How a Sand Battery Could Revolutionize Home Energy Storage
Summary
TLDRThe video discusses the emerging technology of thermal energy storage (TES), particularly sand-based batteries, for residential use. It highlights the efficiency and potential of TES to complement renewable energy sources like solar panels in reducing energy costs and ecological impact. Challenges such as size, cost, and the thermodynamic limitations of converting heat back to electricity are addressed, alongside innovative solutions like underground sand tanks and water heater-like devices. The video also touches on the promising future of TES with government incentives and technological advancements making it increasingly accessible and affordable.
Takeaways
- 🔋 Sand is a key ingredient in a new type of thermal energy storage (TES) being used for residential purposes, offering an alternative to traditional lithium-ion batteries.
- 🏠 Companies like Batsand are pioneering the use of TES in individual homes, aiming to reduce energy costs and increase self-sufficiency.
- 💰 The high cost of residential TES systems, including installation, is a significant barrier to widespread adoption.
- 🌡️ TES devices store energy as heat and can be charged by passing electricity through a heating element, then discharged through a cooling process.
- 🌞 When combined with solar panels and heat pumps, TES can significantly reduce a home's reliance on traditional energy sources for heating.
- 🔌 Residential TES systems have high round-trip efficiency rates (RTEs), meaning they retain a high percentage of the energy stored for later use.
- 📈 The size of TES systems has been a challenge for home use, but underground tanks and innovative designs are making it more feasible.
- 🌍 The adoption of TES is expected to increase with the growth of renewable energy and the need for efficient storage solutions.
- 💸 Financial incentives, such as tax credits from the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) in the US, are helping to make TES more affordable for homeowners.
- 🔄 While TES is efficient for heating, its efficiency drops significantly when converting heat back into electricity, limiting its versatility.
- 🌱 The environmental benefits of TES are aligned with the shift towards green energy, as they only store and use the energy that is generated from renewable sources.
Q & A
What is the primary use of sand in the context of the script?
-Sand is used as a medium for thermal energy storage (TES) in batteries, due to its ability to hold onto a lot of heat for a long time.
What percentage of total US residential energy use is dedicated to heating?
-Over 30% of total US residential energy use is dedicated to heating, as stated by the University of Michigan.
How does the Tesla Powerwall address the issue of renewable energy's intermittency?
-The Tesla Powerwall is a residential battery system that stores energy, helping to overcome the intermittency issue of renewable energy sources like solar panels by providing energy when the production is not consistent.
What is the round-trip efficiency rate (RTE) and why is it important for energy storage devices?
-The round-trip efficiency rate (RTE) is the percentage of electricity put into storage that is later retrieved. It is important for any kind of energy storage device as it indicates the efficiency of energy storage and retrieval, with a higher RTE meaning less energy loss.
What are the benefits of using sand as a thermal medium in TES devices?
-Sand has a low specific heat, allowing it to heat up quickly with less energy, and its high density enables it to store large amounts of thermal energy. Additionally, sand batteries are low maintenance, have long lifespans, and can be heated well above the boiling point of water, maintaining high RTE.
What is the main challenge in bringing TES technology to residential homes?
-The main challenge is the size of TES devices, as they need to be large to optimize heat storage, which makes them difficult to miniaturize for home use and increases the cost of installation.
How does the Batsand system plan to address the issue of space requirements for residential TES?
-Batsand plans to hide the sand tank underground, similar to a septic tank, to save space and provide insulation, making the system more suitable for residential use.
What are the key features of the NEStore thermal energy storage device?
-The NEStore combines special vacuum insulation with thinner-than-average tank walls, allowing it to hold more water and more heat than other devices in its weight class. It is designed to replace traditional water heaters and can work with PV systems.
Why have TES devices been overlooked for residential use until now?
-TES devices have been overlooked due to their size, the cost of installation, and the availability of more mature storage technologies like lithium-ion batteries. Additionally, converting heat back into electricity is less efficient, making TES less versatile.
How does the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) in the US benefit TES devices?
-The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) provides a tax credit of up to 30% for TES devices, and up to 40% for projects made with domestic materials, making them more affordable for households and encouraging domestic innovation and manufacture of TES units.
What is the potential future of TES in the residential market?
-The future of TES in the residential market looks promising, with the potential for more companies to enter the scene and increased affordability due to incentives like the IRA, leading to a growth in domestic innovation and competition.
Outlines
🌟 Introduction to Sand Batteries and Residential TES
This paragraph introduces the concept of sand batteries and their role in thermal energy storage (TES). It highlights the launch of the world's commercial sand battery, capable of supplying power for 10,000 people, and the emerging trend of residential TES. The video's host, Matt Ferrell, sets the stage for a discussion on how heat storage can impact our lives and homes. It also touches on the ecological impact and safety issues associated with lithium-ion batteries, presenting TES as a promising alternative. The paragraph emphasizes the efficiency of TES when used with heat pumps and solar panels, as demonstrated by the Drake Landing Solar Community in Alberta, Canada.
