The 'Sand Battery' that heats your home, NOT the planet!

Ғылым және технология

The global energy crisis is starting to really hurt, and the prospects for winter fuel prices are starting to look pretty bleak for millions of people in the Northern hemisphere. So how do we get ourselves off our hopeless dependence on fossil fuels? And if the alternative is intermittent renewables then how are we going to keep our homes constantly warm during the colder months? Perhaps our friends in Scandinavia can provide some answers…
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Пікірлер: 1 000

  • @wenkeadam362
    @wenkeadam362 Жыл бұрын

    I am 77 and find it so fascinating to live in the middle of a creativity boom around one of humanity's oldest problems, heating and light. Let 1000s ideas flourish and some solutions will stick. In the meantime, thank you so much for sharing bite size information nuggets about the ongoing process.

  • @Diana1000Smiles

    @Diana1000Smiles

    Жыл бұрын

    That's so nice. ❤ I'm younger than you. (ha, ha, but not by much)

  • @kimmer6

    @kimmer6

    Жыл бұрын

    I live inland East of San Francisco where the climate is much hotter and drier. My 4 bedroom home has wooden open beam high ceilings over half of the house that look great, but have no insulation. This house roasted in the Summer and was terribly cold in the Winter. In 2019, I needed a new roof and opted for having the entire roof coated with sprayed-on rigid urethane foam. It is 2 inches thick and you can jump on it without damaging the foam. They sprayed acrylic on top and dusted it with crushed tan colored mineral. This roof cut my natural gas heating bill 45% and since there is no central AC here, ceiling fans do a decent job of making one feel cooler. It was 102F, 38.9C a few days ago and it only got to 78F or 25.5C in our living room before the outside air cooled down for the evening. The attic gable fan used to run 12-14 hours a day in the Summer. Now it might run once a week for 30 minutes just before sunset if it was a very hot week. The thermostat is set for 95F, 35C to operate the fan. I'm retired and on fixed income and appreciate the savings on our utility bill. Maybe I'm saving the planet, too.

  • @yodab.at1746

    @yodab.at1746

    Жыл бұрын

    It's getting to a point where the idea of government should be more about prioritizing and funding development that benefits society as a whole rather than prioritizing profit making legacy energy production. Yes energy, in of itself, benefits society but at the cost of our future generations environment.

  • @kimmer6

    @kimmer6

    Жыл бұрын

    @@yodab.at1746 I want to see the cox ucking liberals, politicians, and big mouth news anchors live on 10 kilowatt hours a day of electricity like I do. I am able to pay for unlimited electrical usage especially on the 100F 38C weeks. But I made it my mission to prove that it can be done without many hardships. Government officials do not give a rat's ass about conservation of anything. Most are in to gain money, influence, power, and control over us peasants.

  • @Kevin_Street

    @Kevin_Street

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kimmer6 Better insulation is always a good idea, no matter what climate a home is in. You're definitely doing your part.

  • @rickrys2729
    @rickrys2729 Жыл бұрын

    Some years ago we built and used a so called Russian wood stove that was common in Finland. By heating the interior bricks to over 1000 Degrees, it took more than 5 hours for that heat to soak to the surface which was very nice for a single burn in the evening to last through a cold night. While heat capacity of brick is less than water the high temperatures meant we could store more heat than an equivalent size water tank. Basic idea seems feasible.

  • @sam71119

    @sam71119

    Жыл бұрын

    The Romans did it as well... works ✔️✔️✔️

  • @Patrick-jj5nh

    @Patrick-jj5nh

    Жыл бұрын

    there are domestic versions of this type of slow thermal heat radiations system available, cant find model name right now, that are based on ceramic thermal storage

  • @salec7592

    @salec7592

    9 ай бұрын

    All across former Yugoslavia (and I guess it was something copied from Germany), so called "electrical thermoaccumulation furnaces" with optional addition of timers have been used in winter time by the residents to take advantage of lower electric power price during night time. During the day, forced ventilation of ambient air through the isolated inside (a labyrinth of fire clay bricks) of the furnace works as space heater without conversions of energy from electric to thermal happening at the time of use. A thermostat prevents rapid discharge of all of the accumulated heat. The high temperature heat is produced by resistive electric heater lodged in between the fire clay bricks inside. A layer of glass wool keeps the core of the furnace from cooling too soon and also makes surface of the apparatus only lukewarm to the touch. So, basically, the concept of this solution has been known, but this is on a much larger scale and of cost-optimized construction.

  • @davefroman4700

    @davefroman4700

    6 ай бұрын

    I took an old electric stove I had laying around and filled the oven with sand and screwed it shut. I put 120vdc of solar to the lower element direct. Kept my greenhouse warm enough all winter. January I added another string of panels to keep it up the wattage. You can do it real cheap if you have access to some used panels.

  • @gavinderbyshire5535
    @gavinderbyshire5535 Жыл бұрын

    I'm working on the Eden Project geothermal system, were integrating the heated water to supply heat to a new greenhouse. The Geothermal system will supply surrounding houses an business's eventually. It's a great system with local losses at a minimum.

  • @acmefixer1

    @acmefixer1

    Жыл бұрын

    How deep are your wells? Where is it located? I understand that it's very expensive to drill wells, especially deep wells.

  • @danrawson8515

    @danrawson8515

    Жыл бұрын

    You can use a compost heap in a greenhouse while the compost is degrading it releases heat to keep the greenhouse warm ..

  • @DrDave327

    @DrDave327

    Жыл бұрын

    I have a 5600 square foot office building which I heat with 6 450’ closed loop geothermal wells. The 50 year old building had two natural gas accounts, which I was able to close with a smile on my face. The project was a bit expensive, but the technology can become cheap by scaling up. I believe geothermal could be Europe’s answer to their recent shortage of natural gas supplied by Russia.

  • @danrawson8515

    @danrawson8515

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DrDave327 there is no shortage all what's going on is planned .. they are stealing everyone's money then they will steal everyone's savings then property's through default .. then banks crash and close then these parasites bring in programmable digital currency.. a social credit slavery system like China all run by A.I and if you don't comply with any rules your moneys switched off and were screwed all on. .Gov website .. If you Google bank of England bail ins then you know it's all true.. Only hope we all have is to not buy into digital I.d on phones or it's game over for humanity.. Unfortunately half the country have no critical thinking brain cells left..

  • @andrewsaint6581

    @andrewsaint6581

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DrDave327 in addition, your capital expense will be inflated away and you will be insulated😉 from the volatility of current and future inflation and energy market price shocks caused by politically unstable states and corrupt governments. Double whammy! Nice.

  • @claudegarneau666
    @claudegarneau666 Жыл бұрын

    I heat my house using a Finnish style fireplace, of my own design, that heats a 50000 lbs of stone in an insulated room. These fireplaces have to be isolated because of difficulty controlling its heat. I draw the heat from it through my furnace. It also heats 300 feet of copper tubing that allows me a 1 hour shower or more. The most important consideration is insulating the house. My house has a R-value of over 45. The windows a triple glazed and filled with argon. I live in Canada and before I completed my fireplace, I used to pay 30 dollars a month to heat it in winter. In summer, it is on average, 10 - 15 degrees C cooler inside than outside. I found the more insulation , the better. We also have an air to air heat exchanger that replaces the air in every thirty minutes.

  • @andreas5287
    @andreas5287 Жыл бұрын

    I love this guy! He always manages to adress and soothe my, sometimes paralysing, despair with hope and rational solutions. Thank you!

  • @JustHaveaThink

    @JustHaveaThink

    Жыл бұрын

    Cheers Andreas.

  • @chrishayes5755

    @chrishayes5755

    Жыл бұрын

    What do you guys make of the countless scientists who say it's too late to reverse anthropogenic climate change and that doom is inevitable in the coming decades?

