Articles

IEA SHC & IEA ECES Collaboration Makes Advances in Thermal Energy Storage
IEA SHC & IEA ECES Collaboration Makes Advances in Thermal Energy Storage
December 2020 - PDF 0.75MB

Thermal energy storage is key for integrating renewable heat sources into an energy system --from domestic applications to district heating and from industrial applications to the power sector. The flexibility storage provides is necessary for the coupling of energy sectors. When higher temperatures, volume restrictions or very long storage periods come into play, new compact thermal storage technologies are needed, but so is more work on their development for the different energy sectors. It is this need that was the motivation for SHC Task 58/ECES Annex 33: Material and Component Development for Thermal Energy Storage – to further improve the storage materials and components based on a better knowledge of the underlying physics and chemistry.

Material and Component Development for Thermal Energy Storage
Material and Component Development for Thermal Energy Storage
Interview with Wim van Helden
December 2020 - PDF 0.32MB
Editor: Pamela Murphy

The IEA SHC Programme concluded its joint project with the IEA Energy Conservation through Energy Storage (ECES) Programme on Material and Component Development for Thermal Energy Storage (SHC Task 58/ECES Annex 33). To learn first-hand how this Task supported thermal energy storage market development, we asked Wim van Helden, the SHC Task Operating Agent, to share some of his thoughts on this 3-year project.
 

Advanced thermal storages - towards higher energy densities, long term storage and broader operating ranges
Advanced thermal storages - towards higher energy densities, long term storage and broader operating ranges
December 2018 - PDF 0.19MB
Publisher: IEA SHC Task 58
As the share of renewables in energy production grows so does the role for thermal energy storage. The wide range of applications for thermal energy storage presents a broad range of development conditions for advanced thermal storage technologies to supplement the existing, widely used water-based heat storage technologies. Thermal energy storage could reveal itself as a real game-changer, allowing for a notable decrease in primary energy demand, thus reducing the energy footprint. It could also support the widespread acceptance and use of renewable energy as well as the efficient use of fluctuating energy sources.