Design, techno-economic analysis, and comparative assessment of high-temperature molten salt electric thermal energy storage systems for industrial heat decarbonization in Alberta, Canada
Abdul Saboor et al.
Abstract
Alberta’s industrial sector requires substantial high-temperature process heat, yet its extreme ambient temperatures, which can reach −40 ∘ C, present challenges for thermal energy storage deployment. This study evaluates the techno-economic feasibility of electric thermal energy storage systems using binary chloride salts (50 wt% NaCl: 50 wt% KCl) contained in engineered concrete for delivering industrial heat at approximately 700 ∘ C. A single-tank configuration with an embedded air to salt heat exchanger is operated under different thermal charging configurations, including electric heating powered by solar photovoltaic farms, wind farms, or the grid, and beam-down volumetrically absorbing concentrated solar thermal systems. Nine scenarios were evaluated under four carbon pricing trajectories over a 30-year project lifetime: CP0 (carbon price frozen at $170/tCO 2 e after 2030), CP15 (continued rise of $15/tCO 2 e annually), CP30 (accelerated increase of $30/tCO 2 e annually), and CP45 (high-stringency case with $45/tCO 2 e annual increases). Key performance indicators include round-trip efficiency, levelized cost of heat, land footprint, and use-phase emissions. Results are compared against a natural gas boiler as the reference case. Under continued carbon price escalation of $15/tCO 2 e annually (CP15), this study highlights the effectiveness of an advanced hybrid concentrated solar thermal system with electric thermal energy storage (CST E-TES), as it achieves high round-trip efficiencies of up to 90 %, the lowest levelized cost of heat among renewable options at 19 $/MWht and 83 % lower emissions than natural gas. • Technoeconomic analysis of high-temperature electric thermal energy storage systems. • 9 different charging scenarios evaluated under 4 carbon pricing trajectories to 2050. • Binary chloride salts enable stable high-temperature storage at 700 ∘ C for industry. • Embedded heat exchanger eliminates salt pumping in extreme climates down to −40 ∘ C. • Electric thermal energy storage achieves 90.2 % round-trip efficiency with molten salts.
4 citations
Evidence weight
Balanced mode · F 0.40 / M 0.15 / V 0.05 / R 0.40
| F · citation impact | 0.37 × 0.4 = 0.15 |
| M · momentum | 0.60 × 0.15 = 0.09 |
| V · venue signal | 0.50 × 0.05 = 0.03 |
| R · text relevance † | 0.50 × 0.4 = 0.20 |
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