pressure 6.6 Bar | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Charge Phase | Discharge Phase | Charge Phase | Discharge Phase | Charge Phase | Discharge Phase | |
Time (s) | 326.2 | 56 | 524.8 | 83.4 | 664 | 100.4 |
Initial pressure (bar) | 2.70 | 3.92 | 2.69 | 5.17 | 2.7 | 6.43 |
Final pressure (bar) | 4.00 | 2.61 | 5.31 | 2.61 | 6.62 | 2.61 |
Initial temperature (K) | 293.35 | 293.65 | 293.25 | 293.65 | 292.95 | 293.55 |
Final temperature (K) | 295.15 | 292.65 | 295.65 | 291.95 | 295.85 | 291.45 |
Initial volume (L) | 0.1 | 5.4 | 0.1 | 8.6 | 0.1 | 10.7 |
Final volume (L) | 5.4 | 0.1 | 8.6 | 0.1 | 10.7 | 0.1 |
Oil flow rate (L/min) | 1 | 5.3 | 1 | 5.3 | 1 | 5.3 |
RTE | 79.38% | 68.71% | 67.80% | |||
ED | 0.019 kWh/m3 | 0.035 kWh/m3 | 0.048 kWh/m3 |
Pmin [bar] | Pmax [bar] | L elect,in [J] | L elect,out [J] | RTE [kWh/m3] | ED [kWh/m3] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Measured | 70 | 130 | 5.81 × 103 | 4.05 × 103 | 0.6974 | 0.0547 |
Simulated | 5263.84 | 3569.36 | 0.6780 | 0.0480 |
ID | Pmin [Bar] | Pmax [Bar] | Lelect,in [J] | Lelect,in_kWh [kWh] | Lelect,out [J] | Lelect,out_kWh [kWh] | RTE [kWh/m3] | ED [kWh/m3] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Case 1 | 70 | 130 | 1.11 × 106 | 0.3088 | 7.56 × 105 | 0.2103 | 0.6808 | 0.8712 |
Case 2 | 70 | 100 | 6.16 × 105 | 0.1713 | 4.30 × 105 | 0.1195 | 0.6972 | 0.495 |
Case 3 | 100 | 130 | 6.18 × 105 | 0.1718 | 4.40 × 105 | 0.1224 | 0.712 | 0.507 |
Case 4 | 50 | 200 | 1.88 × 106 | 0.5237 | 1.22 × 106 | 0.3405 | 0.6501 | 1.4107 |
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Vallati, A.; Di Matteo, M.; Pompei, L.; Nardecchia, F.; Fiorini, C.V. Mitigation of Renewable Energy Source Production Variability in Residential Stock through Small-Scale Gas–Liquid Energy Storage Technology Application. Processes 2024, 12, 655. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr12040655
Vallati A, Di Matteo M, Pompei L, Nardecchia F, Fiorini CV. Mitigation of Renewable Energy Source Production Variability in Residential Stock through Small-Scale Gas–Liquid Energy Storage Technology Application. Processes. 2024; 12(4):655. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr12040655
Chicago/Turabian StyleVallati, Andrea, Miriam Di Matteo, Laura Pompei, Fabio Nardecchia, and Costanza Vittoria Fiorini. 2024. "Mitigation of Renewable Energy Source Production Variability in Residential Stock through Small-Scale Gas–Liquid Energy Storage Technology Application" Processes 12, no. 4: 655. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr12040655
APA StyleVallati, A., Di Matteo, M., Pompei, L., Nardecchia, F., & Fiorini, C. V. (2024). Mitigation of Renewable Energy Source Production Variability in Residential Stock through Small-Scale Gas–Liquid Energy Storage Technology Application. Processes, 12(4), 655. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr12040655