International Journal of Energy Research, Vol.44, No.8, 6531-6554, 2020
Thermodynamic analysis of a novel compressed carbon dioxide energy storage system with low-temperature thermal storage
Research projects on new electrical energy storage (EES) systems are underway because of the role of EES in balancing the electric grid and smoothing out the instability of renewable energy. In this paper, a novel compressed carbon dioxide energy storage with low-temperature thermal storage was proposed. Liquid CO2 storage was employed to increase the storage density of the system and avoid its dependence on geological formations. Low-temperature thermal energy storage technology was utilized to recycle the heat of compression and reduce the challenges to system components. The system configuration was introduced in detail. Four evaluation criteria, the round trip efficiency (RTE), exergy efficiency (eta(Ex)), thermal efficiency (eta(TE)), and energy density (rho(E)) were defined to show the system performance. Parametric analysis was carried out to examine the effects of some key parameters on system performance and the genetic algorithm was adopted for system optimization. The calculated results show that, for the novel EES under the basic working condition, its RTE is 41.4%, eta(TE) is 59.7%, eta(Ex) is 45.4%, and rho(E) is 15 kWh m(-3). The value of rho(E) increases with the increasing pump outlet pressure for a fixed value of pressure ratio, and the changes of RTE, eta(TE), and the total exergy destruction of the system (E-D,E-total) with pump outlet pressure are complicated for different values of pressure ratio. When both pressure ratio and pump outlet pressure are high, the values of RTE and rho(E) can be maximized whereas the value of E-D,E-total can be minimized. Besides, no matter how pump outlet pressure and pressure ratio change, the exergy destruction of the system mainly come from compressors and regenerators, which accounts for about 50% of the total exergy destruction.
Keywords:compressed carbon dioxide energy storage;low-temperature thermal storage;parametric analysis;thermodynamic analysis;transcritical carbon-dioxide cycle