Abstract:
Thermal energy is at the heart of the whole energy chain
providing a main linkage between the primary and secondary
energy sources. Thermal energy storage (TES) has a pivotal
role to play in the energy chain and hence in future clean
energy systems. However, a competitive TES technology
requires a number of scientific and technological challenges to
be addressed including materials, components and devices, and
integration of the devices within energy networks and
associated dynamic optimization. This requires fundamental
understanding of the underlying physics particularly flow and
heat transfer of a multiphase system across a very large spatial
length scale from atomic/molecular scale to system scale. This
talk will first briefly outline the background and challenges of
energy storage. Discussion will then be on TES covering TES
materials, TES devices (TES heat exchangers) and system
integration, with a specific focus on flow and heat transfer
across large lengthscales. TES can be sensible heat, latent heat
or thermochemical based. This talk shall use the latent heat
storage materials, often called phase change materials (PCM),
as an example, particularly inorganic salts based PCMs for
medium and high temperature applications. Two key challenges
for such materials are chemical incompatibility and low thermal
conductivity. The use of composite materials provides an
avenue to meeting the challenges. Such composite materials use
a structural supporting material and a thermal conductivity
enhancement material. A right combination of the salt, the
structural supporting material and the thermal conductivity
enhancement material could give a hierarchical structure that is
able to encapsulate the molten salt and give a substantial
enhancement in the thermal conductivity. Our recent progress
in these aspects will also be covered in the talk.
Description:
Papers presented at the 13th International Conference on Heat Transfer, Fluid Mechanics and Thermodynamics, Portoroz, Slovenia on 17-19 July 2017 .