They’re not
batteries, they’re not thermal storage systems, but they still store energy.
Friday, August 30, 2013
Hawaii Energy Storage 8: The fascinating world of phase change materials
You haven't
heard much about phase change materials. You will. Phase change materials are a range of
compounds that have a huge energy signature when they change forms, or change
phase, from liquid to solid or solid to liquid.
A common
example is ice in a cooler. As long as ice is melting, it is absorbing heat
from the beer and the outside of the cooler, and it keeps the temperature of
everything around freezing. The temperature stays stable as long as the ice is
changing phase and turning into water. Once the ice is gone and the melting
process stops, the stuff in the cooler warms up.
You can
develop materials that change phase at almost any temperature, and they work
both ways--they can keep things cold, or alternatively, can keep things hot.
Japanese researchers
at a recent energy storage conference said they are studying phase change
materials to keep bentos hot. In this application, the materials changes from
liquid to solid at the assigned temperature. As the food starts to cool, the
phase change starts, the liquid changes to solid, and the process throws off
heat. As a result, your bento stays at the assigned temperature and can't get
cold.
You have
heard of lithium ion batteries in laptops and Boeing jets that heat and even
explode. You’ve felt your cell phone battery heat up. One researcher said a
phase change material blanket could automatically a begin liquefying when a
battery heats up, thus keeping it cool and preventing the explosion.
Researchers
said you can dramatically increase the capacity of a home water heater by
inserting rods with phase change materials inside. The phase change material
stores a great deal of energy, and releases it as it changes phase. In this
application, as the water temperature drops when you take a shower, the phase
change material—presumably inside pipes in the water heater--begins
solidifying, releasing heat into the water, without having to turn on the electric
coils.
This means
you could charge up a water heater when power is plentiful and cheap, and it
could produce far more hot water for longer than standard water heaters of the
same size.
I talked to a
man whose company uses phase change materials to keep medical supplies cold for
a week while they are being delivered to the military or third world countries.
A New Zealand
researcher is mixing phase change compounds into drywall, keeping a house from
getting too warm in summer or too cold in winter--without having to use
electricity. It basically makes half inch drywall act like a thick concrete
wall.
A German
researcher talked about designing a modern supermarket to reduce lighting loads
and improve cooling loads. They build icemakers into their big coolers to
buffer their temperatures, and so they can turn off the power during times of
high-cost power and still keep food cold. On stormy nights, when German
windfarms produce more power than there is load, the price of electricity to
supermarkets goes negative; they are paid to take power—they make ice with it.
When power
rates go up, they can use the phase-change characteristics of the ice to keep
the food cold without buying expensive electricity.
Next:
Wrapping up energy storage
© Jan
TenBruggencate 2013
Posted by Jan T at 7:23 AM
Labels: Conservation, Energy, Physics, Solar, technology
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