  • @brianwheeldon4643

    @brianwheeldon4643

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes Andreas I agree. The problem is we are nowhere near doing sufficient to mitigate fossil fuel burning. Physics only cares about GHGs in the atmosphere, oceans and land masses. So how do we address that? Currently we're conservatively at 508 CO2 e ppm (NOAA Nov 2021). That roughly equates to an already 2.25 deg C global average rise, currently working its way through the planetary system, meaning roughly 7 to 9 degrees C over land. Yes, Dave Borlace is good at what he does, but let's not forget that humanity, whilst not reverting the dark ages, has to drastically and urgently reduce its GHG emissions. Most don't want to do anything, such as take action, to effect the change in reduction. There's no Polar Night Energy Storage System on a largely lifeless planet, so don't get too comfortable. There are no scientific tech fixes in the necessary time frame available... Sit David King, Prof Kevin Anderson, and more generally the Potsdam Institute, and the Tyndall Centre. These solutions are all for subequent adaptation, after humanity has stopped emitting as near as possible to low low close to statistical zero and taken >Trillion Tonnes of the stuff out of the atmosphere and kept it out. Good luck and kind regards

  • @1jimjon

    @1jimjon

    Жыл бұрын

    @@chrishayes5755 it could always be worse, less doom is better than more doom if we continue on the same path.

  • @vhawk1951kl

    @vhawk1951kl

    Жыл бұрын

    Why the obsession with so-called "fossil fuels" given that men (human beings have been using fossil fuels for thousands of years, without having any reason to suppose that there is any reason - or any sensible reason, why they might not?

  • @seewaage
    @seewaage Жыл бұрын

    I saw a gentleman that used a large barrel of paraffin wax to use as a heat battery. He put this 5 gallon barrel of wax on his wood stove. When the wood stove died down in the middle of the night, the wax gave off loads of heat until it solidified.

  • @ArcticSeaCamel
    @ArcticSeaCamel Жыл бұрын

    Finland here. I live in city of Lahti which has city-wide distributed heating network - as all cities in Finland). The city has 2 own power plants that runs with trash (have been so since 90's) and nowadays with wood. They produce electricity and heat. Combined power is 350MW. The scale of things here (Lahti has about 100K inhabitants, not all live in the area of the network) is so big that these kind of storage systems might not be viable. All the heat produced is needed anyway and burning plant is easy to adjust for current need. But in industrial buildings that may have their own plants etc. they may be great! Anyway, we should eventually get rid of burning things altogether. Biomass isn't sustainable either. Lack of biodiversity in Finland is already actual problem. There's very little natural forests here. What I think would be the best source of "unlimited" heat here up north is geothermal in industrial scale. There has been a test facility drilled in Espoo few years back (down to 6km or so) but apparently they won't be making commercial plant out of it - at least not yet. But the idea of getting all the heat needed from the ground should be very much on the top of the list. On winter there simply isn't any other scalable heat source here that wouldn't burn things. Another problem with these distributed heat systems are that they're natural monopolies (fortunately they're almost all owned by municipalities). That way in many cases the price of that heat can be pretty high! Making a new house with good insulation and HVAC with heat exchanger consume so little energy that heat pump(s) can be much cheaper overall! There's lot of wind turbines installed lately but their fluctuation is a bit too big of an issue in terms of creating heat. The coldest days in winter are in many case are the most calm.

  • @mintheman7

    @mintheman7

    Жыл бұрын

    Your last sentence indicated exactly why storage such as this is needed: store heat when there is excessive wind generation, and use it on cold nights with no wind. We need many different technologies for different scenarios if we want to successfully transition ourselves off fossil fuel.

  • @ArcticSeaCamel

    @ArcticSeaCamel

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mintheman7 Yes, I agree at some level. But the best way to utilize them would be to use the electricity to pump heat from the ground. Not sure if high enough temperatures for these storages can be gained there. But everything not burning is on the right direction!

  • @mintheman7

    @mintheman7

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ArcticSeaCamel You are still not getting my point. This technology is for energy STORAGE. Renewables are not viable unless storage technology becomes cheaper and more mature because wind/solar are both intermittent. Ground source heat pump you mentioned is very efficient when electricity can be generated, but how do you operate them at night without wind?

  • @j.m.b.greengardens968
    @j.m.b.greengardens9685 ай бұрын

    Around 10 years ago, I had the opportunity to visit a project in Richmond, Virginia using similar principles. A home-owner, who may have had an engineering background, though I do not recall for sure, had excavated a pit in the backyard - 10 to 12 feet deep and wide and maybe 15 to 20 feet long. This he lined with some sort of membrane to keep out water, insulated with foam board and layered in PEX pipe and sand. The whole was topped off with more insulation board and soil, and more membrane to keep out water. On one end of the system the pipe went to solar panels - I am recalling 4 or 5 panels - and to the house on the other. The PEX was filled with a propylene glycol solution. Richmond has fairly hot summers and cool to cold winters, roughly an average high and low in July of 89ºF/32ºC and 69ºF/21ºC, and in January of 46º F/8º C and 25ºF/-4ºC. The weather is rarely cloudy for more than a few days at a time. Heating of some sort is usually needed November through March, occasionally longer, and the home-owner said that the system kept up quite well. The house was of conventional mid century frame construction, and as I recall, had no special features except for good insulation.

  • @martincotterill823
    @martincotterill823 Жыл бұрын

    Great video, Dave, cheers! Here in Saarland, Germany, there's a lot of community heating systems round power stations. Such heat storage systems would plug right in, no problem

  • @JustHaveaThink

    @JustHaveaThink

    Жыл бұрын

    Cheers Martin :-)

  • @_aullik

    @_aullik

    Жыл бұрын

    Not really tho as they are horrible inefficient. They require high temperatures for storage so either burning, solar concentration or induction. Germany has a massive energy problem in the winter (fully renewable), so using induction instead of a heat pump solution does not sound that great to me. Instead of sand, you could use existing heat storage technologies namely PCMs (Phase Change Material). The energy required to heat 1kg of water or ice by 1°C is 1kcal. However to go from 1kg of ice at 0°C to 1kg of liquid water requires ~80kcal. Meaning you can store a lot of energy by using the phase change. You can do similar at higher temperatures with other materials, paraffin (candle wax) being an example here. Thus you could have a big tank of wax at ~75°C that you melt to add energy and freeze to remove energy. You can't store as much energy per area as with sand, meaning you need a bigger tank, however your max temperature is now 75°C so you could use a heatpump and be 4 times as efficient from an energy perspective. Now to be fair, there are challenges, for example Wax tends to expand when melting and a tank would have to deal with that.

  • @garygraham8373

    @garygraham8373

    Жыл бұрын

    @@_aullik sand is environmentally friendly, a ground-source heatpump heated hotwater tank in sand is good, with reticulated radiators, sized for heat storage with electric three or four hours at ultra-night rate, ideally including heatpump compressor direct-coupled vertical-axis wind turbine for free heating every time the wind blows (subsurface ground evaporator or built-in coolroom/fridge)

  • @_aullik

    @_aullik

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@garygraham8373 Sry but you lost me there somewhere. Could you please split that into a couple short sentences. What i understood from your text: You want to use a heatpump, so your max temp is ~80°C or you are super inefficient. So what is the point of the sand instead of just using water tanks? Sand adds nothing to it. The water alone is a decent storage medium, however it is not that easy to insulate when keeping it under working pressure. As for the heatpump that is directly coupled with a wind turbine. Whats the point of that? Wind turbines convert rotation to electricity and motors back to rotation. The overall efficiency is 80% to 85% efficient. A gearbox in direct coupling will get you around 90% efficiency. So slightly better, however now you are dependent on wind directly above you. Your heatpump is also less efficient as it cannot adjust its motorspeed depending on its needs. So direct coupling doesn't give you efficiency but it makes you a whole lot more dependent on the whether.

