Liquid air could be cheapest method for long-term energy storage, researchers predict
Summary by thechemicalengineer.com
2 Articles
2 Articles
Excess solar and wind energy can be stored as liquid air. MIT has calculated whether this pays off.
Liquid air could be cheapest method for long-term energy storage, researchers predict
MODELLING by chemical engineers in the US and Norway suggests that liquid air energy storage (LAES) could be a more cost-effective option than existing techniques. Researchers at MIT and the Norwegian University of Science and Technology found it could be considerably cheaper than lithium-ion batteries and pumped hydropower.
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