Science
Related: About this forumOcean Battery stores renewable energy at the bottom of the sea
By Michael Irving
January 09, 2022
As useful as renewable energy sources are, they need to be backed up by storage systems that hold energy for times when the Sun isnt shining or the wind isnt blowing. Ocean Battery is a new design for an energy storage system that functions a bit like a hydroelectric dam at the bottom of the sea.
Developed by Dutch startup Ocean Grazer, the Ocean Battery is designed to be installed on the seafloor near offshore renewable energy generators, like wind turbines, floating solar farms, tidal and wave energy systems. It is made up of three components that together function on a principle similar to that of a hydro dam.
Buried in the seabed is a concrete reservoir that holds up to 20 million liters (5.3 million gal) of fresh water, stored at low pressure. A system of pumps and turbines connects this reservoir to a flexible bladder on the seafloor. Excess electricity from the renewable sources can be used to pump water from the reservoir into the bladder. When the energy is needed, the bladder releases and, driven by the pressure of the seawater above it, squeezes its water back down to the reservoir, spinning turbines on the way to generate electricity thats fed out into the grid.
The Ocean Grazer team says that the system has an efficiency of between 70 and 80 percent, and should be able to run an unlimited number of cycles over an operation lifetime of more than 20 years. Its also fairly scalable each concrete reservoir has a capacity of 10 MWh, so adding more of these can increase the overall capacity. Extra units of the pump and turbine machinery can also be added to boost the power output, if more energy is needed quickly.
More:
https://newatlas.com/energy/ocean-battery-renewable-energy-storage/
Response to Judi Lynn (Original post)
wyn borkins This message was self-deleted by its author.
Duppers
(28,123 posts)Thanks for posting this, Judi.
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