Close Menu
Invest Intellect
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Invest Intellect
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • Commodities
    • Cryptocurrency
    • Fintech
    • Investments
    • Precious Metal
    • Property
    • Stock Market
    Invest Intellect
    Home»Commodities»The Energy Storage Logjam is Breaking: Sodium-sulfur Batteries Can Help
    Commodities

    The Energy Storage Logjam is Breaking: Sodium-sulfur Batteries Can Help

    August 6, 20245 Mins Read


    BASF site in Tarragona, Spain — sodium-sulfur batteries

    BASF is developing a longer-duration version of its sodium-sulfur battery, which offers duration, supply chain, and safety advantages over lithium-ion. (Image courtesy of BASF.)

    Between Hurricane Beryl in Texas and a series of heat waves across the U.S., the impact of a warming climate has come into clear view this year. Equally clear is the need to remove some bottlenecks standing in the way of rapid decarbonization. That includes the availability of energy storage.

    To decarbonize the grid, entirely new systems must be developed to hold more wind and solar energy for longer periods of time. In the meantime, facility managers can take advantage of a near-term solution in the form of sodium-sulfur batteries, a technology that offers advantages over the familiar lithium-ion formula.

    Energy storage and the shift to peak winter demand

    Lithium-ion batteries have dominated the energy storage market for many years. Electric vehicles, home energy storage systems and grid-scale battery arrays are some of the familiar use cases. In the stationary storage field, though, lithium-ion arrays are typically limited by a duration of four hours, or less.

    The four-hour standard is no accident. It’s incentivized in some wholesale electricity markets in the United States to support a grid-balancing strategy that takes solar energy into consideration. More solar energy is available during the summer, and summertime peak demand periods tend to be relatively short in duration, making four-hour storage an economical choice.

    Peak demand periods in winter require a different strategy. Winter demand peaks can last into the evening when solar power is not available. Traditionally, natural gas and heating oil fill the gap, but these resources are falling by the wayside as the building electrification movement gains momentum. The U.S. Department of Energy is among those advising that a shift in energy storage strategy is needed over the coming years to focus more attention on wintertime demand.

    Parts of the Southeast and Texas already shifted to a winter demand pattern, according to a National Renewable Energy Laboratory report. The lab anticipates wholesale electricity markets will respond by incentivizing periods of energy storage duration beyond four hours.

    Longer-duration energy storage gives grid managers more opportunities to smooth out the bumps in wind and solar availability. Taking advantage of low off-peak rates for longer periods is another benefit.

    The sodium-sulfur solution

    One energy storage solution already on the market is a proven sodium-sulfur formula, often called NAS based on the scientific abbreviations for the two chemicals. The chemical producer BASF is among the battery stakeholders with lengthy experience developing and marketing NAS batteries. The firm is introducing an updated, six-hour duration version of its NAS technology called NAS Model L24, in partnership with the Japanese manufacturer NGK Insulators.

    In contrast to the volatile liquid electrolyte used as a part of the charging and discharging process in conventional lithium-ion batteries, NAS batteries use a stable, precisely designed ceramic material. 

    Although the word “ceramic” suggests a fragile object, industrial ceramics are different. A durable, high-performance ceramic material is commonly used in electrical applications, including the new generation of solid-state batteries emerging in the electric vehicle field.

    Ceramics are also made from earth-abundant materials, an important factor to consider as manufacturers focus their attention on supply chain sustainability and security, said Caroline Brannock, BASF senior sales manager for battery technology.

    A render of BASF's updated technology for sodium-sulfur batteries: NAS Model L24.
    The NAS Model L24 is an updated, six-hour duration version of BASF’s technology for sodium-sulfur batteries made in partnership with NGK Insulators. (Image courtesy of BASF.)

    Changing mindsets on energy storage

    Despite the longer duration and supply chain advantages of NAS, the lithium-ion industry still has the advantage of familiarity. That can be a formidable obstacle to overcome.

    “Everyone is so accustomed to lithium-ion technology, so it’s not necessarily about prices or technical specifications,” Brannock told TriplePundit.

