Showing posts with label energy storage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label energy storage. Show all posts

Friday, July 22, 2022

boron nitride hydrogen storage


boron nitride hydrogen storage


Making oil refineries greener

It is not just future fuels that this technology can help deliver. Currently, oil refineries use a process called "cryogenic distillation" to separate crude oil components such as petrol and cooking gas. This is an energy-intensive process that accounts for about 15 percent of global energy demand. 

The researchers are confident that their powder-based gas separation is effective even for crude oil components. Under test conditions, their setup required 76.8 KJ/s of energy to separate and store 1000L of gases. This is a 90 percent reduction in the amount of energy being currently spent on 'cryogenic distillation', the press release claims. 

So far, the research team has only attempted to use its method to separate a few liters of gases at a time. They now plan to test the technology at scale. 

The findings of their research were published in the journal Materials Today.

Abstract:
Light hydrocarbon olefin and paraffin gas mixtures are produced during natural gas or petrochemical processing. The petrochemical industry separates hydrocarbon gas mixtures by using an energy-intensive cryogenic distillation process, which accounts for 15% of global energy consumption [1]. The development of a new energy-saving separation process is needed to reduce the energy consumption. In this research, we develop a green and low energy mechanochemical separation process in which boron nitride (BN) powders were ball milled at room temperature in the atmosphere of an alkyne or olefin and paraffin mixture gas. BN selectively adsorbs a much greater quantity of alkyne and olefin gas over paraffin gases, and thus the paraffin gas is purified after the ball milling process. The adsorbed olefin gas can be recovered from the BN via a low-temperature heating process. The mechanochemical process produces extremely high uptake capacities of alkyne and olefin gases in the BN (708 cm3/g for acetylene (C2H2) and 1048 cm3/g for ethylene (C2H4)) respectively. To the best of our knowledge, assisted by ball milling, BN nanosheets have achieved the highest uptake capacities for alkyne/olefin gases, which are superior to all other materials reported so far. Chemical analysis reveals that large amounts of olefin gases were quasi-chemically adsorbed on the in-situ formed BN nanosheets via C–N bond formation, whereas small amount of paraffin gases was physically adsorbed on BN nanoparticles. This scalable mechanochemical process has great potential as an industrial separation method and can realize substantial energy savings. 

Friday, April 8, 2022

DIY Safe Hydrogen Storage



How to make graphitic carbon nitride from Urea and Table sugar in a Kiln. to 200C to dry and react at 550C.

Stores 10% by weight hydrogen.  And needs 300C to release gas. I assume to capture gas as well.




Monday, October 5, 2020

A Demonstration Battery Energy Storage System in Poland is Now Operational

The focus of the system is dubbed a hybrid battery energy storage system (BESS). The system, which combines high-output lithium-ion batteries with high-capacity lead-acid storage batteries, is charged with a wind farm. The Combined capacity is 6 MW.

Highlights and a link to the press release are below.

TOKYO, Oct 2, 2020 - (JCN Newswire) - New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO) and its project partners Hitachi, Ltd. (Hitachi), Showa Denko Materials Co., Ltd. (Showa Denko Materials) and Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (SMBC) announced today that the Smart Grid Demonstration Project in Poland, aimed at the expansion of renewable energy with a hybrid battery energy storage system (BESS) located at the Bystra Wind Farm in northern Poland reached monitoring phase in June and full-scale demonstrative operation phase on Sept. 25.

...

This hybrid BESS is Poland's largest-scale battery energy storage system, which combines high-output lithium-ion batteries with high-capacity lead-acid storage batteries, a combination to obtain high performance at low cost. The test operation will validate and prove the effectiveness of the functionality for alleviating short-term fluctuations in wind power generation and for providing necessary reserve power for adjusting demand-supply balance (load balancing).

...

