Energies, Vol. 19, Pages 171: Impact of Ambient Temperature on the Performance of Liquid Air Energy Storage Installation

Energies, Vol. 19, Pages 171: Impact of Ambient Temperature on the Performance of Liquid Air Energy Storage Installation

Energies doi: 10.3390/en19010171

Authors:
Aleksandra Dzido
Piotr Krawczyk

The increasing share of renewable energy sources (RES) in modern power systems necessitates the development of efficient, large-scale energy storage technologies capable of mitigating generation variability. Liquid Air Energy Storage (LAES), particularly in its adiabatic form, has emerged as a promising candidate by leveraging thermal energy storage and high-pressure air liquefaction and regasification processes. Although LAES has been widely studied, the impact of ambient temperature on its performance remains insufficiently explored. This study addresses that gap by examining the thermodynamic response of an adiabatic LAES system under varying ambient air temperatures, ranging from 0 °C to 35 °C. A detailed mathematical model was developed and implemented in Aspen Hysys to simulate the system, incorporating dual refrigeration loops (methanol and propane), thermal oil intercooling, and multi-stage compression/expansion. Simulations were conducted for a reference charging power of 42.4 MW at 15 °C. The influence of external temperature was evaluated on key parameters including mass flow rate, unit energy consumption during liquefaction, energy recovery during expansion, and round-trip efficiency. Results indicate that ambient temperature has a marginal effect on overall LAES performance. Round-trip efficiency varied by only ±0.1% across the temperature spectrum, remaining around 58.3%. Mass flow rates and power output varied slightly, with changes in discharging power attributed to temperature-driven improvements in expansion process efficiency. These findings suggest that LAES installations can operate reliably across diverse climate zones with negligible performance loss, reinforcing their suitability for global deployment in grid-scale energy storage applications.

More From Author

Energies, Vol. 19, Pages 172: Experimental Design and Numerical Analysis of Volume Internal Heat Generation Source in Fluids Based on Microwave Heating

Energies, Vol. 19, Pages 170: Perception of Environmental Comfort in Historic Museum Buildings Depending on the Method of Active Microclimate Control—A Case Study of the National Museum in Krakow

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *