that's PS10, it's horrendously expensive in terms of land, install, maintenance, etc, looks fantastic, but if it was not for your TAX money, it would never exist (it cost some €35,000,000 to build for a max 11Mw output, making it THE single most expensive plant on on the planet per Mw.BiggestNizzy wrote:Saw a similar thing in spain with one of those large solar power stations (one with the mirrors not the panels) they melt salt and store it in tanks and use that at night to generate the steam that powers the turbines.sendmyusername wrote:Not gyros,
It's a heat exchange type process. (only read a snippet in an engineering mag) (i work long shifts)
They use the power generated from windmill when it's not needed to chill a gas, it is then kept chilled until it's needed, then it's brought back to normal temperature which creates the power. (doesn't need the windmill to be turning)
It's not the most efficient at the moment, but considering when the windmill is producing power and it isn't needed it's completely wasted, it will be an improvement. The protype has been used on a small scale, thi k it was 3 large scale domestic turbines, and already they have come up with efficiency improvements.
The system allows the gas to be stored at low temperature indefinately, so can be used to pick up extra demand, or used when there is no wind.
Sorry for the vagueness.
If I find the atricle again I will put in more detail.
using heat as a storage medium is somewhat a dead end, it woks OK on small scale stuff, but the numbers are just stupid for any real capacity.
if you want storage, current the best way is pumped, as in Dinorwig, this is where you have a top and bottom lake, you pump the water up at night when you have surplus electric, then use it to generate power during high demand.
this was the plan back in the 70's when nuclear was the way forward, and you could then run a nuclear plant 24/7 at it's most efficient usage.
Back then, we had sensible, real engineers comming up with the stratigic way forward, now we have sound-bite politicians, and subsidy hungry industry making a right mess of it.