The hybrid BESS introduced in this demonstration project consists of high-output lithium-ion batteries (1 MW-0.47 MWh) and high-capacity lead-acid storage batteries (5 MW-26.9 MWh) manufactured by Showa Denko Materials, the BESS-DCS (Distribution Control System) manufactured by Hitachi, which allows hybrid control of these two types of storage batteries, and the PCS (Power Conversion System), a 6 MW power converter manufactured by Hitachi ABB Power Grids Ltd. The system is the largest-scale storage battery system in Poland, offering a high level of performance at low cost.

 

Poland's Largest Hybrid Battery Energy Storage System Commence Full-scale Technology Demonstration
https://www.benzinga.com/pressreleases/20/10/a17776951/polands-largest-hybrid-battery-energy-storage-system-commence-full-scale-technology-demonstration
Oct 4, 2020

 

Saturday, June 6, 2020

Gravitricity - fast, long-life energy storage





https://www.gravitricity.com/



As the world generates more and more electricity from intermittent renewable energy sources, there is a growing need for technologies which can capture and store energy during periods of low demand and release it rapidly when required.



At Gravitricity is developing a novel storage technology which offers some of the best characteristics of lithium batteries and pumped storage.



Ideally suited to network-constrained users and operators, distribution networks and major power users, the technology operates in the 1MW to 20 MW power range and enables existing grid infrastructure to go further in a renewable energy world.



Technology



Patented technology is based on a simple principle: raising and lowering a heavy weight to store and release energy. The Gravitricity system suspends weights of 500 - 5000 tonnes in a deep shaft by a number of cables, each of which is engaged with a winch capable of lifting its share of the weight. Electrical power is then absorbed or generated by raising or lowering the weight. The weight is guided by a system of tensioned guide wires (patents applied for) to prevent it from swinging and damaging the shaft. The winch system can be accurately controlled through the electrical drives to keep the weight stable in the hole.



Gravitricity  technology has a unique combination of characteristics:



50-year design life – with no cycle limit or degradation

Response time – zero to full power in less than one second

Efficiency – between 80 and 90 percent

Versatile – can run slowly at low power or fast at high power

Simple – easy to construct near networks

Cost effective – levelised costs well below lithium batteries

Each unit can be configured to produce between 1 and 20MW peak power, with output duration from 15 minutes to 8 hours.



 The key requirement is a deep hole in the ground; it can be a disused mineshaft brought back into use, or a purpose-sunk shaft. Shaft depths can be from 150m for new shafts down to 1500m for existing mines.



The grid connection is through modern power electronics to permit rapid switching between generation and absorption of power and the system can deliver active as well as reactive power to help with grid stability.



While the weight system can be used on its own, the energy storage capacity of the overall system can be much increased when the shaft is used as a pressure vessel, allowing a compressed air energy storage (patent applied for.) to operate alongside the weight system.  This involves adding a pressure-tight “lid” to the top of the shaft and lining the shaft to prevent leakage. The ground provides the bursting resistance other than at the very top of the shaft. The winches and generators will be contained in the pressurized space so that only electrical cables need to penetrate the pressure vessel walls.



Initially we will prove the technology using existing mine shafts. Future deployments will be able to utilise existing mines or purpose-built shafts, allowing development wherever storage is required.



During 2019/20 we are undertaking sub-system design and will be building a 250kW concept demonstrator in 2020.  We aim to deploy our first full-scale prototype in 2022 or 2023 at a disused mine in the UK.



Gravitricity Ltd has patents dating 2011, 2013, 2017 and 2019.




Friday, December 23, 2016

Hydrogen Peroxide as a new energy storage.

http://www.americanenergyindependence.com/peroxide.aspx



Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) can store energy in the form of chemical energy, similar to hydrogen. However, H2O2 has the same problem that hydrogen has — that is, hydrogen peroxide does not exist naturally in large pools like crude oil. H2O2 is not a source of energy like oil; we can't go out and explore for it or drill for it. Hydrogen peroxide is manufactured by a process that consumes energy, and/or other chemical resources.