    Safety is one consideration that could make a difference. “We have a lot of safety concerns with lithium for mobility and stationary storage,” Brannock said, noting that lithium-ion installations typically require additional containment measures to reduce risks.“Two major concerns are thermal runaway and toxic gas release, particularly for urban areas. This is something NAS does better.”

    The lithium-ion battery industry has incorporated new fire safety systems, according to a report from the Electric Power Research Institute. The report notes a sharp drop in the rate of battery energy storage system fires and other incidents described as “failures” in recent years. Still, knowledge gaps remain, and “a significant fraction of [battery energy storage systems] failure incidents had an unknown root cause,” according to the report

    The long road to long-duration energy storage

    BASF foresees commercial and industrial operations along with hospitals, schools, and other facilities that depend on a continuous supply of power in the event of an emergency among prospective customers for the new NAS battery. Islands and other remote communities would also benefit from access to energy storage technologies that last longer than the four-hour standard.

    Beyond the needs of individual facilities and isolated communities, the U.S. Department of Energy is providing funds for innovators developing new energy storage systems with much longer durations capable of handling more wind and solar energy as the nation decarbonizes its power grid. The agency set a 10-hour minimum for new long-duration energy storage systems.

    In the future, facility managers will have additional opportunities to weigh the costs and benefits of these new technologies. For the here and now, NAS offers a solution that can bridge the gap with duration, supply chain and safety advantages.



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    Musique: le metal, exploser les oreilles sans casser la voix

    Commodities

    Strengthening Vietnam-US business partnership in the agricultural sector: Towards sustainable development and trade balance

    Commodities

    La recherche s’attaque au calcul du bilan carbone de l’IA

    Commodities

    Quand le métal devient métaphore de l’élévation : le 71e congrès des Compagnons serruriers du Devoir a réuni plus de 500 personnes à Nîmes

    Commodities

    De Nantes à Clisson, les micros festivals de métal dans l’ombre du Hellfest

    Commodities

    Rome’s Agricultural Renaissance

    Commodities
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Picks
    Investments

    Brookfield seeks to buy more property in Japan after $1.6 billion in deals

    Commodities

    Agricultural Adjuvants Market to Reach USD 5.9 Billion by 2032,

    Investments

    Abington police wish Detective Lieutenant Steven Fink a happy retirement

    Editors Picks

    The Smartest Dividend Stocks in Warren Buffett’s Portfolio to Buy With $5,000 Right Now

    May 3, 2025

    Gold surrenders intraday gains; holds above $3,1,00 ahead of Trump’s tariffs announcement

    April 1, 2025

    Voici une bonne nouvelle pour la recharge de voitures électriques en Belgique

    April 26, 2025

    Alabama and America’s energy independence

    August 23, 2024
    What's Hot

    Trump announces cryptocurrency reserve with bitcoin, XRP, ether & more

    March 2, 2025

    Jakarta ups its gold game with Gresik smelter 

    March 19, 2025

    quel avenir pour les plateformes de crowdfunding immobilier ?

    April 14, 2025
    Our Picks

    La Banque Nationale du Canada maintient la performance sectorielle de First Majestic Silver avec un objectif de prix de 12,25 $.

    April 9, 2025

    Bare Metal Stents Market Statistical Forecast, Trade Analysis

    August 29, 2024

    Woman subject to UK’s first ‘McMafia’ wealth order forfeits house and golf club

    August 5, 2024
    Weekly Top

    Ambiance rock garantie au Puy-Sainte-Réparade avec le groupe pop rock Silver Fox au château La Coste

    June 1, 2025

    Quand le métal devient métaphore de l’élévation : le 71e congrès des Compagnons serruriers du Devoir a réuni plus de 500 personnes à Nîmes

    June 1, 2025

    Dividend & Stock Split: TCS, Tata Motors, Coforge Among Shares To Trade Ex-Date This Week

    May 31, 2025
    Editor's Pick

    OPP warn about cryptocurrency tracing scams

    April 1, 2025

    Alphabet: A Big Dividend Boost Could Be On The Way (NASDAQ:GOOGL)

    February 21, 2025

    Endeavour Silver shares rise as Terronera surpasses the 77% completion mark

    October 21, 2024
    © 2025 Invest Intellect
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.