4.6 Article

Effect of additives on the cyclic thermal stability and thermal properties of sodium acetate trihydrate as a phase change material: An experimental study

Journal

SOLAR ENERGY
Volume 231, Issue -, Pages 473-483

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.solener.2021.11.079

Keywords

Sodium acetate trihydrate; Phase change materials; Thermal cycling stability; Supercooling degree

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Fund for Distinguished Young Scholars [51925604]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51806212]
  3. Major Science and Technology Projects of Inner Monggol Autonomous Region [2019ZD014]
  4. Next Generation Technologies for Efficient Storage and Quality Promotion of Low Grade Industrial Heat [DNL202017]

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This study investigated the effects of thickening agent CMC and nucleating agent DSP concentrations on the thermal properties of cPCMs, finding that high viscosity CMC helps maintain thermal cycle stability but leads to poor phase change behavior. Excessive use of CMC or DSP can reduce thermal stability and increase supercooling. Additionally, the viscosity of cPCMs irreversibly decays after several thermal cycles due to degradation and weakened entanglement, posing challenges for CMC in long thermal cycle environments.
As a low-cost and high-density heat storage material, sodium acetate trihydrate with sodium carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) as a thickening agent and disodium hydrogen phosphate dodecahydrate (DSP) as a nucleating agent has the advantages of good thermal cycle stability and low supercooling degree. However, the optimal concentration and mechanism of the additives are unclear. In this study, the effects of viscosity grades of CMC and additives (CMC and DSP) of different concentrations on the cyclic thermal stability, thermal properties and phase change behavior of cPCMs were examined. The results showed that CMC with a high viscosity has a remarkable ability to maintain the thermal cycle stability of the cPCMs. However, a poor phase change behavior (decreased latent heat and increased supercooling degree) was observed with high-viscosity CMC as the thickening agent. It was also observed that excessive use of CMC or DSP results in a poor thermal stability and high supercooling degree. In addition, the viscosity of the cPCMs decayed irreversibly after several thermal cycles because of the degradation and weakened entanglement, which challenges the ability of CMC to cope with long thermal cycle environments.

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