Hydrogen peroxide, when used to produce energy, creates only pure water and oxygen as a by-product, so it is considered a clean energy like hydrogen. However, unlike hydrogen, H2O2 exists in liquid form at room temperature, so it can be easily stored and transported. Hydrogen peroxide has been around for a long time, so there is a long history of industrial handling and storage. Scientists are familiar with hydrogen peroxide.


Recent advances in electrochemistry have demonstrated the feasibility of producing hydrogen peroxide by the electrochemical reaction of oxygen and hydrogen in a fuel cell. The new process could significantly reduce the cost of producing hydrogen peroxide and provide an opportunity to make the H2O2 from hydrogen and oxygen generated locally with renewable resources.
Patent# 6,685,818 Process for the electrochemical preparation of hydrogen peroxide - February 3, 2004

One of the problems Engineers must solve when designing a process for making hydrogen peroxide is the high loss of energy. The typical energy conversion efficiency is less than 50% because the formation of H2O2 produces heat as a by-product.

Friday, July 4, 2014

WSJ: For Storing Electricity, Utilities Push New Technologies



A 4-kilowatt lithium-ion battery, at right, is part of a project by Southern California Edison to reduce demand on the electrical grid during peak hours.

SAN FRANCISCO—From backyard tinkerers to big corporations, inventors have been struggling to find a way to store solar, wind and other renewable energy so it can furnish electricity when the sun doesn't shine or the wind doesn't blow.
Now California is offering businesses a big incentive for success—contracts that the utility industry estimates could total as much as $3 billion for successful, large-scale electricity-storage systems.
Starting this year, big utilities that do business here must begin adding enough battery systems or other technology so that by 2024 they can store 1,325-megawatts worth of electricity—nearly 70 times the amount that the handful of mostly experimental systems in the state store now. Regulators are also requiring municipal utilities to buy or lease energy-storage equipment.
The storage systems California wants don't exist on such a scale, so the new rules amount to a big bet—paid for by utility customers—that creating demand will produce workable new technology. If so, other states are likely to follow suit, experts say.
Like most states, California has an electric system that was built around big power plants that cranked out electricity around the clock. But utilities here are on track to get a third of the electricity they sell from intermittent resources like solar panels and wind turbines by 2020."We're not talking about lab experiments anymore," said Nancy Pfund, managing partner of Silicon Valley venture-capital firm DBL Investors. "We're talking about a real solution to a growing issue as renewables become a bigger percentage of everyone's grid. The whole world is watching this."
Nationally, renewables accounted for 37% of the new generating capacity added last year, according to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
Utilities now use small natural-gas plants to fill gaps when power generation and demand aren't in balance, but the state thinks storage systems would be more efficient and produce less pollution.
At least in the first few years, many of the storage contracts are likely to go to projects that use rechargeable batteries, like the ones in electric cars and buses, industry officials say. Batteries have been tested for durability and safety by the automotive industry, and they are in widespread use.
"Battery technology is probably going to be the immediate, short-run leader," said Jeff Gates, managing director of commercial transmission at Duke Energy Corp.DUK -1.15% in Charlotte, N.C. Duke built a large battery-storage facility near one of its Texas wind farms, and the company plans to build similar projects in California and other states, he said.
While utilities have installed a handful of battery-storage systems in California and other places, many of them were designed to store less than an hour's worth of electricity to provide extra power to transmission lines. Under the new program, California utilities are likely to want systems that can store at least two or three hours of power to fill in gaps left by solar panels after sunset, Mr. Gates said.
Different types of batteries are already being made by manufacturers including General Electric Co. GE +0.94% , of Fairfield, Conn., and LG Chem Ltd. 051910.SE +0.35% of South Korea.
Some people hope that California's bet on energy storage will create opportunities for technologies that currently exist only in the lab or in one-off projects, including storage based on compressed air or giant flywheels. Gravity Power LLC, a startup in Goleta, Calif., uses deep underground bore holes, filled with water, to create energy when huge pistons are dropped down central shafts.
Among the questions the California experiment may answer is where storage devices should be installed. Some experts think they should be built next to wind farms, for example, as Duke did. Others suggest they should be located along transmission lines or installed next to businesses and homes with solar panels.
"I don't think we understand the function of storage on the grid [enough] yet to know where it would have the highest value," said Mark Nelson, a power-planning manager at Southern California Edison, based in Rosemead, Calif.
SolarCity Corp. SCTY -1.07% , of San Mateo, Calif., in December began offering commercial customers rechargeable batteries—the same ones that are used in Tesla Motors Inc. TSLA -0.08% electric cars—along with solar panels. Tesla, of Palo Alto, Calif., said Wednesday that it plans to build a U.S. battery factory to supply its Fremont, Calif., car factory and SolarCity's energy-storage business. "Storage is important because the sun only shines part of the day, but we use electricity all of the day," Elon Musk, who is chairman and chief executive of Tesla and chairman of SolarCity, said Thursday during an appearance in San Francisco.
Southern California Edison recently installed stacks of lithium-ion batteries at an Irvine, Calif., parking garage that has solar panels on the roof and a row of electric-car chargers on a lower floor. The panels generate electricity for the car chargers and the batteries, which help power the chargers after sunset.
Some utilities and consumer advocates worry that the technologies are expensive and aren't ready for prime time.
Mike Niggli, president of San Diego Gas & Electric Co., a unit of Sempra Energy, said that although there are many storage technologies, "few of them are cost-effective at this time."
The financial strength of some companies likely to offer their products is also a concern, following a series of bankruptcies by battery makers, including Xtreme Power, which filed for Chapter 11 last month, and A123 Systems Inc. and Ener1 Inc., which filed for bankruptcy protection in 2012.
California is one of 37 states that have renewable-energy mandates or goals, but the only one to require utilities to buy lots of storage.
"Energy storage is a highly specialized market now," said Haresh Kamath, a researcher at the Electric Power Research Institute, a utility-funded group in Palo Alto, Calif. "But I expect it to become an important part of the grid's architecture in coming years."
SOURCE: WSJ

