HomeNewsIndia NewsNREL Heats up Thermal Energy Storage for Energy Efficiency

    NREL Heats up Thermal Energy Storage for Energy Efficiency

    Scientists from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) have developed a simple way to better evaluate the potential of novel materials to store or release heat on demand in your home, office, or other building in a way that more efficiently manages the building’s energy use.

    Their work, featured in Nature Energy, proposes a new design method that could make the process of heating and cooling buildings more manageable, less expensive, more efficient, and better prepared to flexibly manage power from renewable energy sources that do not always deliver energy when it is most needed.

    Thermal energy storage allows buildings to function as a huge battery by storing thermal energy in novel materials until it can be used later. One example is a heat pump. While electricity is needed initially to create and store the heat, the heat is used later without using additional electricity.

    A Ragone plot shows the tradeoff between how much energy a device can store and its discharge power, or how quickly the device can release energy. This foundational approach makes comparisons between different thermal storage materials or device improvements easier to evaluate. It serves as a starting point for defining targets and is a useful design tool to develop new thermal storage materials and devices that can serve as novel, alternative energy storage options. This framework ensures the cost-effective design of thermal storage materials and devices depending on the power and energy requirements of a particular application,” said Jason Woods, a senior research engineer at NREL and lead author of the newly published paper.

    Thermal energy storage systems will need to become more flexible and adaptable with the addition of onsite power generation, electric vehicle charging, and the combination of thermal storage with batteries,” Woods said. “Part of this flexibility requires higher power—but this higher power comes at a cost of available energy, as this publication highlights.”

    The way in which thermal energy storage is used will impact its performance. Scientists need to consider questions about how stored energy can best be used to keep building occupants comfortable, or for different applications like maintaining electronic equipment at a safe temperature.

    ELE Times Research Desk
    ELE Times Research Deskhttps://www.eletimes.ai
    ELE Times provides a comprehensive global coverage of Electronics, Technology and the Market. In addition to providing in depth articles, ELE Times attracts the industry’s largest, qualified and highly engaged audiences, who appreciate our timely, relevant content and popular formats. ELE Times helps you build awareness, drive traffic, communicate your offerings to right audience, generate leads and sell your products better.

    LEAVE A REPLY

    Please enter your comment!
    Please enter your name here

    Related News

    Must Read

    STMicroelectronics’ new GaN ICs platform for motion control boosts appliance energy ratings

    STMicroelectronics unveiled new smart power components that let home...

    Keysight Hosts AI Thought Leadership Conclave in Bengaluru

     Keysight Technologies, Inc. announced the AI Thought Leadership Conclave, a...

    Government approves 17 projects worth Rs. 7,172 crore under ECMS

    The Ministry of Electronics and IT announced for the...

    BD Soft strengthens cybersecurity offerings for BFSI and Fintech businesses with advanced solutions

    BD Software Distribution Pvt. Ltd. has expanded its Managed...

    Advancing Quantum Computing R&D through Simulation

    Courtesy: Synopsys Even as we push forward into new frontiers...

    Overcoming BEOL Patterning Challenges at the 3-NM Node

    Courtesy: Lam Research ● Controlling critical process parameters is key...

    Driving Innovation with High-Performance but Low-Power Multi-Core MCUs

    Courtesy: Renesas Over the last decade, the number of connected...

    Evolving from IoT to edge AI system development

    Courtesy: Avnet The advancement of machine learning (ML) along with...

    From the grid to the gate: Powering the third energy revolution

    Courtesy: Taylor, Robert, Mannesson, Henrik, Texas Instruments A significant change...

    Rohde & Schwarz India Pvt. Ltd. unveils R&D Centre in New Delhi, India

    Rohde & Schwarz announced the expansion of its Research...