🏠 Challenges and Innovations in Home TES
This paragraph delves into the challenges of implementing TES on a residential scale, primarily due to size constraints. It introduces Batsand, a company offering residential heat batteries that ingeniously hide sand tanks underground, akin to septic tanks. The discussion includes the practicality of sand as a thermal medium due to its low specific heat and high density, as well as the non-flammable and non-toxic nature of properly prepared sand. The paragraph also mentions the NEStore by Newton Energy Solutions, a TES device that functions similarly to a water heater and can replace it, offering impressive heat storage capacities. The focus is on the innovative approaches to make TES viable for home use.
💰 Economic and Environmental Considerations of TES
The final paragraph addresses the economic and environmental aspects of TES. It discusses the high costs associated with residential TES systems, such as the NEStore and Batsand's 14kW system, and the challenges of fitting these devices into household budgets. The paragraph also highlights the impressive round-trip efficiency (RTE) rates of these systems, which can reach up to 95%. It acknowledges the niche status of thermal batteries and their growing relevance with the rise of renewable energy sources. The discussion concludes with optimism for the future of TES, spurred by incentives like the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) in the US, which could make TES more affordable and widespread.
Mindmap
Keywords
💡Thermal Energy Storage (TES)
💡Sand Battery
💡Round-Trip Efficiency (RTE)
💡Renewable Energy
💡Intermittency
💡Lithium-Ion Batteries
💡Heat Pumps
💡Sustainability
💡Cost-Effectiveness
💡Inflation Reduction Act (IRA)
💡Energy Independence
Highlights
Sand is being used as a material for thermal energy storage (TES) in batteries.
The world's commercial sand battery is capable of supplying power for about 10,000 people.
Companies like Batsand are offering heat batteries for individual homes.
Over 30% of total US residential energy use is dedicated to heating.
Thermal batteries store energy as heat and can be used in combination with heat pumps and solar panels.
Drake Landing Solar Community got a record-breaking 96% of their yearly heating from solar energy.
Thermal batteries have very good round-trip efficiency rates (RTE), with commercial and industrial thermal batteries hitting RTEs of 90% or more.
Sand has low specific heat and high density, making it ideal for thermal energy storage.
Batsand plans to hide the sand tank underground, similar to a septic tank, to save space and provide insulation.
The NEStore device from Newton Energy Solutions (NES) functions like a water heater and can replace it.
The NEStore is made from fully recyclable materials and can be installed in under two hours.
Thermal batteries have been a niche technology for much of their 200-year existence due to size and cost.
The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) in the US offers tax credits for TES devices, making them more affordable.
TES devices work well in tandem with other energy storage systems like the Tesla Powerwall.
By 2030, resistance electric heaters are expected to be more energy and emissions efficient than gas heaters.
Transcripts
Sand. It’s coarse, it's rough, and it can make for a great battery. And as weird as that might sound,
it’s just one example of the many earthy materials currently used for thermal energy
storage (or TES). A while back, we covered the debut of the world’s commercial sand battery,
which is big enough to supply power for about 10,000 people. Now,
sand-based energy storage has reached a new frontier: individual homes. Companies
like Batsand are currently offering heat batteries that bring hot and fresh sand
directly to your door. Seems you can get just about anything delivered these days.
But what’s stopped us from experimenting with residential TES before? How will heat
storage impact our lives in our homes? And where exactly are homeowners supposed to put this stuff?
I’m Matt Ferrell … welcome to Undecided.
This video is brought to you by Factor and all of my patrons on Patreon, but more on that later.
Your utility bill probably already tells you the story that we spend a lot of money
heating and cooling our homes. In fact, according to the University of Michigan,
over 30% of total US residential energy use is dedicated to heating.
Water heating comes in at about 13%, which is really just another kind of
temperature control. According to the U.S. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,
one-fifth of all energy produced in the United States goes towards a building’s thermal load.
Residential battery systems like the Tesla Powerwall are a great
way to get around what some consider the fatal flaw of renewable energy:
intermittency. But the dominance of lithium-ion batteries comes with a host of its own downsides,
like some of those ecological impact and potential safety issues.
Thermal batteries or thermal energy storage (TES) devices are one alternative that’s
worth watching. We’ve examined them before, but here’s a quick refresher.
When it comes to TES, the acronym is pretty straightforward: they’re
batteries that store energy as heat. You charge them by passing electricity
through a heating element embedded in your thermal medium. This medium can be water,
sand or whatever, so long as it can hold onto a lot of heat for a long time. We
can then discharge and release the heat at a later date through a basic cooling process.
