4.5 Article

Calcium hydride with aluminium for thermochemical energy storage applications

Journal

SUSTAINABLE ENERGY & FUELS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d3se01122d

Keywords

-

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Thermochemical energy storage has the potential to enable large-scale storage of renewable energy by integrating with power production facilities. The use of metal hydrides, particularly calcium hydride with the addition of aluminium, allows for lower operating temperatures and excellent working conditions for thermal energy storage.
Thermochemical energy storage has the potential to unlock large-scale storage of renewable energy sources by integrating with power production facilities. Metal hydrides have high thermochemical energy storage densities through reversible hydrogenation. Particularly, calcium hydride presents remarkable properties to integrate with high-temperature systems. The addition of aluminium to calcium hydride enables lower operating temperatures below 700 degrees C. The CaH2-2Al system reacts through a two-step reaction mechanism, which was verified via in situ powder diffraction analysis. The thermodynamics of dehydrogenation have been determined for both dehydrogenation steps with step 1 having a Delta Hdes = 79 +/- 3 kJ mol-1 and Delta Sdes = 113 +/- 4 J mol-1 K-1, while step 2 has a Delta Hdes = 99 +/- 4 kJ mol-1 and Delta Sdes = 128 +/- 5 J mol-1 K-1. The reaction kinetics for both steps were determined using the Kissinger method from DSC-TGA data to be 138 +/- 12 kJ mol-1 and 98 +/- 8 kJ mol-1 for step 1 and 2, respectively. Reversible hydrogenation over step 2, for 66 cycles at 670 degrees C under 20 bar of H2, determined the sorption capacity to be stable at 91% of the theoretical maximum of 1.1 wt% H2. A materials-based cost analysis evaluates the system at 9.2 US$ per kW hth, with an energy density of 1031 kJ kg-1. Addition of aluminium to calcium hydride delivers excellent operating conditions for utilisation as a thermal energy storage material.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available