Gravel Batteries For Wind And Solar Power Storage

The battery is made up of two large containers of gravel. Electricity
is used to power a pump to heat and pressurise air to 500C; which is fed into
one of the containers of gravel. As the air gives up its heat to the
gravel, expands and leaves the first container; it is much cooler and is fed
into the second, dropping temperature of that gravel to -150C. In order to regenerate the electricity, the cycle is simply reversed. The temperature difference is used to run the Isentropic machine as a heat
engine to make electricity. Other news for Wednesday 28 April, 2010 Return to main renewable energy news section Other Energy Matters News Services
Isentropic says its Pumped Heat Storage Plant could occupy as little as 1/300th of the
area of pumped water storage facilities and at a cost of
USD $55/kWh - and $10/kWh at scale.
Related:
How
deep cycle batteries work