
There are several types of STES technology, covering a range of applications from single small buildings to community district heating networks. Generally, efficiency increases and the specific construction cost decreases with size. UTES (underground thermal energy storage), in which the storage medium may be geological strata ranging from earth or sand to solid bedrock, or aquifers. UTES technologies include: [pdf]
Seasonal storage of solar thermal energy through supercooled phase change materials (PCM) offers a promising solution for decarbonizing space and water heating in winter. Despite the high energy density and adaptability, natural PCMs often lack the necessary supercooling for stable, long-term storage.
Image showing heat loss from a house. New research on thermal energy storage could lead to summer heat being stored for use in winter. Credit: Active Building Centre, Swansea University Funding to research thermal energy storage that could cut bills and boost renewables.
Seasonal thermal energy storage (STES), also known as inter-seasonal thermal energy storage, is the storage of heat or cold for periods of up to several months. The thermal energy can be collected whenever it is available and be used whenever needed, such as in the opposing season.
“This has the potential to provide day-to-day storage of thermal energy at densities far greater than traditional technologies,” the academics explained. The PCM system employs a thermal source to heat a chemical store to transition the solid material into liquid form. “The effect of this is to store latent heat for several days.
Choosing such materials, in essence, protects the system's integrity, performance, and durability throughout thermal energy storage operations. High thermal conductivity: Sorption Thermal Energy Storage (STES) system stores thermal energy by adsorbing/absorbing and desorbing a working fluid onto a solid/liquid absorbent.
A number of examples of the use of solar thermal storage from across the world include: Suffolk One a college in East Anglia, England, that uses a thermal collector of pipe buried in the bus turning area to collect solar energy that is then stored in 18 boreholes each 100 metres (330 ft) deep for use in winter heating.
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