  • @mattihalme81

    @mattihalme81

    Жыл бұрын

    @@_aullik PCMs are a curious topic. Is the price and availability of paraffins or sugar alcohols trivial from engineering point of view? For sure the economically viable sources for petroleum wax will be fossil fuels, not some warm and fuzzy soybean oil. Latent heat of phase change is a self-evident and an uninteresting insight. How do you freeze the material in the container(s) and how reliably does the crystallization occur? Please please, present a juggernaut of a tank filled with paraffin wax and the estimated storage capacity in GWh and the cost in €/MWh to me. Not some miniature nuclear reactor arrangement in a bucket at the basement of a technical university.

  • @eaaeeeea
    @eaaeeeea Жыл бұрын

    In Finland we have district heating in every major city and it's absolutely awesome. Very cheap and efficient system. I love to see this sand heat storage tech coming out of Finland when Nokia, Angry Birds and Clash of Clans are so yesteryear's news. If only those pesky Swedes hadn't made world's first fossil free steel (SSAB)... The race is on for a sustainable future and as we can see here, innovation isn't dependent on the size of the nation!

  • @GrahamCampbell-kr2gz

    @GrahamCampbell-kr2gz

    Жыл бұрын

    Technically, it isn't fossil fuel free. Most nitrogen is made from burning coal. It is then transported using fossil fuels. Check out watch?v=BaGO8jIxVdA

  • @dougaltolan3017

    @dougaltolan3017

    Жыл бұрын

    @@GrahamCampbell-kr2gz technically gold is free too, as are all raw minerals and food. Extraction costs a bit, but the lions share is company profits.

  • @dougaltolan3017

    @dougaltolan3017

    Жыл бұрын

    How is the heat use metered? How are bills calculated?

  • @GrahamCampbell-kr2gz

    @GrahamCampbell-kr2gz

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dougaltolan3017 Volvo claiming "Fossil fuel free steel" is BS on a large scale. Not counting the power to run a meter is insignificant.

  • @dougaltolan3017

    @dougaltolan3017

    Жыл бұрын

    @@GrahamCampbell-kr2gz I misread your first post here, sure, the steel isn't fossil fuel free but it could be very nearly if all heating was done without fossil fuel. The metering aspect isn't a cost issue, rather a technical one. I lived in a place that had district heating, and billing was its complete downfall. Usage was measured by evaporation of water in a vial on every radiator. That meant that meter readers needed to enter every room if every flat. That simply was not going to happen, not on that estate anyway. Then there are all the ways to cheat such meters.

  • @paulwary
    @paulwary Жыл бұрын

    Another interesting heat storage material is sodium sulphate, which undergoes a phase change at from solid to liquid at 32C and can thereby story lots of 'latent' heat. The phase change temp is also adjustable down to 20C by adding common salt. This temperature range seems perfect for heating/cooling applications.

  • @schlirf
    @schlirf7 ай бұрын

    New England appreciates this video, especially with our (second hand) weather.

  • @PaulFellowsGuitarist
    @PaulFellowsGuitarist Жыл бұрын

    I recall when Billingham new town in the North East of England was built in the late 50's/60's, they implemented a district heating system with ducts along side the roads carrying the heating pipes. The system is no longer used, but the building housing the boilers and backup diesel generators still exists. It may have been still in operation until around 2010. I think originally the idea was to use the waste heat from the massive ICI chemical works to feed the system but I am not sure that part ever happened. It heated homes, college, shopping centre/precint and the large leisure centre.

  • @PhilLesh69

    @PhilLesh69

    Жыл бұрын

    There used to be central heating plants all over major cities. I remember seeing steam vents in the middle of a city street where they would put a big steel pipe over the crack or manhole in order to raise the steam above the road so it wouldn't wash out driver visibility. New York city may still have places like that down in the older parts of lower Manhattan. Baltimore used to. Washington D.C. did, too.

  • @wkinne1
    @wkinne1 Жыл бұрын

    Here in Michigan there are thousands of old silos on farms no longer in use, imagine filling one with sand and putting solar panels every few feet surrounding them from top to bottom. Have some heat generating resisters in the sand and you have a massive sand battery! I only wish I had one 🤔🤔 Spray foam the inside for insulation, sure seems like this would work.

  • @BrainMcFly
    @BrainMcFly Жыл бұрын

    Most worth mention is, that you can use types of sands that are not usable e.g. for concrete. Since sand for concrete is also a very enviromental unfriendly (just search for some videos here) for these storages you can use any types of sand, e.g. from deserts.

  • @The.Ghost.of.Tom.Joad.

    @The.Ghost.of.Tom.Joad.

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah. I'm still shocked that we don't use more lime-based mortar and less concrete, since lime mortar actually ABSORBS CO2 over its lifetime, while concrete adds to the environmental CO2, but so it goes. Freaking corporations and their dedication to big-carbon.

  • @gibbsm

    @gibbsm

    Жыл бұрын

    saudi arabia has plenty of useless sand.

  • @arnokilianski7889
    @arnokilianski7889 Жыл бұрын

    This is going off on a bit of a tangent, but I'm reminded of a blog written by a guy living off grid in the USA. He heated his cabin with a wood stove, which he buried under a pile of rocks in his basement, basically leaving only the door and draft controls exposed. That pile of rocks worked wonders to smooth out the "spikes" in heat output from the wood stove; he could fire it up when it suited him, and the rock pile would continue to give off heat long after the fire burned down.

  • @theusconstitution1776

    @theusconstitution1776

    Жыл бұрын

    I happen to know of this very same scenario in New Hampshire with a woodstove and all its piping in a brick room filled with tons and tons of sand and well that might be good when you have temperatures in the 40s when it’s 10 below zero you can’t get enough heat out of it it just burns wood so this caused the gentleman and his family to haul the tons of sand up the stairs and out of the basement take the brick walls down and try something else

  • @procrastinator41

    @procrastinator41

    Жыл бұрын

    @@theusconstitution1776 maybe a little heat pump that draws from the sand and brick thermal battery to access boost heat for cold snaps ?

  • @ps.2
    @ps.2 Жыл бұрын

    One thing I can't quite get my head around: heat pumps are 300% to 500% efficient since they are not _generating_ heat but merely _moving_ it. This only works for low (human-scale) temperatures, though. For thermal storage, be it water at 98°C or sand at 600°C, you must use direct heat, which cannot exceed 100% efficiency. So, while district heating from thermal storage seems like it gains a lot of economies of scale, I can't see how you can beat even small-scale heat pumps. Unless heat pumps are completely off the table because the outdoor temperatures go below -20°C or so. Which, come to think of it, is probably common in Finland.

  • @Brurgh

    @Brurgh

    Жыл бұрын

    Heat pumps are more efficient. However this and other thermal storage solutions are making use of existing wasteful processes. Just like the example used in the video, Data Centres produce a ridiculous amount of wasted heat energy, which normally cannot be used and is just expelled. This then makes data centres very energy inefficient, even if renewables are being used to power the data centres a lot of excess energy is going to waste. By storing this excess energy in sand to be released into exisitant district heating systems this then makes data centres more efficient as well as provide the district heating company stored heat for use whenever they need. District heating is already a thing in a lot of central europe & scandanavia with incetives to join the district heating which also makes it more economical for people. This along with your comment on -20°C tempuratures really pushes this kind of technology. This big picture view of the energy system, finding where energy is being wasted and turning that into something more useful, is way more sustainable and better for the environment than just sticking heat pumps everywhere because they are really efficient.

  • @eyeballengineering7007
    @eyeballengineering7007 Жыл бұрын

    I use solar powered mini-split heat pumps. Along with a solar powered hot water heater. I use far less carbon footprint than most.

  • @Diana1000Smiles

    @Diana1000Smiles

    Жыл бұрын

    How expensive will Water become in the very near future?

  • @eyeballengineering7007

    @eyeballengineering7007

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Diana1000Smiles mine is $45 a month up to 1,000 gallons. Every thousand gallons past that is $3.75. not too bad. My friends are the management at our local gid. So I have a good understanding of our costs and maintenance.

