Decarbonizing heavy industry with thermal batteries
MIT spinout Electrified Thermal Solutions has developed an electrically conductive firebrick that stores heat at high enough temperatures to power industrial processes.
Zach Winn | MIT News
Publication Date: November 26, 2024
The electrically conductive firebricks could help hard-to-decarbonize sectors utilize renewable energy for the first time.
Image: MIT News; figure courtesy of the researchers
Whether youre manufacturing cement, steel, chemicals, or paper, you need a large amount of heat. Almost without exception, manufacturers around the world create that heat by burning fossil fuels.
Since coming to MIT in 2014, Stack has worked to develop thermal batteries that use electricity to heat up a conductive version of ceramic firebricks, which have been used as heat stores and insulators for centuries. In 2021, Stack co-founded Electrified Thermal Solutions, which has since demonstrated that its firebricks can store heat efficiently for hours and discharge it by heating air or gas up to 3,272 degrees Fahrenheit hot enough to power the most demanding industrial applications.
Achieving temperatures north of 3,000 F represents a breakthrough for the electric heating industry, as it enables some of the worlds hardest-to-decarbonize sectors to utilize renewable energy for the first time. It also unlocks a new, low-cost model for using electricity when its at its cheapest and cleanest.
We have a global perspective at Electrified Thermal, but in the U.S. over the last five years, we've seen an incredible opportunity emerge in energy prices that favors flexible offtake of electricity, Stack says. Throughout the middle of the country, especially in the wind belt, electricity prices in many places are negative for more than 20 percent of the year, and the trend toward decreasing electricity pricing during off-peak hours is a nationwide phenomenon. Technologies like our Joule Hive Thermal Battery will enable us to access this inexpensive, clean electricity and compete head to head with fossil fuels on price for industrial heating needs, without even factoring in the positive climate impact.