We reach more than 65,000 registered users in Dec!! Register Now

New paper offers innovative solution for thermal energy storage
- March 13, 2022
- 3 Views
- 0 Likes
- 0 Comment
Have you ever gotten relief from summertime heat by draping a wet towel over your head? If so, you’ve benefited from a phase-change material (PCM): a substance that releases or absorbs energy when it transitions between two of the fundamental states of matter, such as the solid, liquid, or gas states. Your damp towel cools you because water is a PCM that absorbs heat when it’s evaporating—in other words, when it’s transitioning from the liquid state to the gas state.
Now, as detailed in a paper just published in Nature Energy, one major challenge has been overcome through a remarkably simple idea, opening the door to expanded use of PCMs for energy-efficient heating and cooling.
“Classically, the way people have been handling this—for well over thirty, forty years—is they mix the two. What they do is create composites where some fraction of the volume is metal, or a metal matrix, to help conduct heat and achieve good power density,” he says. “But the trade-off is they are losing storage material, and so they sacrifice energy density in the process.”
“What our method does,” Miljkovic explains, “is it completely decouples the two,” i.e., the energy density and power density.
Previously, to achieve the transition from solid to liquid, a stationary heat source was used to melt an adjoining stationary block of PCM. As the heat melted the near side of the PCM, that “melt front” of the PCM receded away from the heat source—and the growing distance between the heat source and the shrinking PCM translated into dwindling power density, and an increasingly ineffective system.
Experiments discussed in the paper have demonstrated the efficacy of the new approach.
Miljkovic says the new solution was inspired by the low-tech observation that you can help a stick of butter melt in a hot pan if you press on it, instead of just dropping it in and waiting. “Our main contribution here is not a fancy material or some expensive system! It’s actually the simplicity,” he says.
The paper, “High power and energy density dynamic phase change materials using pressure-enhanced close contact melting” by Wuchen Fu, Yashraj Gurumukhi, Xiao Yan, Vivek S. Garimella, William P. King, and Nenad Miljkovic, is available at https://www.nature.com/articles/s41560-022-00986-y. Miljkovic is an Associate Professor in Mechanical Science & Engineering (MechSE) and researcher in the Materials Research Lab at UIUC. Fu, Gurumukhi, and Garimella are graduate students in his group, and Yan was formerly his postdoc. King is the Ralph A. Andersen Endowed Chair in MechSE and MRL.
List of Referenes
- Wuchen Fu, Xiao Yan, Yashraj Gurumukhi, Vivek S. Garimella, William P. King, Nenad Miljkovic. High power and energy density dynamic phase change materials using pressure-enhanced close contact melting. Nature Energy, 2022; DOI 10.1038/s41560-022-00986-y
Cite This Article as
No tags found for this post