Pumps Molten Salt Pumps Improve Efficiency of New Long Duration Energy Storage Facility

Source: Press release Sulzer 2 min Reading Time

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Sulzer has signed an agreement with Highview Power to deliver eight molten salt pumps, five cryopumps and a selection of auxiliary services. The partnership aims to unlock long-duration energy storage at Highview Power’s new facility at Carrington, Manchester, and at other future facilities across the UK.

Sulzer’s Vey and Vny vertical mixed-flow molten salt pumps offer high capacity and efficiency, balancing NPSH requirements with long-term reliability for concentrated solar power.(Source:  Sulzer)
Sulzer’s Vey and Vny vertical mixed-flow molten salt pumps offer high capacity and efficiency, balancing NPSH requirements with long-term reliability for concentrated solar power.
(Source: Sulzer)

Sulzer has signed an agreement with Highview Power to deliver eight molten salt pumps, five cryopumps and a selection of auxiliary services. The deal represents an engineering-led collaboration that will help unlock long-duration energy storage at Highview Power’s new facility at Carrington, Manchester, and at other future facilities across the UK. The Carrington project will be the first to deliver commercial-scale liquid air energy storage in the UK.

While solar, wind and other green power sources offer enormous reserves of emission-free power, they can also be intermittent. If these renewable sources generate more supply than demand at any one time, they can overwhelm the grid. In the UK where wind produces about 30 % of all electricity, the grid operator will often pay developers to turn their wind turbines off. This costly process known as curtailment is a growing issue as the UK introduces more wind power supply into the grid.

Highview Power’s liquid air energy storage (LAES) system represents a significant opportunity in the global energy transition, delivering more renewable energy into the power grid through its innovative storage technology. The system captures excess power, releasing it back at times of high demand or reduced generation. It also offers critical grid stability services.

Alternative energy storage

Excess energy is used to clean and dry air, which is then refrigerated and compressed until it liquefies and can be stored in tanks. When power is needed, the liquid is pumped at high pressure and heated, so it expands, and drives a gas turbine to generate electricity, explains Highview Power.

Sulzer will supply Highview Power with cryogenic pumps and a molten salt storage system. The new Carrington facility will use these molten salt processes to recover and store otherwise wasted energy for use in heat generation, further maximizing its efficiency, shares Sulzer.

A world-class collaboration

With over fifty years’ experience in molten salt pump manufacture, Sulzer’s expertise provides invaluable support for innovative projects like this. Their robust, proven designs ensure reliable service and minimum downtime in an industry where every second matters.

Sulzer pumps also lead the way in molten salt applications, and expected peak temperatures in the new plant of around 435°C sit well below the 650°C standard tolerance of Sulzer’s specialist pumps. Nonetheless, the LAES project poses specific engineering challenges around integrating both cryogenic pumps and molten salt pumps efficiently, adds Sulzer.

Molten salts represent a state-of-the-art solution to renewable energy storage, where energy providers can tap into excess production to smooth output at peak times and avoid costly excess. Given the collaborative nature of the project, Sulzer anticipates a 14-month manufacturing and delivery timescale despite the complexity involved, and it expects to see the plant operational by March 2027.

Sulzer’s system will ensure that Highview Power’s innovative liquid air energy storage technology is even more efficient, delivering more renewable energy onto the grid in the UK and beyond, concludes the firm.

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