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Adiabatic Compressed Air Energy Storage system performance with application-oriented designed axial-flow compressor

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posted on 2025-02-06, 12:59 authored by Daniel L Pottie, Maury M Oliveira, Bruno Cardenas, Zahra Baniamerian, Seamus Garvey, James Rouse, Edward Hough, Audrius BagdanaviciusAudrius Bagdanavicius, Abdullah Ali, Philip Eames, Edward R Barbour
Medium and long-duration energy storage systems are expected to play a critical role in the transition towards electrical grids powered by renewable energy sources. ACAES is a promising solution, capable of handling power and energy ratings over hundreds of MW and MWh, respectively. One challenge with ACAES is achieving the required highly efficient operation in the compressor over the range of conditions encountered in the system as the pressure in the air store changes. In this paper, an application-oriented axial-flow compressor is designed, aiming towards efficient operation throughout the operation range, whilst also associating the performance prediction to a practical compressor geometry. A two-step design methodology based on inviscid, axisymmetric flow conditions has been implemented, leading to the flowtrack, blade-row geometries and the compressor performance map. The compressor model is integrated into an ACAES model, including two compression spools, two expansion stages with preheat, a constant volume high pressure storage operating between 5.5 and 7.7 MPa and two separate Thermal Energy Storage units. While the existing ACAES literature either ignores the transient off-design operation or uses generic numerical correlations (which are not associated to a particular geometry), the key novelty of this paper is the application of a detailed design method for turbomachinery to ACAES. The results indicate that the designed compressor requires 33 stages over the two spools, and is able to operate efficiently over the storage pressure range, showing that if the application-oriented design procedure is applied to the compressor, it does not stop ACAES reaching 70% round-trip efficiency, outputting 35MW for approximately 15 h. Importantly, the specific ACAES requirement of conserving heat at higher temperatures has been fulfilled by decreasing the number of intercoolers. Finally, it is recommended that a similar level of scrutiny is applied to the other components (i.e. expanders, heat exchangers and TES units), keeping in mind the unique set of operational requirements of ACAES. This work is an important step towards removing the common misconception that off-the-shelf components can be easily be used in typical ACAES designs.

Funding

Sustainable, Affordable and Viable Compressed Air Energy Storage (SAVE-CAES)

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

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History

Citation

Daniel L. Pottie, Maury M. Oliveira, Bruno Cardenas, Zahra Baniamerian, Seamus Garvey, James Rouse, Edward Hough, Audrius Bagdanavicius, Abdullah M. Ali, Philip Eames, Edward R. Barbour, Adiabatic Compressed Air Energy Storage system performance with application-oriented designed axial-flow compressor, Energy Conversion and Management, Volume 304, 2024, 118233, ISSN 0196-8904, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.enconman.2024.118233

Author affiliation

College of Science & Engineering Engineering

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Energy Conversion and Management

Volume

304

Pagination

118233 - 118233

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

0196-8904

eissn

1879-2227

Acceptance date

2024-02-19

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2025-02-06

Language

en

Deposited by

Dr Audrius Bagdanavicius

Deposit date

2024-12-02

Data Access Statement

Data will be made available on request.

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