Advances in Thermal Energy Storage
Thermal energy storage (TES) is the storage of thermal energy for later reuse. Employing widely different technologies, it allows surplus thermal energy to be stored for hours, days, or months. Scale both of storage and use vary from small to large – from individual processes to district, town, or region. Usage examples are the balancing of energy demand between daytime and nighttime, storing summer heat for winter heating, or winter cold for summer cooling (Seasonal thermal energy storage). Storage media include water or ice-slush tanks, masses of native earth or bedrock accessed with heat exchangers by means of boreholes, deep aquifers contained between impermeable strata; shallow, lined pits filled with gravel and water and insulated at the top, as well as eutectic solutions and phase-change materials.
In the present book, eleven typical literatures about thermal energy storage published on international authoritative journals were selected to introduce the worldwide newest progress, which contains reviews or original researches on thermal energy storage. We hope this book can demonstrate advances in thermal energy storage as well as give references to the researchers, students and other related people.
Sample Chapter(s)
Preface (178 KB)
Components of the Book:
  • Chapter 1
    Capital costs of aquifer thermal energy storage (ATES): a review
  • Chapter 2
    Latest Advances in Thermal Energy Storage for Solar Plants
  • Chapter 3
    Integrating renewable energy and thermal storage in district heating networks: A design optimization approach
  • Chapter 4
    Numerical Investigation of Thermal Energy Storage Systems for Collective Heating of Buildings
  • Chapter 5
    Dual-functional thermocapacitive heat pump with electrochemical supercapacitors for building thermal management and energy storage
  • Chapter 6
    Insights into Aquifer and Borehole Thermal Energy Storage Systems for Slovenia’s Energy Transition
  • Chapter 7
    Current, Projected Performance and Costs of Thermal Energy Storage
  • Chapter 8
    Maximizing Efficiency in Compressed Air Energy Storage: Insights from Thermal Energy Integration and Optimization
  • Chapter 9
    Experimental characterization of a vertical shell-and-tube latent heat thermal energy storage with dual-tube finned tubes for evaporation at temperatures about 133 °C
  • Chapter 10
    Integration of pit thermal energy storages into district heating networks – a techno-economic case study
  • Chapter 11
    Biochar-infused cellulose foams with PEG-based phase change materials for enhanced thermal energy storage and photothermal performance
Readership: Students, academics, teachers and other people attending or interested in thermal energy storage.
Matthias Herrmann
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Institute of Applied Geosciences (AGW), Kaiserstraße 12, 76131, Karlsruhe, Germany

Amedeo Ceruti
Technical University of Munich, TUM School of Engineering and Design, Chair of Energy Systems, Boltzmannstr. 15, Garching, 85747, Germany

Laura Pompei
Department of Astronautical Electrical and Energy Engineering—DIAEE, Sapienza University of Rome, Via Eudossiana 18, 00184 Rome, Italy

and more...
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