4.4 Article

Ultra-High Temperature Thermal Conductivity Measurements of a Reactive Magnesium Manganese Oxide Porous Bed Using a Transient Hot Wire Method

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Publisher

ASME
DOI: 10.1115/1.4052081

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Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) under the Solar Energy Technology Office [DE-EE0008992]
  2. United States Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) [DE-AR0000991]

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The research found that pelletized magnesium manganese oxide has promising potential for high temperature thermochemical energy storage, with the effective thermal conductivity increasing with temperature. The proposed dual porosity model expresses the effective thermal conductivity as a function of temperature, taking into account radiation heat transfer effects.
Pelletized magnesium manganese oxide shows promise for high temperature thermochemical energy storage. It can be thermally reduced in the temperature range between 1250 degrees C and 1500 degrees C and re-oxidized with air at typical gas-turbine inlet pressures (1-25 bar) in the temperature range between 600 degrees C and 1500 degrees C. The combined thermal and chemical volumetric energy density is approximately 2300 MJ/m(3). The rate at which a thermochemical storage module can be charged is limited by heat transfer inside the solid packed bed. Hence, the effective thermal conductivity of packed beds of magnesium-manganese oxide pellets is a crucial parameter for engineering Mg-Mn-O redox storage devices. We have measured the effective thermal conductivity of a packed bed of 3.66 +/- 0.516 mm sized magnesium manganese oxide (Mn to Mg molar ratio of 1:1) pellets in the temperature range of 300-1400 degrees C. Since the material is electrically conductive at temperatures above 600 degrees C, the sheathed transient hot wire method is used for measurements. Raw data is analyzed using the Blackwell solution to extract the bed thermal conductivity. The effective thermal conductivity standard deviation is less than 10% for a minimum of three repeat measurements at each temperature. Experimental results show an increase in the effective thermal conductivity with temperature from 0.50 W/m degrees C around 300 degrees C to 1.81 W/m degrees C close to 1400 degrees C. We propose a dual porosity model to express the effective thermal conductivity as a function of temperature. This model also considers the effect of radiation within the bed, as this is the dominant heat transfer mode at high temperatures. The proposed model accounts for microscale pellet porosity, macroscale bed porosity, pellet size, solid thermal conductivity (phonon transport), and radiation (photon transport). The coefficient of determination between the proposed model and the experimental results is greater than 0.90.

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