Role of particle size on the multicycle calcium looping activity of limestone for thermochemical energy storage

[Display omitted] •Thermal energy performance of narrow particle size distribution limestones is studied.•Multicyclic activity is better for small particles under all the different studied conditions.•This effect is particularly relevant for particles smaller than 15 μm median particle size.•Particl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of advanced research 2020-03, Vol.22, p.67-76
Hauptverfasser: Durán-Martín, Jonatan D., Sánchez Jimenez, Pedro E., Valverde, José M., Perejón, Antonio, Arcenegui-Troya, Juan, García Triñanes, Pablo, Pérez Maqueda, Luis A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Thermal energy performance of narrow particle size distribution limestones is studied.•Multicyclic activity is better for small particles under all the different studied conditions.•This effect is particularly relevant for particles smaller than 15 μm median particle size.•Particle size effect is not relevant for particles between 15 and 900 μm. The calcium looping process, based on the reversible reaction between CaCO3 and CaO, is recently attracting a great deal of interest as a promising thermochemical energy storage system to be integrated in Concentrated Solar Power plants (CaL-CSP). The main drawbacks of the system are the incomplete conversion of CaO and its sintering-induced deactivation. In this work, the influence of particle size in these deactivation mechanisms has been assessed by performing experimental multicycle tests using standard limestone particles of well-defined and narrow particle size distributions. The results indicate that CaO multicycle conversion benefits from the use of small particles mainly when the calcination is carried out in helium at low temperature. Yet, the enhancement is only significant for particles below 15 μm. On the other hand, the strong sintering induced by calcining in CO2 at high temperatures makes particle size much less relevant for the multicycle performance. Finally, SEM imaging reveals that the mechanism responsible for the loss of activity is mainly pore-plugging when calcination is performed in helium, whereas extensive loss of surface area due to sintering is responsible for the deactivation when calcination is carried out in CO2 at high temperature.
ISSN:2090-1232
2090-1224
DOI:10.1016/j.jare.2019.10.008