|
Thermal masses are a super cool way (ha!) to store energy, and I'm surprised they don't get more attention, both in the media, and in terms of research / investment. Heating and cooling accounts for somewhere around half(!) of residential energy use [1], which could be easily time-shifted with some very cheap thermal mass and some economic incentive to do so. This is actually used in some commercial buildings in places where energy is cheaper at certain times of the day (for example, at night) [2], by freezing ice when energy is cheap, and thawing it when it isn't. That being said, although this is a super cool project (I have the same inverter, and I made a similar control board ;)), this thermal mass doesn't seem like it would be particularly practical in most cases. Water has a relatively high specific heat capacity of 4.186J/gC, but given the narrow range of temperatures acceptable for a fridge, this doesn't end up being very much - only 79Wh per degree Celsius that the fridge is allowed to swing. If you consider 1C - 6C "acceptable", you only end up storing 395Wh. This is about 30-40% of the capacity of a $100-$200 "deep discharge" lead-acid battery, and is also a much wider range than most consumers would be used to (and may result in frozen veggies, for example). In order to make this more practical, you really want something that can freeze around fridge temperature. For the same amount of water used above, freezing and thawing the water would store 6,308Wh(!), around 16x as much. If you could get something that freezes at 3C/4C with a similar heat of fusion to water, you could have a much smaller thermal battery that lasts _much_ longer, without the substantial temperature swings you see with your current design. [1] https://www.eia.gov/tools/faqs/faq.php?id=96&t=3
[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_storage_air_conditioning |
You need to take into account efficiencies of getting the cold into the fridge too. It takes around 10-15 hours of runtime to cool the thermal mass down from 5 to 0.5 degrees C (at 14C exterior temp), and the fridge needs 120 watts to run. Measured this way, the thermal battery is storing ~1200-1800 watt-hours.
But then, if it were powered from batteries, there would be significantly more power needed to fully charge the batteries and maintain good health -- my 860AH battery bank (4 deep cycle batteries) needs at least 1kwh input to charge up from 12v to full).
Another way to come at the question is, how many batteries are typically specced out to power an offgrid fridge, and banks costing 10-20k dollars are not at all uncommon, though they're also shared with other household needs.