Pumped Thermal Energy Storage System for Trigeneration: The Concept of Power to XYZ

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Abstract

The objective of this investigation is to present a novel concept for the optimum exploitation of volatile electricity from renewable energy sources. The idea of the Carnot battery is extended to a general concept for trigeneration which can be called “power to XYZ”. This idea is applied for the building sector where there are needs for cooling production, space-heating production/domestic hot water production and electricity. More specifically, volatile electricity feeds a multi-stage heat pump that produces cold storage at 0◦C for cooling, medium heating storage at 50◦C for space heating and high thermal storage at around 115◦C for future utilization in an organic Rankine cycle for electricity production. The storage is performed in three different temperature levels, with latent storage proposed for proper long-term and efficient storage. The use of ice is suggested especially for cold storage in order to make the design a cost-effective one. This work is a theoretical preliminary thermodynamic analysis performed with a model created in Engineering Equation Solver. The results indicate the system’s maximum exergy efficiency is found at 45.28%, while the respective energy efficiency is found at 322.16%. Moreover, this work includes parametric studies and calculations about the operating margins of the suggested system.

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APA

Bellos, E., Lykas, P., & Tzivanidis, C. (2022). Pumped Thermal Energy Storage System for Trigeneration: The Concept of Power to XYZ. Applied Sciences (Switzerland), 12(3). https://doi.org/10.3390/app12030970

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