Solar energy storage using sulphur by Staff Writers Berlin, Germany (SPX) Dec 20, 2021
Together with European research partners, the German Aerospace Center (Deutsches Zentrum fur Luft- und Raumfahrt; DLR) has developed a process that can generate electricity in a climate-neutral way using sulphur and solar energy. Initial tests with a pilot-scale plant have now been successfully completed. This process is based on a chemical cycle. It involves burning sulphur in special power plant turbines and converting the exhaust gases into sulphuric acid. Using solar energy, the sulphuric acid can then be converted back into pure sulphur, without producing carbon dioxide; this sulphur can then be reused as fuel.
Why sulphur? The energy density of sulphur is 30 times higher than that of molten salt, which is currently used in solar thermal power plants to absorb, transport and store solar energy as high-temperature heat. Because sulphur can be stored in powder or liquid form, it can easily be transported and stored over long periods of time. Due to limited geological deposits and decreasing fossil fuel production volumes, it will become more economical in the future to sustainably integrate sulphur into processes that involve the recycling of their materials. In such cycles, sulphur can be repeatedly used as fuel. As demonstrated in the PEGASUS project, this can be achieved with the help of renewable energy sources.
Potential for power from renewable energy sources around the clock The resulting gas is sulphur dioxide (SO2), which can be fed into a conventional sulphuric acid plant to produce sulphuric acid and large amounts of heat. This heat then drives a steam turbine that generates additional electricity. The cycle can then begin again with the decomposition of the sulphuric acid. When strong solar radiation is available, a sulphur-based power plant can even produce more sulphur than is necessary for its daytime operations, thus enabling the plant to operate continuously. The resulting surplus of sulphuric acid can then be converted into sulphur by solar thermal means at a later stage. Solar thermal plants with sulphur production can be operated effectively, especially in sunny regions. The sulphur produced can then be easily transported to regions with less sunlight.
Pilot operation of the solar power plant using DLR's Synlight artificial Sun In a particle receiver, small ceramic particles absorb and transport the incoming thermal energy to generate electricity and industrial process heat. Molten salt, currently used as a heat transfer medium in state-of-the-art solar power plants, can only be used at temperatures of up to approximately 550 degrees Celsius. Using heated ceramic particles, power plants can be operated at significantly higher process temperatures of over 900 degrees, resulting in higher efficiency and thus lowering the cost of energy production. For the demonstration, scientists from the DLR institutes of Future Fuels and of Solar Research installed a variant of the CentRec particle receiver developed for the Synlight artificial Sun in Julich. At the same time, they investigated the sub-process of integrating sulphuric acid decomposition into the sulphur cycle in a laboratory. Due to their high degree of innovation, the two sub-processes studied in PEGASUS placed high demands on the researchers. Solar-heated particles have never been used to split sulphuric acid before, for example. The combustion of sulphur at elevated pressure for use in gas turbines had also not been investigated before. Researchers at the DLR Institute of Future Fuels are working on the disproportionation reaction in the associated BaSiS project, funded by the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia.
New device advances commercial viability of solar fuels Berkeley CA (SPX) Dec 20, 2021 A research team has developed a new artificial photosynthesis device with remarkable stability and longevity as it converts sunlight and carbon dioxide into two promising sources of renewable fuels - ethylene and hydrogen. The researchers' findings, which they recently reported in the journal Nature Energy, reveal how the device degrades with use, then demonstrate how to mitigate it. The authors also provide new insight into how electrons and charge carriers called "holes" contribute to degradatio ... read more
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