Salt Cavern Exergy Storage Capacity Potential of UK Massively Bedded Halites, Using Compressed Air Energy Storage (CAES)
Abstract
:Featured Application
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Mechanical, Bulk Electrical Energy Storage (EES), and the Potential of CAES
3. CAES-Geological Storage Options, Developments, and Restrictions
4. Materials, Exergy Storage Tool, and Methodology
4.1. Massively Bedded UK Halite Deposits Available
- The Northwich Halite Member of Cheshire Basin, onshore north-central England (Triassic)
- The Preesall Halite Member of the offshore East Irish Sea (EIS) (Triassic)
- The Dorset Halite Member of Wessex Basin, on- and extending offshore southern England (Triassic)
- The Fordon Evaporite Formation, on- and extending offshore Eastern England (Upper Permian, Zechstein [Z2]).
4.2. Exergy Storage Terminology—The Gas Storage Experience
- Working gas’ volume, which represents the available gas that can be used between the maximum and the minimum operating storage pressures
- Cushion gas’ volume, representing that below minimum operating pressure that is not available and which must remain permanently in the storage to provide the required minimum pressure to maintain the geomechanical stability of the storage. In the case of porous rock storage, it also provides some of the drive, but it is irretrievable, being effectively lost in the porosity.
4.3. Exergy Storage Tool
- Adiabatic boundary conditions in which heat flux into the surrounding rock mass is zero
- Isothermal boundary conditions in which heat flux is infinite with perfect conduction into and through the surrounding rock mass
4.4. Exergy Storage Assessment—Methodology
- Taking 1% of the estimated exergy storage for the ‘available’ UK caverns
- Calculating the cavern storage estimates based on a percentage reflecting the number of operational or permitted UGS caverns in the UK (148) relative to the total number of possible caverns
- Filtering the caverns to include only those of greater than 100 m height
- Filtering the caverns to include only those of 100–150 m in height
- For the two filtered cavern height datasets, applying filters taking 1% of caverns and a percentage of the storage, using UGS cavern numbers relative to the total number of possible caverns in individual basins.
5. UK Salt Cavern Exergy Storage Capacity Estimates—Results and Commentary
6. General Discussion
7. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Evans, D.; Parkes, D.; Dooner, M.; Williamson, P.; Williams, J.; Busby, J.; He, W.; Wang, J.; Garvey, S. Salt Cavern Exergy Storage Capacity Potential of UK Massively Bedded Halites, Using Compressed Air Energy Storage (CAES). Appl. Sci. 2021, 11, 4728. https://doi.org/10.3390/app11114728
Evans D, Parkes D, Dooner M, Williamson P, Williams J, Busby J, He W, Wang J, Garvey S. Salt Cavern Exergy Storage Capacity Potential of UK Massively Bedded Halites, Using Compressed Air Energy Storage (CAES). Applied Sciences. 2021; 11(11):4728. https://doi.org/10.3390/app11114728
Chicago/Turabian StyleEvans, David, Daniel Parkes, Mark Dooner, Paul Williamson, John Williams, Jonathan Busby, Wei He, Jihong Wang, and Seamus Garvey. 2021. "Salt Cavern Exergy Storage Capacity Potential of UK Massively Bedded Halites, Using Compressed Air Energy Storage (CAES)" Applied Sciences 11, no. 11: 4728. https://doi.org/10.3390/app11114728
APA StyleEvans, D., Parkes, D., Dooner, M., Williamson, P., Williams, J., Busby, J., He, W., Wang, J., & Garvey, S. (2021). Salt Cavern Exergy Storage Capacity Potential of UK Massively Bedded Halites, Using Compressed Air Energy Storage (CAES). Applied Sciences, 11(11), 4728. https://doi.org/10.3390/app11114728