  • @peterfeenan3116

    @peterfeenan3116

    Жыл бұрын

    What's a" mini-split heat pump"? I'm looking to decarbonise my home and looking for all options.

  • @offgridwanabe

    @offgridwanabe

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome, I went ground source heat pump 20 years ago and 6 years ago I added a solar system I live in a zone 4 climate and my home is 100% electric and all of this cost $45 a month last year, so it can be done and now I will find that last $45.

  • @eyeballengineering7007

    @eyeballengineering7007

    Жыл бұрын

    @@offgridwanabe Phenomenal!

  • @apuuvah
    @apuuvah Жыл бұрын

    Greetings from Kankaanpää, Finland. It's nice that people like you provide some optimism in a world that gets worse by the day, it seems.

  • @anarchimedes7
    @anarchimedes7 Жыл бұрын

    The simplicity is amazing.

  • @manzion7591
    @manzion7591 Жыл бұрын

    Excellently written and presented. Thank you. Edit comment- you might check use of units in slides… kWh power vs. kW capacity. To viewers wishing for small scale or DIY thermal storage, look into groundwater coupled heat pumps, and good old fashioned passive solar heat storage such as black stones or water drums placed inside sunny windows.

  • @andrewbell8282
    @andrewbell8282 Жыл бұрын

    An extension of this idea I've wondered about is using the heat for purpose as well as storage, even if that loses some capacity. Just about anything can be decomposed into its constituent elements given sufficient heat in a vacuum. So heat up difficult-to-recycle materials and then separate out the elements via gravity, spinning, etc. Cool the elements by transferring the heat to the district heating system, and then extract the elements for reuse.

  • @blank.9301
    @blank.9301 Жыл бұрын

    I see a more local, sustainable community approach to living becoming more popular in the years to come.

  • @dama9150
    @dama9150 Жыл бұрын

    'Northern hemisphere winter will be here soon enough'... I'm not ready.

  • @Diana1000Smiles

    @Diana1000Smiles

    Жыл бұрын

    I am ready. I cannot survive on smoke from Wildfires, and, I have lots of warm socks. 😊

  • @brian1204
    @brian1204 Жыл бұрын

    Love these “lower tech” solutions to energy storage. I’m not at all against tech, but why not use appropriate tech instead of always focusing on high tech? Keep up the good work!

  • @GregEva

    @GregEva

    Жыл бұрын

    Simple solutions are the future. High-tech brings with it high complexity, cost, maintenance, risks, etc. In systems design, we try to keep things as simple as possible to achieve the goal.

  • @carlsapartments8931

    @carlsapartments8931

    Жыл бұрын

    probably because of human curiosity, it's intense and fun. people love to create. Oh and remember, what we call low tech now used to be the current hi-tech, things always move forward.

  • @Quemedices684
    @Quemedices684 Жыл бұрын

    Heat pumps provides four times more heat than joule heating. Also, not using some change of phase (I.e. some salt compounds), implies that temperature has to drop quite a lot to recover most of the thermal energy. What would be fantastic would be some compound that changes phase at temperatures appropriate for heat pump (50-60C), so that allowed them to be used directly at residential houses

  • @stormelemental13

    @stormelemental13

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, but they aren't very suitable for most thermal storage because they aren't efficient at reaching the high temperatures that are wanted.

  • @P.SeudoNym
    @P.SeudoNym Жыл бұрын

    Brilliant. I wondered why something like this was not on the market. Chicago has had a similar approach, just for cooling, since 1985.

  • @jenshobroh1294

    @jenshobroh1294

    Жыл бұрын

    How does that work Matt? Interested.

  • @nixonsmateruby1
    @nixonsmateruby1 Жыл бұрын

    I remember in the 70s seeing a documentary, and in India these people just threw there animals dung in a trough, then stuck half a barrel on top and used the gas to cook on, well every house could have one of those that has a garden, because a compost bin is the same.

  • @hanserikkratholmrasmussen6623
    @hanserikkratholmrasmussen6623 Жыл бұрын

    I'm from Denmark. In my hometown, Holstebro, we have district heating using multiple sources which makes our heating very cheap. A lot of other cities have relied on gas, and they pay a huge price now. I think the "sand battery" is a splendid idea. We could use it here to store some of the solar energy that we have plenty of.

  • @SteveP0412

    @SteveP0412

    Жыл бұрын

    Why has it not been implemented here in Denmark, yet? Sounds like a perfect solution.

  • @CUBETechie

    @CUBETechie

    Жыл бұрын

    Sector coupling. For example a metal cast factory has a lot of heat it can be used for heatin, factory waste heat can be used and for example using the waste heat directly to heat up the Sand. Especially in summer ( AC System get rid of the heat and below it in the sand

  • @Hukkinen

    @Hukkinen

    Жыл бұрын

    @@CUBETechie Sector coupling, yeah, I feel this is the way new energy systems must be designed. It's like a new "eco"system must be created, consisting of various kinds of energy components. This is in contrast of traditional "one problem solutions" like burning stuff to create energy, or even nuclear. For example, the metal liquid batteries.. I'd like to see them put in a place where their waste energy could be harnessed. PS. Hans, combined heat and power production gives a really high efficiency, over 90 %.

  • @MortenSlottHansen
    @MortenSlottHansen Жыл бұрын

    Here in Denmark cities with district heating will have a mandatory connection requirement meaning it quickly works out for all parties. Also we are burning waste and putting the excess heat back into the district heating.

  • @magnushelin007

    @magnushelin007

    Жыл бұрын

    Same in Sweden.

  • @davidwalker2942
    @davidwalker29426 ай бұрын

    Verge Permaculture in Alberta has done engineered greenhouses viable through minus 40 degrees winters by pumping heat into ground under the greenhouse in summer while cooling the greenhouse, and recapturing that heat in winter while recharging the ground using cold air.

  • @benlamprecht6414
    @benlamprecht6414 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for yet another excellent video. Please do regular follow-ups on Thermal Storage Polar Night's progress, competitors and alternatives

  • @jasonleland6300
    @jasonleland6300 Жыл бұрын

    Hi Dave, great video, I watch them every week. I design district heating systems here in the (UK). The industry is going through large changes as we speak. You spoke some of high temperatures needed. While this is important for certain sources, particularly EFW or where power generation is included in the scheme, the major trend is leading towards reducing temperatures in the systems and using more heat engines that can be powered by renewables. Heating design practices and regulations are both being geared towards low temp solutions that can be driven by heat pumps. If you want more details and some exciting happenings for future, let me know.

  • @JustHaveaThink

    @JustHaveaThink

    Жыл бұрын

    Cheers Jason. That sounds like very encouraging news for the UK. Thanks for sharing this info.

  • @joecornelius4334

    @joecornelius4334

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for your comment. It raised 2 questions: 1. In the lower temp scenario you described, would each home/bldg have a heat pump or some other form of heat engine that would tap into the district heating system? 2. What problems would lower temps solve and would those problems still exist in a sand-based high temp system?

  • @jasonleland6300

    @jasonleland6300

    Жыл бұрын

    Hi Joe, you can do it two ways. You can have a central heat pump and run the district at about 60C to feed the connections, or you can run the district at close to ambient temperatures (10-20C) and have smaller heat pumps at each connection. The latter generally means a lot of equipment however, which means lots of maintenance and higher front end costs. The former is a bit less efficient, because you loose more heat durning transmission. The lower temps allow the use of heat pumps which can be powered by renewables, and reduce the heat losses from the network. Heat pumps also worke at a much higher per efficiency than combustion plant. The higher temp systems require a high temperature source, which usually means combustion. Green hydrogen could be used for higher temp systems, but the market and distribution of it hasn’t developed enough to implement them at any large scale. You can always put a high temp thermal storage system on a lower temp system, and it may be worth while if you are dealing with fluctuations in the power supply or some similar condition. You would have to heat the sand store with a high temp source however.