When used in combination with heat pumps and solar panels,
TESs can do some amazing things. As far back as 2012, Drake Landing Solar Community got
a record-breaking 96% of their yearly heating from solar energy. In 2015-16,
that number jumped 100%. That was in cold, dark Alberta, Canada, of all places!
TESs tend to have very good round-trip efficiency rates (RTE), which is the
percentage of electricity put into storage that’s later retrieved. It’s very important for any kind
of energy storage device. A 100% RTE would mean that every drop of energy stored can be withdrawn
and used later. It’s also thermodynamically impossible. For context, lead-acid batteries
have an RTE of about 70%. Lithium-Ion batteries for large energy storage, like those in many
industrial-scale energy storage facilities and maybe even your home, have an RTE of around 90%.
But commercial and industrial thermal batteries are reportedly hitting RTE’s of 90% or more.
This got a lot of innovators thinking… if v TESs are working so well for big applications,
why not bring them home? But can TESs work on a small scale? And if they can,
why haven’t we tried this sooner?
But first…why sand? I don’t like sand. If you’ve ever visited the beach and made the mistake of
ditching your flip flops a little too soon, you’re all too aware that sand holds heat remarkably
well. That’s because sand has low specific heat, meaning it doesn’t need a lot of energy
to heat up fast. And sand’s high density allows it to store large amounts of thermal energy. No
chemical reactions means sand batteries are low maintenance and have long life spans.
We can also heat it to well above the boiling point of water, and hold onto that heat with
an RTE well above 90%. For these reasons we’ve seen companies like Polar Night achieve viral
buzz around their commercial sand batteries. We just heat the sand with renewable energy,
then we use air to move the heat from the sand to your house. Seems easy,
so why haven’t we been doing it all along?
We’ll dig a little deeper on this question later, but there’s something else we need to dig into
first … and that’s a tasty treat from today’s sponsor, Factor. I’m going to get really hungry
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get early ad free versions of my videos, and to all of you for supporting the channel. So
why haven’t we been doing home TES all along?
The main reason is size. Mass matters,
especially for storing heat! I don’t know what your living situation is like,
but I don’t really have room in my garage for a 23-foot (7ish meter) tall silo of sand.
That’s where companies like Latvian-based Batsand come in. It’s difficult to reduce
these devices down to a residential size, so Batsand cleverly plans to hide the sand tank
underground … not unlike a septic tank. This is a necessity, as even the smallest Batsand
tank is going to measure 40 cubic meters. Though it’s not all about space consideration — having a
tank underground helps to keep everything well insulated, kinda like a DIY geothermal system.
Better yet, sand is dirt cheap, non-toxic, and (if it has been properly selected and cleaned of other
organic materials) non-flammable. Numbers-wise, the device is intended for 300-400 square-meter
buildings and can store 10,680 kW/h. That’s impressive, assuming you’ve got the recommended
30-plus kW of solar panels on your property. What’s the catch? We just touched on it … it's
that massive sand tank. Just like a geothermal system, digging your yard up isn’t cheap, I can
talk about that first hand. Something to keep in mind for later when we talk about price points.
Netherlands-based Newton Energy Solutions (NES) have a very different kind of TES device to offer,
though. They’re keeping it simple with a no-frills design that falls somewhere between a TES,
a water heater, and a buffer tank. Fun side-note: a water heater is already a thermal battery,
technically speaking. It’s just one that can’t turn the heat back into electricity.
But seeing as you’re already spending most of your electricity on heat, that’s not much of
an issue. No surprise then that the NEStore looks and functions a lot like a water heater. In fact,
if you don’t have enough space for both, the NEStore can flat out replace your water heater.
The NEStore combines special vacuum insulation with thinner-than-average tank walls. Together,
these two small advantages allow the NEStore to hold more water and much
more heat than other devices in its weight class. The system is available in two sizes:
The smaller one has water volumes of 214 liters and 20 kWh capacity.
The larger one is 320 liters and a 29 kWh capacity. According to NES,
even the smaller size can heat 600 liters of tap water to 40 C (104 F). That’s a lot of showers!
As a nice sustainability cherry on top, NES says their device is made
from fully recyclable materials. Their “plug-n-play” tech is meant to replace
existing water heaters and work with your PV systems. The company claims
it can install a NEStore in your house in under two hours. Of course, we’ll have to
see what third-parties say once the NEStore is on the market. This goes for Batsand too.
So if TESs are so great, and can work on a residential scale,
why have we overlooked them until now? There’s a lot of little reasons,
but the most prominent one is size. Now this is oversimplifying it a lot,
but as I mentioned earlier, bigger things cool off slower, so if you want to optimize
your thermal energy storage device, it pays to be big. That’s thermodynamics 101.
