That, of course, is the energy storage system that will store cheap solar
power cheaply, deliver It efficiently, use non-toxic materials, and keep
working long enough to make economic sense.
For Hawai`i, it’s the battery that turns solar and wind
power into firm power, and it may be the ultimate key to getting to 100 percent
renewable energy in the Islands.
Existing batteries haven’t gotten us there.
The old standby
lead-acid has its applications, but it’s not cheap, the lead toxicity is an issue,
and while your solar panel might last 20 years, a lead-acid battery is lucky to
last a third of that in daily cycling.
Lithium-ion is interesting, and last many more cycles, but
it’s still not cheap.
Lithium-air has tantalizing qualities—it’s very energy
dense—but they’re having trouble getting it to survive enough cycles to be
economically feasible. It’s discussed deep in this article in The Economist.
Here’s a report from the blog The Engineering Economist on a
graphene battery that may be running on nothing but the heat in the room. If
you read the article, you’ll see that there are still some questions about it,
but it’s an intriguing concept.
There has been lots of discussion of heat-based energy
storage. Most of it, though, has involved converting the stored heat (in molten
salts or rock) into electricity with old-school steam engines. And thus far,
the economics haven’t been great.
But researchers are working on it, and hard. One team has
developed what it hopes will be a cheap form of energy storage using a heat
transfer mechanism that doesn’t uses a steam engine. Rather, it stores heat in
crushed rock surrounded by argon gas. As the argon moves between a hot chamber
and a cold chamber, it runs through a pump hooked up to a generator.
In this article in The Economist, engineer Jonathan Howes
figures he can store and then generate energy at less than five cents per
kilowatt-hour. They call their system Pumped Heat Electrical Storage (PHES),
and their company is Isentropic.
Of course, they haven’t built the thing yet.
Nature magazine wrote last month about Michael Aziz and his
cheap quinone battery, a flow battery. It shows great promise, although it’s
still in testing and has some toxicity problems. I’ve met Aziz, and his work is
taken very seriously by his colleagues in the field.
There’s lots going on in energy storage technology.
The breakthrough, as they say, is just around the corner.
The breakthrough, as they say, is just around the corner.
But nobody’s predicting just when we get to that corner.
© Jan TenBruggencate 2014
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