Storing and extracting latent heat

4200148
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Inventors

Friefeld, Jerome M.
Silverman, Jacob

Application #

892723

Filed

Apr-3-1978

Published

Apr-29-1980

Current US Class

060/641.8
060/659
126/643
165/10
165/104.21
165/183

International Classes

F28D 021/00

Field of Search

165/104 126/400 126/436 60/659 60/641

Assignee

Rockwell International Corporation (El Segundo, CA)

Examiners

Davis; Albert W.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Humphries; L. Lee, Sperry; Robert M.

US Patent References

3996919   System for collectin...
4131158   Storage arrangeme...

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Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
Heat is stored by melting a mixture of salts contained in compartments between an inner and an outer tube and radial copper fins which taper in radial outward direction. The molten salts solidify upon passage of relatively cold water through the inner tube, but formation of salt deposits on the fins is deferred so that liquid salt interfaces directly with the fins for an extended period of time during heat extraction.
 
Claims
What is claimed and desired to be protected by letters patent of the United States is:

1. A thermal energy storage and extraction system, which comprises:

an inner tube for conveying a heating and a heat extracting fluid;

a plurality of fins tapering in a radially outer direction wherein each of said fins is radially and longitudinally disposed along said inner tube;

an outer tube concentric with said inner tube and connected to said inner tube through said fins;

a plurality of compartments defined by forward and aft closures, by said inner tube and said outer tube on its radial extremities, and by said adjacent fins on its sides; and

a thermal storage medium located within said compartments.



Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to the storage and extraction of thermal energy on the basis of the latent heat of fusion of a storage medium.

Heat of fusion has been used successfully for buffering thermal energy as between a prime source of heat and a user, operating on an asynchronous basis in the sense that periods of development of heat do not or at least not completely coincide with periods of desired and required use. A typical example here is solar energy, the sun being the prime source and the user being, e.g. an electrical power plant. Obviously night time energy demands can be satisfied only through a buffer which must be filled in the daytime. Correspondingly, not all of the solar energy being collected could or should be used right away.

The thermal buffering as described requires employment of a heat storage medium. For example, salt mixtures are currently used to store thermal energy in the form of the latent heat of fusion of the mixture; that is to say large quantities of such a mixture are gradually melted by a heating process deriving its energy e.g. from a solar radiation concentrating system. If properly insulated, the molten salt retains the stored energy until a colder fluid is brought into heat exchange relation with the molten salt which will gradually solidify while heating the colder heat exchange fluid. Salts are used with advantage here, because the phase change temperature (i.e. the melting point) can be chosen and adapted to a high value so that one may generate steam, possibly even superheated steam at a sufficiently high temperature, which, however, is limited by the phase change temperature. Moreover, the latent heat of fusion should be rather high to obtain a rather high storage capacity on a caloric or watt-hour per unit volume basis.
 
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