But it’s hard to both go big and go home. It puts these devices at odds with miniaturization
and home deployment, and of course, really drives up the price. These factors have
traditionally made TESs a hard sell, especially when standard, fossil-fuel-burning methods of
heating are comparatively cheap and small. This goes for the other use cases too. Why attach your
solar farm or home solar panels to a less mature technology when more mature storage technologies,
like lithium-ion batteries, are available? And, whether you’re a homeowner or a utility
company, it’s hard to take a risk on a device that may never pay itself back.
The numbers also don’t look as good if you try to convert heat back into electricity,
because a small but significant amount of power is “lost in translation.” Though,
statistically speaking, you’re already spending most of your power on heating your home,
so saving and later using that energy as heat really isn’t a problem. This means
that TES devices work well in tandem with other energy storage ones, like the Tesla Powerwall.
Letting the TES handle the lion’s share of the work in heating allows the chemical battery to
handle other electrical applications. It’s using the right tool for the right job.
However, every time energy is converted from one form to another, there are energy losses.
TESs have remarkable efficiency when their stored power is used for heating. But their
efficiency drops to a much less exciting 50–70% when they’ve got to convert that heat back into
electricity. Compare this to 90% for lithium-ion batteries or even 70–85% for pumped hydro,
and you can see why adoption has been slow. That makes them less versatile than something
like a residential chemical battery system, and if you’re only able to afford one energy storage
device, you’re probably going for the more versatile and available piece of technology.
Speaking of affordability, that’s also a major factor. The relatively small and cheap NEStore
has a €5,000 to €6000 price tag, which is about $5300 to $6400, depending on size. Those figures
do include installation, though I worry those numbers will go up once it leaves the preorder
stage. Batsand’s smaller 14kW system will run you a very reasonable €7,200 or about
$7,700. But with installation it balloons to a hefty €17,000 or $19,000 on the low end.
That kind of price point means these devices aren’t going to fit into a lot of budgets.
However, these high prices do buy you some impressive RTEs. When I asked NEStore about
theirs over email, a business development representative said it had an RTE of 95%.
Similarly, Andre Raimundo, the head of operations at Batsand, told me over email that generally they
store energy at a 92% efficiency, and use that stored energy at a 94% efficiency rate. Granted,
these are likely “best-case scenario” figures, but they’re still very exciting. Even with this kind
of performance, it’s challenging to get homeowners to spend luxury prices on these kinds of things
unless they’re really into energy independence or greentech…like someone you might know.
For these reasons, thermal batteries have been a niche technology for much of their
200-year existence. Demand really only started to blossom alongside renewables,
partly because TES devices are only as green as the energy we put into them. Take water heaters,
for example. As recently as 2010, a typical resistance electric water heater produced
four times more emissions than gas water heaters. How? Well, it takes a lot of
energy to heat that kind of thing, and that energy was mostly coming from fossil fuels.
But now, with green energy being more abundant, and the problem shifting from
generation to storage, electric resistance water heaters (and by extension thermal batteries) are
looking better and better. According to Sydney's University of Technology, by 2030 resistance
electric heaters will be radically more energy and emissions efficient than gas heaters. Heat
pump water heaters already are, and I’ve got a video that goes into my experience with one.
And speaking of heat pumps, it’s looking likely that TES devices could follow a similar path. I
hope they do, considering how they could work with the rest of your home energy system. Think about
it: Your solar panels gather energy for your house, including your heat pump and TES. Those
devices will keep your home at a cozy temperature all day. With the massive burden of heating taken
off on your battery system’s plate, it has more juice to spend on all your other electrical needs.
The synergies at play here are just so cool. What’s not love? Well, the cost of purchasing
and installing solar panels, a heat pump, battery system, and a TES. But we’re working on that.
Here in the US, TESs are more affordable than ever thanks to the Inflation Reduction
Act (IRA). That’s because many of the IRA battery storage provisions also apply to
TES units. That means you can get a whopping 30% tax credit on your TES device. This jumps
to a 40% tax credit for projects made with domestic materials. That should go a long
way toward making them more affordable for the average household. With incentives like
this on the table, I think we’ll see an expansion in domestic TES innovation and
manufacture — and competition should help make thermal batteries more affordable over time.
So where does this leave us? I really do think we’re at the dawn of a new age
here. Thermal energy batteries are just starting to break into the residential
market. When we circle back to this topic in a couple of years,
I won’t be surprised at all if there’s a lot more companies on the scene.
But what do you think? Do you want thermal energy storage for your
home? Jump into the comments and let me know. I’ll see you in the next one.
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