  • @benzonex

    @benzonex

    Жыл бұрын

    Hi Jason, Floor heating only needs water around 23°C for a comfy feeling. That's 'cold' water... Faucet water hardly needs to be more than 40°C. Mostly these temperatures can be easily achieved tapping at 100 mt underground, and there you go... At least here in the Netherlands. What is you perception about that?

  • @Conservator.

    @Conservator.

    Жыл бұрын

    @@benzonex 40°C tap water has the risk of becoming contaminated which legionellae bacteria. That doesn’t seem like a great idea. There might be solutions for this that I’m not aware off btw.

  • @mariushegli
    @mariushegli Жыл бұрын

    I have nothing to say really, but I appreciate your content, and wish to help with the yt-algorithms.

  • @alightvlogging

    @alightvlogging

    Жыл бұрын

    I guess I'd best reply then to pump the algorithm a bit more

  • @ecoworrier

    @ecoworrier

    Жыл бұрын

    +1

  • @artkozak
    @artkozak Жыл бұрын

    Can't wait to see this scaled up!

  • @stopscammingman
    @stopscammingman Жыл бұрын

    This is really good coverage

  • @jasonhillgiant
    @jasonhillgiant Жыл бұрын

    There is a pilot project in Massachusetts that is converting natural gas distribution to district heating. Which seems like an elegant solution to me.

  • @girowinters

    @girowinters

    Жыл бұрын

    Nothing elegant about destroying the planets ability to support human life. We have to stop burning fossil fuels

  • @Kevin_Street

    @Kevin_Street

    Жыл бұрын

    That's very interesting! I wonder how much retrofitting systems like that would cost.

  • @equalizers8190
    @equalizers8190 Жыл бұрын

    Really great video, there are a few companies working towards these same goals. One of them is Climatengine a private company I have done some work for. The project I was on was pool heating with basically no carbon footprint, really interesting project water was heated and at same time so was the indoor environment through new PCM materials for holding the harvested heat.

  • @calvinflager4457
    @calvinflager4457 Жыл бұрын

    These concepts can be utilized in private dwellings, avoiding the long-assumed but mistaken perspective that centralized solutions are more desirable. For our home we use a combination of thermal solar to heat a 500 hundred gallon tank of water which circulates in radiant tubing in our house floor. This radiant tubing is ensconced in three inches of sand below wood and tile flooring. Once the sand heats up, it tends to remain warm with minimal added heat from the solar-heated hot water tank. Thank you for doing this sort of video, with alternative ideas that really work.

  • @The.Ghost.of.Tom.Joad.
    @The.Ghost.of.Tom.Joad. Жыл бұрын

    I love the concept, using readily available material to store energy. Unlike lithium-ion batteries, there's no toxic waste, no recycling challenges, and no rare earth metals used. I'd be interested to see if you could use a sand battery for a single dwelling, storing a summer's worth of excess heat and using it in the winter to run a boiler for radiant floor heating. I've seen simple heat battery systems for greenhouses, but this is the first time I've thought, "Maybe this can work for homes too."

  • @chuckkottke
    @chuckkottke Жыл бұрын

    Dave, it cooled down to near normal, but we had been roasting like hazelnuts in dry, sunny, relentless heat for a month and a half here in Wisconsin. Thanks for thinking of us across the pond! I just talked to an Indian gal who is visiting here from London; she was complaining about the heat in London, and she's from Central India! Keep as cool as you can, and keep up with the great presentations. Cheers! 🍺

  • @Diana1000Smiles

    @Diana1000Smiles

    Жыл бұрын

    I live in the US West, and the Wildfire Season is getting longer every year. All that smoke is a detriment to the Humans' respiratory systems. That combined with the US Opioid Epidemic makes for a poor survival rate.

  • @JustHaveaThink

    @JustHaveaThink

    Жыл бұрын

    Cheers Chuck. All the best :-)

  • @macmcleod1188

    @macmcleod1188

    Жыл бұрын

    thumbed simply for "we had been roasting like hazelnuts". 😁

  • @chuckkottke

    @chuckkottke

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Diana1000Smiles Sounds pungently spiced with roasted pine scent! I wish you well and refreshed by air purifiers. 🌱

  • @rick-yo
    @rick-yo Жыл бұрын

    Can’t the sand bank be coupled w concentrated solar? Like cycling hot liquid when the sun is out. More efficient then converting electricity to heat.

  • @jenshobroh1294

    @jenshobroh1294

    Жыл бұрын

    Would like to know the reasoning as well.

  • @ps.2

    @ps.2

    Жыл бұрын

    CSP is more efficient, but also more expensive. Turns out, all those mirrors on individual trackers add up to a lot of moving parts that require a lot of manufacturing and installation costs, plus a lot of maintenance costs once deployed. Many CSP sites have been built, but so far the economics of it aren't looking too promising.

  • @rikulappi9664
    @rikulappi9664 Жыл бұрын

    Where I live in Finland we have a district heating system and I love it. However, storing cold during winter and distributing it through the district heating/cooling system for AC during summer, as they do on an office site in Helsinki, is my favourite tech innovation.

  • @Bob.W.
    @Bob.W. Жыл бұрын

    Grew up with district heating in our small town, courtesy of the local power plant. Shut down after the 71/72 heating system. The bill for our apartment was $6.40 for the season. :)

  • @duanepomrenke2073
    @duanepomrenke2073 Жыл бұрын

    Here in southern canada, plenty of summer sun and sand. Every Tom, Dyck, Harry and Dave could utilize a scaled down parabolic heated super insulated shed full of super heated sand in preparation for the next winter. Good job as always, keeps our minds busy. -(1.5c a tall order.

  • @Umski
    @Umski Жыл бұрын

    Keep it simple as the saying goes ;) Never thought of sand as a heat storage system, I was wondering how I could store all my excess PV over the summer to use in the winter after my immersion has topped out each day - this gives me an idea :D

  • @kitemanmusic

    @kitemanmusic

    Жыл бұрын

    Can you use a ground source heat pump coil to store energy?

  • @Umski

    @Umski

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kitemanmusic in theory, yes you could heat up the ground or a water source BUT importantly, you then need to expend more energy to get it back again using the HP - I'm not sure the efficiencies would make that worthwhile or practical from a plumbing perspective 🤔

  • @stevewilliams2498

    @stevewilliams2498

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kitemanmusic yes if you deposit the heat into the sand.

  • @DSK658
    @DSK658 Жыл бұрын

    Great video Dave.

  • @blue_beephang-glider5417
    @blue_beephang-glider5417 Жыл бұрын

    All we need is another everlasting "Service Fee" to pay all year for four or five months of use...

  • @briangarrow448
    @briangarrow448 Жыл бұрын

    One thing extreme heat waves impact is the climate change denial postings on KZread comments sections.

  • @10minutenewhampshirebreak77
    @10minutenewhampshirebreak77 Жыл бұрын

    One thing that can be easily done in the meantime, …have your existing system checked for leaks, especially in an attic, make sure your ductwork is clean, have your gas / oil provider perform a tune up. I’ve seen hundreds of high efficiency hvac appliances installed into old infrastructure. This issue needs to be addressed.

  • @123Goldhunter11
    @123Goldhunter11 Жыл бұрын

    I was camping along the Copper River in Alaska years ago with a buddy. Per an old woodsman manual I read as a kid, we dug a pit for our camp fire and put big rocks in the bottom. After we put the fire out or the night we filled in the pit with dirt/sand and put the tent over it. Took half an hour to feel any heat but after a hour it got so hot we had to move the tent. Was still warm in the morning. This is a great idea as the sand can be warmed by windmill generated electricity late at night when it's not being used elsewhere. But, living on acreage, I can't help but wonder about building a small scale model and heating it in the summer with parabolic mirrors?