Saturday, September 19, 2009

Welcome to Green Ideas

 I have been having many brainstorming session over E-mail, phone and Facebook. Ideas such as  Solar, Wind, Geothermal, Bio Fuels as well as the problems associated with them like Energy Storage, Electric Vehicles, and Green Materials and manufacturing techniques. Also carbon sequestration, and anything that will move us past the  petroleum age and the impending climate disaster it has brought.

Now I finally will have a place for the open discussion and hopefully new solutions leading to inventions and product. For any of these ideas to work, they must not only be green but economically viable and buy that I mean profitable.

I would like to invite as many smart people in to these brainstorming sessions as possible.
My only requirement is to keep an open mind.  As I am even open to things like biblical references, but don't want to tangent too far down those paths.

The end goal is to work towards reversing global warming and other problems facing the continued expansion of the human race.  I believe this idea of limiting the human race at 10 Billion is horrific. If we are to continue to progress, we must keep inventing and take control over all aspects of our environment.  I think the earth could easily support 1 trillion people comfortable with trillions more living thought the solar system and beyond.

Below is a list of some of what I have been researching and getting in to some very deep discussions. 
  • Bio Diesel - Algae, Jatropha, Fisher-Trope process, and other plant oils.
  • Bio Gasoline - pyrolysis, hydropyrolysis,
  • Bio Gas - HHO, Syngas, methane hydrates
  • Solar, holographic lenses, flexible cells,  alternatives to Silicon, ways to reduce cost, 
  • Wind - optimal designs, cost reductions
  • Power storage, Super Caps, batteries, thermal
  • Geothermal - way to reduce cost, maintenance
  • Electrical generation, transmission and storage
  • Non petroleum based plastics, Eco-epoxy and materials for manufacturing
  • Materials for third world production, like using plant fibers
  • Alternatives to Cement that release CO2 during production
  • Methane and CO2 release during food production