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Importance of reactor design on efficient utilisation of thermochemical heat storage materials for background space heating

S. Hosouli, R.J. Sutton, Justin Searle Orcid Logo, Eifion Jewell Orcid Logo, Jonathon Elvins

Journal of Energy Storage, Volume: 142, Start page: 119509

Swansea University Authors: Justin Searle Orcid Logo, Eifion Jewell Orcid Logo, Jonathon Elvins

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Abstract

Thermochemical storage materials allow harvesting and storage of thermal energy (e.g. from industrial waste heat) potentially reducing emissions to atmosphere and time-shifting the hitherto wasted energy for later use in heating buildings. Reported thermochemical storage densities vary widely, with...

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Published in: Journal of Energy Storage
ISSN: 2352-152X
Published: Elsevier BV 2026
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa70981
Abstract: Thermochemical storage materials allow harvesting and storage of thermal energy (e.g. from industrial waste heat) potentially reducing emissions to atmosphere and time-shifting the hitherto wasted energy for later use in heating buildings. Reported thermochemical storage densities vary widely, with many studies overestimating laboratory-scale data when linearly scaling to practical reactor sizes. Presently, an experimental and design model analysis has been carried out on a stacked bed reactor using varying material depths to evaluate thermal performance, energy storage capacity and environmental impact in a modelled industrial scenario. Using a bench top reactor, the depth of the thermochemical storage material (CaCl2/ vermiculite) was varied between 30 and 60 mm with variations in input flow rate of moist air between 5 and 40 LPM. Maximum temperature uplift (11–13 °C) and energy densities (80–110 kWh/m3) were obtained with 30–40 mm of material with high flow rates. The experimental results were utilised in a design simulation to identify the optimum thermodynamic and low carbon impact material depth and inter gap spacing in order maximise the effective reactor storage density. Multiple 30 mm layers with a small interlayer gap provided the best energy density (59.2 kWh/m3), opposed to fewer 60 mm layers with a large interlayer gap (15.1 kWh/m3). Thermal performance of a single space cabin heated via harvested industrial waste heat is modelled, with subsequent LCA analysis to determine carbon impact compared with heating via electricity and gas alternatives. The carbon impact varies with reactor design and operational use, but cabins utilised over multiple years show a significantly improved carbon footprint.
Keywords: Salt in matrix; Thermochemical; Calcium chloride; Reactor design; CO2 analysis
College: Faculty of Science and Engineering
Funders: The authors would like to acknowledge support through the funding of the SPECIFIC Innovation and Knowledge Centre by the Engineering and Physical Science Research Council [EP/N020863/1], Innovate UK [920036], and the European Regional Development Fund [c80892] through the Welsh Government.
Start Page: 119509