  • @behr121002
    @behr121002 Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, Dave!

  • @makeitcold6649
    @makeitcold6649 Жыл бұрын

    Great video as usual, I'm not aware of any district heating in my area (California) but that's probably due to the major population centers being built directly on active fault zones. Sand as an energy storage medium is highly under utilized though and I love hearing about it being developed and the Ambri battery seems like its ultimate evolution, hopefully they will get a follow-up video

  • @nicksgarage2

    @nicksgarage2

    Жыл бұрын

    I live in the San Diego area and much of our downtown was heated by district heating with steam plants. I don't think any of it is used any longer and new buildings certainly wouldn't be using it. I found an article from 1987 that stated there were 40 buildings using it but that more and more were going to stop because the power company, SDG&E, was raising the cost of it. I think there are plenty of colder climate cities that still rely on steam heat.

  • @tedbomba6631
    @tedbomba6631 Жыл бұрын

    And a massive thank you to you, Dave, for providing me with thought provoking videos on a weekly basis !

  • @JustHaveaThink

    @JustHaveaThink

    Жыл бұрын

    Cheers Ted. Much appreciated.

  • @theotherandrew5540
    @theotherandrew5540 Жыл бұрын

    My experience of district heating systems in Russia is that the weak part of the system is in the distribution pipes, and in particular, the valves.

  • @1987Confused
    @1987Confused Жыл бұрын

    I love this idea the only change I'd make is use old concrete and block broken up as the thermal mass because we have alot of it laying around and it's often just buried in landfills.

  • @1987Confused

    @1987Confused

    Жыл бұрын

    I also wonder how well a similar system could be used to keep greenhouses running.

  • @1987Confused

    @1987Confused

    Жыл бұрын

    I also wonder how well a similar system could be used to keep greenhouses running.

  • @winrampen1174
    @winrampen1174 Жыл бұрын

    Dave, Thanks for raising this important issue. When it comes to heat, the laws of thermodynamics start to play a role. One that cannot be ignored! The Finnish heat battery uses resistive heating - which means 1 kWh of electricity becomes the same amount of heat, ie. 1 kWh. Because space heating only needs low grade heat (my underfloor system is typically at 30C) a heat pump can run with a coefficient of performance between 3 and 4. Which means 1 kWh of electrical energy "moves" 3 - 4 kWh of heat to usefully heat your building. If anyone currently has "surplus" renewable electricity, in my opinion at least, they should be using it to power a heat pump. If we were all doing this, it would create sufficient electrical demand to avoid any surplus, given the heating requirements in the UK. I appreciate that this doesn't solve seasonal heating requirements, but thermal mass, good insulation and control of infiltration in our buildings would go a long way to making this work in the UK. One of the worst things western societies are doing is converting high grade fuel into low grade heat, particularly when that fuel is adding carbon to the atmosphere.

  • @niclaskarlin

    @niclaskarlin

    Жыл бұрын

    The steel, paper, cement and other process industries will be the main source of the waste heat.

  • @HolgerNestmann

    @HolgerNestmann

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes I thought about this too, but the amazin bit was, that they can store heat for months. Granted only for 80h of discharge, but it still lets one dream if we can offset summer heat / solar surplus towards the winter

  • @RikkerdHZ

    @RikkerdHZ

    Жыл бұрын

    If we're talking efficiency, nothing beats a proper heat pump. But the economics are much different, because the cost is much higher.

  • @douglasfur3808
    @douglasfur3808 Жыл бұрын

    You said they didn't use heat pumps to increase the energy density. However I missed the part on how data center heat was transferred to the sand silo. How did they get from, say, 95° to 600°?

  • @wertigon

    @wertigon

    Жыл бұрын

    From what I understand the heating is achieved by electrically heating water into 700 degree hot steam and let that run through a massive coil, basically. Once introduced the sand keeps the temps until it is time to let the heat out again. This is primarily a replacement to central heating boilers.

  • @zygge60

    @zygge60

    Жыл бұрын

    They do it the other way around. Temperature of the air from the data center is about 60 degrees, but they do not transfer it into the silo. Instead the heat from the silo is used to warm up the data center heat up to 75-100 degrees which is then sent into the community heating network.

  • @rorychivers8769
    @rorychivers8769 Жыл бұрын

    A vast amount of energy is basically spunked up the wall generating heat, so I guess it makes sense to actually do it on purpose, rather than only trying to store the electrical charge itself.

  • @RebeccaTreeseed
    @RebeccaTreeseed9 ай бұрын

    Since I saw this last year I started planning a sand battery for my small home. I use passive solar for about 12 hours per day of winter heat, 300 days per year. I tested it the last couple years and find it survivable, comfortable at night if I use a mylar blanket underneath my bedding. Not suitable for edible houseplants. 17 hours is a good amount of heat. I have concrete blocks and a big pile of sand and gravel inherited from the previous owner, but our heat dome had me put off starting it. At 69 I didn't want to press myself in 8 hour daily heat advisories. I am excited to try this! Worst case scenario my partially underground tea house is more stable in temperature, especially for summer. I was glad to watch this again, as fall approaches, and I hope to complete by winter. It is interesting to see what the Corporate Succubus Slavers are doing, but I like low tech microsolutions... no debt, a garden, deciduous shade, and so on. An unusual improvement has been making original tapestries like in old castles.They increase comfort in winter and summer both. Still studying transportation. My 05 Tacoma gets ~33 mpg, not too bad, I drive less and it is hard to beat.

  • @ferrywhite
    @ferrywhite Жыл бұрын

    The only video this week, I have been waiting for :) Cheers Dave

  • @JustHaveaThink

    @JustHaveaThink

    Жыл бұрын

    Hope you enjoyed it!

  • @mikaelabowen5781
    @mikaelabowen5781 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for posting these fascinating videos. I get very depressed at times by the general state of the world and it is hugely reassuring to know that there are people and organisations out there who are doing positive things towards a better future.

  • @Diana1000Smiles

    @Diana1000Smiles

    Жыл бұрын

    Can Mother Earth support more than 8 billion Humans, currently? Also, check to see how many new Humans are born everyday on this Planet?

  • @willm5814

    @willm5814

    Жыл бұрын

    This will get solved Mikaela - to live more joyfully through these turbulent times, it is very important to realize your true self - you can read the books written by many different ‘gurus’ - I would highly recommend Eckhart Tolle - also watch his videos!

  • @TheLosamatic

    @TheLosamatic

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Diana1000Smiles not to worry the exponentially rising rate of death by heat exhaustion is getting ready, three more summer tops, to eliminate a great deal from that number. Just count the population from the equator thru the edge of the tropical zones that stay below, not sure, thousand feet above sea level, that’s a lot of people who if they becomes refugees fleeing those areas will make living much more problematic for everyone else. It is something the IPCC does not talk about! Just MHO I think there’ll be a billion of those refugees in no more than three more summers. What worse they will be concentrated fleeing thru the India Pakistan region! Still subsidizing the fossil fuels industry, one would think spending that money securing two substantial arsenals of nuclear weapons would be a bit less insane, considering the chaos created around all groups of pissed off refugees! But what if I’m wrong a little money not pissed away but spent on more security. Or the consequences of if I’m right?

  • @incognitotorpedo42

    @incognitotorpedo42

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Diana1000Smiles You need to look at the birth rates around the world. Right now, most of the developed world is in population decline, and the developing world will be following in their footsteps. And yes, Mother Earth could support more than 8 billion humans, but some of those humans can't get along with each other and have wars that disrupt the food supply. Climate change is obviously making things worse as well. The population of the Earth will eventually decline, but this has to be carefully managed to avoid demographic collapse.

  • @JustHaveaThink

    @JustHaveaThink

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Mikaela. Much appreciated :-)

  • @januszdylla8119
    @januszdylla8119 Жыл бұрын

    Dziękujemy.

