Current:Home > ContactBreakthrough Solar Plant Stores Energy for Days -WealthRoots Academy
Breakthrough Solar Plant Stores Energy for Days
View
Date:2025-04-18 15:54:23
By Carlo Ombello
Last week the Italian utility Enel unveiled “Archimede”, the first Concentrating Solar Power (CSP) plant in the world to use molten salts for heat transfer and storage, and the first to be fully integrated into an existing combined-cycle gas power plant. Archimede is a 5 MW plant located in Priolo Gargallo (Sicily), within Europe’s largest petrochemical district. The breakthrough project was co-developed by Enel, one of world’s largest utilities, and ENEA, the Italian National Agency for New Technologies, Energy and Sustainable Economic Development.
Several CSP plants already operate around the world, mainly in the US and Spain. They use synthetic oils to capture the sun’s energy in the form of heat, by using mirrors that beam sunlight onto a pipe where pressurized oil heats up to around 390°C. A heat exchanger is then used to boil water and run a conventional steam turbine cycle.
Older CSP plants can only operate at daytime – when direct sunlight is available – an issue that has been dealt with in recent years by introducing heat storage, in the form of molten salts. Newer CSP plants, like the many under construction in Spain, use molten salts storage to extend the plants’ daily operating hours.
Archimede is the first plant in the world to use molten salts not just to store heat but also to collect it from the sun in the first place, and this is the first plant to demonstrate the industrial feasibility of storing the sun’s energy for many days running.
This is a competitive advantage, for a variety of reasons. Molten salts can operate at higher temperatures than oils (up to 550°C instead of 390°C), therefore increasing efficiency and power output of a plant. With the higher-temperature heat storage allowed by the direct use of salts, the plant can also extend its operating hours much further than an oil-operated CSP plant with molten salt storage, thus working 24 hours a day for several days in the absence of sun or during rainy days.
This feature also enables a simplified plant design, as it avoids the need for oil-to-salts heat exchangers, and eliminates the safety and environmental concerns related to the use of oils. Molten salts are cheap, non-toxic common fertilizers and do not catch fire, as opposed to synthetic oils currently used in CSP plants around the world.
Last but not least, the higher temperatures reached by the molten salts enable the use of steam turbines at the standard pressure/temperature parameters as used in most common gas-cycle fossil power plants. This means that conventional power plants can be integrated – or, in perspective, replaced – with this technology without expensive retrofits to the existing assets.
So why hasn’t this technology been developed before? There are both political and technical issues behind this.
Let’s start with politics. The concept dates back to 2001, when Italian nuclear physicist and Nobel prize winner Carlo Rubbia, ENEA’s President at the time, first started research and development on molten salt technology in Italy. Rubbia has been a preeminent CSP advocate for a long time, and was forced to leave ENEA in 2005 after strong disagreements with the Italian Government over its lack of convincing R&D policies. He then moved to CIEMAT, the Spanish equivalent of ENEA. Under his guidance, Spain has now become world leader in the CSP industry. Luckily for the Italian industry, the Archimede project was not abandoned and ENEA continued its development until completion.
There are also various technical reasons that have prevented an earlier development of this new technology. Salts tend to solidify at temperatures around 220°C, which is a serious issue for the continuous operation of a plant. ENEA and Archimede Solar Energy, a private company focusing on receiver pipes, developed several patents in order to improve the pipes’ ability to absorbe heat, and the parabolic mirrors’ reflectivity, therefore maximising the heat transfer to the fluid carrier.
The result of these and several other technological improvements is a top-notch world’s first power plant with a price tag of around 60 million euros. It’s a hefty price for a 5 MW power plant, even compared to other CSP plants, but there is overwhelming scope for a massive roll-out of this new technology at utility scale in sunny regions like Northern Africa, the Middle East, Australia, the US.
The Italian CSP association ANEST claims Italy could host 3-5,000 MW of CSP plants by 2020, with huge benefits also in terms of job creation and industrial know-how. A lot more can be achieved in the sun belt south of the Mediterranean Sea, and in the Middle East. If the roll out of solar photovoltaics in Italy is to offer any guidance (second largest market in the World in 2009), exciting times are ahead for concentrating solar power.
(Republished with permission of Carbon Commentary)
veryGood! (267)
Related
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- Islanders, Here’s Where to Shop Everything in the Love Island USA Villa Right Now
- What's the most popular city to move to in the US? Chances are, it's in Florida
- Princeton University student pleads guilty to joining mob’s attack on Capitol
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Florida woman partially bites other woman's ear off after fight breaks out at house party, officials say
- Britney Spears' Mother-in-Law Hospitalized After Major Accident
- This man owns 300 perfect, vintage, in-box Barbies. This is the story of how it happened
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- NASA rocket launch may be visible from 10 or more East Coast states: How to watch
Ranking
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- SUV hits 6 migrant workers in N.C. Walmart parking lot, apparently on purpose, then flees, police say
- North Carolina police search for driver who appears to intentionally hit 6 migrant workers
- Police investigate killings of 2 people after gunfire erupts in Lewiston
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Takeaways from AP’s reporting on inconsistencies in RFK Jr.'s record
- ‘Conscience’ bills let medical providers opt out of providing a wide range of care
- Princeton University student pleads guilty to joining mob’s attack on Capitol
Recommendation
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
NASA rocket launch may be visible from 10 or more East Coast states: How to watch
Below Deck's Captain Lee and Kate Chastain Are Teaming Up for a New TV Show: All the Details
Mar-a-Lago property manager to be arraigned in classified documents probe
Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
US needs win to ensure Americans avoid elimination in group play for first time in Women’s World Cup
Musk threatens to sue researchers who documented the rise in hateful tweets
Cougar attacks 8-year-old, leading to closures in Washington’s Olympic National Park