4.1. Standalone liquid air energy storage In the standalone LAES system, the input is only the excess electricity, whereas the output can be the supplied electricity along with the heating or cooling output.
We fabricate a liquid-infused solar-absorbing foam charger that can rapidly advance the receding solid-liquid charging interface to efficiently store solar-thermal energy as latent heat and spontaneously float upward to cease the charging process upon overheating.
The heat from solar energy can be stored by sensible energy storage materials (i.e., thermal oil) and thermochemical energy storage materials (i.e., CO 3 O 4 /CoO) for heating the inlet air of turbines during the discharging cycle of LAES, while the heat from solar energy was directly utilized for heating air in the work of .
Concluding remarks Liquid air energy storage (LAES) is becoming an attractive thermo-mechanical storage solution for decarbonization, with the advantages of no geological constraints, long lifetime (30–40 years), high energy density (120–200 kWh/m 3), environment-friendly and flexible layout.
Such heat can be used to increase air inlet temperature of turbine during LAES discharging process. Li et al proposed the integration of LAES with a parabolic trough based concentrated solar power (CSP) system with solar heat stored in a thermal oil at ∼300 °C–400 °C.
Hybrid LAES has compelling thermoeconomic benefits with extra cold/heat contribution. Liquid air energy storage (LAES) can offer a scalable solution for power management, with significant potential for decarbonizing electricity systems through integration with renewables.