  • @JustHaveaThink

    @JustHaveaThink

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much Janusz. I really appreciate your support :-)

  • @ianonley65
    @ianonley65 Жыл бұрын

    Good to hear someone is working on a solution for winter heating. It’s been a big gap in the roadmap to zero emissions. I hope we can put 50 years of dithering behind us now.

  • @0ooTheMAXXoo0

    @0ooTheMAXXoo0

    Жыл бұрын

    This solution is at least 50 years old and solar panels for heating have been popular for 50 years even in Nordic countries... We had rechargeable batteries in the late 1990s that were good enough for all the renewable tech we needed and for everything else we have had solutions for at least 50 years... The major changes have been and still needs to be in attitudes of the public...

  • @lkrnpk

    @lkrnpk

    Жыл бұрын

    @@0ooTheMAXXoo0 it's more about the cost, not attitudes... if you do not have to pay more for sth why bother. And if you cannot afford it, you simply cannot afford. Also lots of stuff like wind and solar were very expensive in the 90s

  • @glike2
    @glike2 Жыл бұрын

    Are there some areas where geothermal heat potential is good enough to combine with the sand battery? This system will find of competition with heat pumps, but they each have advantages and are better suited in certain areas. Bigger the variety the better, mapping out which systems work where is needed.

  • @benzonex

    @benzonex

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes there are such areas: in the Netherlands. You should be knowing that Gilles de Brouwer...

  • @xenod1066
    @xenod1066 Жыл бұрын

    Many, maybe most, large cities in the United States have a "district" steam heat system in the downtown/financial/industrial district, and it's not remotely new, been going for maybe 150 years. Currently powered mostly by various fossil fuels, but can easily be powered by renewables. This type of tech would fit right in, and the systems could be expanded. A major advantage is that that power companies, and many city planners and managers, and facilities managers will already be familiar with the concept. You won't have the hard sell of a new unproven high tech solution.

  • @Ralph_Baric_PhD_C2019

    @Ralph_Baric_PhD_C2019

    Жыл бұрын

    Thats it, plug in, have just one more connection to the teat. The idea is to completely disconnect from metered life so that no one has the power to CONTROL YOU. Oh, i forgot, you already live in a shoe box apartment with no facilities for even your daily coffee that you must SPEND AND BE HAPPY. Maybe you could own nothing and be happy and penetrate ze cabinets for the bugz.

  • @xenod1066

    @xenod1066

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Ralph_Baric_PhD_C2019 What ars you on about?

  • @fortitudethedogwalker6273
    @fortitudethedogwalker6273 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @livingladolcevita7318
    @livingladolcevita7318 Жыл бұрын

    Would be interesting to find out if I could use this system on a small scale for my house. I have suspended floors and have a lot of space underneath, perhaps I could fill a container with sand and heat it up during the summer and tap into it during winter

  • @pumpkinhead456

    @pumpkinhead456

    Жыл бұрын

    It would need to be a very big pit and a very energy efficient home!

  • @GerhardEbersoehn

    @GerhardEbersoehn

    Жыл бұрын

    @@pumpkinhead456 Look at this! It does not need to be big! Type of soil/sand is very important. Consult with experts. I think the isolating effect of the basement could be a good thing for heat-exchange between battery and house-floor.

  • @dismayedtrinket2518

    @dismayedtrinket2518

    Жыл бұрын

    People do something very similar with greenhouses already. kzread.info/dash/bejne/p4iFlaiFYKytmLg.html

  • @mainelife4268

    @mainelife4268

    Жыл бұрын

    You can make it work. I have done it. Sand is not as quick of a transfer as water. The problem with water will be the temperature difference from top to bottom. Plan for a pump to circulate the internal temperatures. You can accomplish this with sand. Again much slower. The advantage to sand is the obvious. It does not boil and it does not leak…Storage is key if you have high heat demand. It changes virtually any heat source from city driving to highway. I have seen people use milk trucks to store heat. They are well insulated. You could run a wood stove for a day then have showers for a week. Don’t be afraid to try it.

  • @pumpkinhead456

    @pumpkinhead456

    Жыл бұрын

    My point was, to heat it in summer and run it in winter, it either wouldn't last long or you'd need a lot of sand. I calculated that I would get 4 days of heating from a milk truck buried under my garden :) obviously it depends on your heat requirements, but heating a home can take a lot of energy!

  • @makeitwork583
    @makeitwork583 Жыл бұрын

    I know, I’ll just fill my house with sand! I mean, the infrastructure is already there!!! LOL. Great video, and amazing how many environmentally neutral solutions there are. Be well.

  • @kiwidiesel

    @kiwidiesel

    Жыл бұрын

    You could have your very own full sized sand castle then🤣

  • @janami-dharmam
    @janami-dharmam Жыл бұрын

    this appears quite appealing. For a hot and humid country like India, it may be useful to make ice when the sun shines and use the ice to cool homes in summer. This may not be cost effective for small houses but for big offices can certainly afford one basement to store several thousand tons of ice to be used in the summer months.

  • @Diana1000Smiles

    @Diana1000Smiles

    Жыл бұрын

    How many new Humans are born in India each Day?

  • @man_at_the_end_of_time

    @man_at_the_end_of_time

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Diana1000Smiles They are at replacement and dropping. Given numbers that are poked for kovid-##, their reported fertility will be dropping much further as the next couple years roll on or so I suspect.

  • @alcosmic
    @alcosmic Жыл бұрын

    The brilliance is in the simplicity

  • @jimhood1202
    @jimhood1202 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Dave. Love to hear about these real life examples. Great to see that we have so many energy generation and storage technologies in the pipeline. The more combinations we have available the closer and more efficient a fit we can achieve depending on geographical location and need.

  • @Diana1000Smiles

    @Diana1000Smiles

    Жыл бұрын

    😄 a comment from the Stone Age?

  • @JustHaveaThink

    @JustHaveaThink

    Жыл бұрын

    Cheers Jim. Much appreciated

  • @jimhood1202

    @jimhood1202

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Diana1000Smiles Not sure I'm getting your point.

  • @Parssel
    @Parssel Жыл бұрын

    I’d really be interested to hear more about strategic planning for the local/national energy storage infrastructures needed for a clean energy future. Maybe about the numbers of (relatively small storage) facilities that might be required to keep the lights on. Also about the potential carbon costs of setting up these types of infrastructure. It seems to me that the technical issues about which types of storage systems are best, etc. are now secondary: there is enough technical innovation already to move on to questions about how to build smart, decentralised storage infrastructure in different nations. Of course it’s a huge generational project and will unfortunately require wise national political will, which is always in short supply, at least in the UK. Still, the move from a national energy model based around a few, massive ‘power stations’ to a model that involves huge numbers of smartly integrated local power storage facilities, simply has to be talked about.

  • @petrskapa793

    @petrskapa793

    Жыл бұрын

    Well, there isn't one. All the large countries in Europe, UK included, Eastern Europe rely principally on gas and coal and no one is planning to change anything untill, perhaps, 2050.. There are Baltic's + Finland where there is something in the pipeline, Denmark + Holland doing little bit as well, that's it.

  • @Parssel

    @Parssel

    Жыл бұрын

    @@petrskapa793 Why is it not being considered or discussed, though? It seems strange to me.

  • @petrskapa793

    @petrskapa793

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Parssel It's hard to say. Is it disinterest of the electorate, corruption pushed by the fossil fuel lobby, Incompetence of the decision-makers? I don't know. But the result is our dependence on Gazprom, Quatar, US, Angola, Azerbaijan... As well as the terrible effects of climate change, of course.

  • @reyes09071962
    @reyes090719623 ай бұрын

    Good that you mentioned other media as being possible for storage use. Sand prices in the us are up significantly due to demand for use in fracking operations.

  • @josoapification
    @josoapification Жыл бұрын

    I live in the north of Ireland. We have had no extreme weather this summer. Our summer was very wet this year .

