NREL will lead the project to develop Economic Long-Duration Electricity Storage by Using Low-Cost Thermal Energy Storage (ENDURING).
As NREL Principal Investigator Zhiwen Ma explains, "When electric power is cheapest, electric heaters will ‘charge' the storage modules by heating stable, inexpensive solid particles to more than 1,100 degrees Celsius. And when it's time to discharge this energy, the hot particles will move through a heat exchanger to heat a working fluid that drives a high-efficiency closed-Brayton combined cycle attached to an electric generator."
The project team includes scientists, engineers, and professors from NREL; GE Global Research; Greenway Energy; Allied Mineral Products, Inc.; Purdue University; Colorado School of Mines; and Power Engineers. This NREL-led team will develop the components for the Long-Duration Energy Storage (LDES) system and will verify that it meets specified cost and performance targets for demonstration and commercialization.
NREL received this competitive award from ARPA-E's Duration Addition to electricitY Storage (DAYS) program, in which teams will develop energy storage systems to provide reliable, affordable power to the electric grid. NREL's proposed system will focus on scalability. For example, a 55-GWh thermal storage system is enough to power 50,000 homes for 100 hours during an outage. This scalability would not only support the DAYS goals but could also help enhance grid resilience and promote the growth of domestic energy sources.
NREL is the U.S. Department of Energy's primary national laboratory for renewable energy and energy efficiency research and development. NREL is operated for the Energy Department by The Alliance for Sustainable Energy, LLC.
Information provided by NREL