  • @TheLosamatic

    @TheLosamatic

    Жыл бұрын

    Obvious proof that sudden onset irreversible climate change is a hoax how dare anyone not go kiss the ass of your nearest petroleum executive!

  • @Diana1000Smiles

    @Diana1000Smiles

    Жыл бұрын

    I have envy. 💚

  • @justbecause4557
    @justbecause4557 Жыл бұрын

    I was literally just thinking about this. I wonder if pairing this with heat pumps might be a good idea. Pulling the heat from attics and passing them through the thermal storage before pumping it into the ground.

  • @dwftube

    @dwftube

    Жыл бұрын

    I was in my attic the other day and thought then that a heat pump could easily provide the hot water I need.

  • @justbecause4557

    @justbecause4557

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dwftube I had to fix my ac a few years ago in the middle of the summer and I went into my attic. Got in about 6 feet and I felt like I was going to die. Learned my lesson real quick to vent the attic first. So much potential up there.

  • @dwftube

    @dwftube

    Жыл бұрын

    @@justbecause4557 But only during the warmer months - though I still think in the winter it could be better than outside.

  • @punkdigerati

    @punkdigerati

    Жыл бұрын

    That's a ground source heat pump and they work great if you can do it, expense and the ability to dig being the biggest barriers.

  • @macmcleod1188

    @macmcleod1188

    Жыл бұрын

    Too much heat in the ground will dry it out. Gotta watch out for that.

  • @forerunnert
    @forerunnert Жыл бұрын

    The Netherlands has some district heating. My city is planning on rolling it out in the coming years to replace gas heating. I won't be using it and have converted to heat pumps instead. The problem with district heating here is the single supplier that makes it very expensive.

  • @DracoOmnia
    @DracoOmnia Жыл бұрын

    In my experience most military bases have community heating systems. Mostly steam based, created from garbage incenerators...

  • @IDann1
    @IDann1 Жыл бұрын

    I look forward to having a think every week, cheers for your work 🍻

  • @JustHaveaThink

    @JustHaveaThink

    Жыл бұрын

    Cheers Daniel. Much appreciated

  • @ericritchie6783
    @ericritchie6783 Жыл бұрын

    Create a warm sitting area with thick curtains hung from the ceiling in part of the living room or a smaller room. It's best to reduce the volume you need to warm to a higher temperature, what parts of the house do you spend the most time in? Focus on keeping a healthy warm temperature in the place you will spend the most time, other areas of the house only need to be kept at 12-15c tops. Unless you have genuinely serious health issues that prevent you spending a minute or two intermittently in a cooler temperature with decent warm clothing, which statistically you almost certainly don't, you don't need to heat the whole building through. It's good to think about what areas of your home are most central and which walls are exposed ect also, even what heat electrical appliances are creating heat and perhaps doubling that use up if practical. Bedrooms are better kept a bit cooler with warmer blankets and duvets and many a mattress heater, air quality is important for sleep so its good have "some" outside air exchange.

  • @macmcleod1188

    @macmcleod1188

    Жыл бұрын

    10 minutes with an electric heating pad on low under the covers before you get in bed makes a huge difference to sleeping comfortable. Cost is pennies.

  • @cg986
    @cg986 Жыл бұрын

    We'll be getting geothermal in my town soon here in the Netherlands

  • @davefroman4700
    @davefroman47006 ай бұрын

    Thermal storage in sand batteries is easily and cheaply scaled to residential size and can be used to drive heat pumps in super cold areas.

  • @atomdent
    @atomdent Жыл бұрын

    Thank you

  • @rajeshchheda456
    @rajeshchheda456 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Dave for another wonderful video as usual, many thanks to patreons for their large-hearted contributions, via whom others like me can have access to First Class content. If this tech absolutely successful and economically sound, amount of waste heat available is tremendous. Suitable containers mounted on trucks could carry "charged containers" from thermal power plants to a vicinity of 200 to 300 kilometres, charged to megawatt levels by sheer waste. That could be game-changer in many ways.

  • @incognitotorpedo42

    @incognitotorpedo42

    Жыл бұрын

    To do that, it would probably be better to use something with a lot more energy density than sand. A eutectic salt mixture with a high heat of fusion might fill the bill. Megawatt amounts of heated sand would be extremely heavy.

  • @rajeshchheda456

    @rajeshchheda456

    Жыл бұрын

    @@incognitotorpedo42 Such heat batteries, if successfully charged and discharged with heat, could bring a revolution in industrial fuels.

  • @DB-me7gm
    @DB-me7gm Жыл бұрын

    FYI, I worked in R&D in home building many years ago. We build several experimental homes with super insulation, in Ohio, USA. The wall & ceiling R-factor was R-70. We used foam, wool, fiberglass and hay bale on different test homes. We found once the inside temperature reached 70 degrees F. If we kept the doors shut, the homes stayed warm for week or months. Also used 2, 3 & 4 panes in the windows. We proved it worked but owner did not want to spend the cost on normal buildings.

  • @wouterke9871

    @wouterke9871

    Жыл бұрын

    Replenishing warm fresh air is the clue there, especially in small volume houses.

  • @macmcleod1188

    @macmcleod1188

    Жыл бұрын

    The prior owner of my house got some insane deal on blown in insulation. I literally have 3 ' of blowin in insulation in the attic and double insulted storm windows. My utility bills are about $800 per year lower than my friends in similar size houses (lower both in the summer $100,$150,$200,$125) and the winter (About $35 less for 3 months). So it's saved me about $18,000 over the 24 years I've been in the house.

  • @ITSecurityNerd
    @ITSecurityNerd Жыл бұрын

    100 degree weather has been fairly common since forever in my (northern) state. Sustained average higer temperatures is probably how warming shows through here. Basically, our "super hot" days happen in the same quantity, but the average summer temp seems to have gone up very slightly.

  • @angelusmendez5084
    @angelusmendez5084 Жыл бұрын

    Awesome!

  • @jfolz
    @jfolz Жыл бұрын

    What I think about this is that we could've had our cake and ate it too, if only we'd taxed fossil fuels correctly, according to their environmental impact. Other than cost, why would anyone choose natural gas over systems like these? I literally cannot find any downsides to these heat storage systems. They can use renewable energy when it's cheap aka during oversupply, helping to stabilize the grid. Their footprint is totally manageable and you could easily bury them in densely built up areas. They're made from dirt cheap materials and off the shelf components. They're positively low tech, so why are these not everywhere already? Why are we doing pilot projects only now?!

  • @macmcleod1188

    @macmcleod1188

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm pro-solar but we need to get ahead of solar waste. Perhaps with a $15 deposit on solar panels to encourage their return to a central location. And yes- if fossil fuel was properly priced (including $2 trillion for the gulf wars), we would be more likely to be on other diverse methods.

  • @thesilentone4024
    @thesilentone4024 Жыл бұрын

    Better insulation shade lighter colors on home. For citys make roads any other color then black white pink green or yellow so we don't heat the road or blind the drivers. Roads should have more native tall shade trees lining them to reduce co2 speeders heat bad air metals in the air and increase clean air full of o2 they hold soil reduce water evaporation and if it fruits food to if its edible. Big hiway or freeways with 4 or more lanes should have public transportation trains in the middle to reduce traffic and air pollution witch saves money. Parking lots should have trees thirsty cement mybe solar too. Parking garage so it goes up should have solar and vine plants climbing the Parking Garage to add energy and reduces heat and adds o2. Citys need to stop going out and go up make new laws where citys can be 50% urban minimum not 70% like now that will save land for forests and wild life save money and reduce logging a little bit too.

  • @janami-dharmam

    @janami-dharmam

    Жыл бұрын

    I always thought roads are the best places to have solar panels on the sidewalks. If roads are black, they will absorb more heat and part of the heat will be stored in for several hours.

  • @TheLosamatic

    @TheLosamatic

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes but alas the politicians in the USofA having the benefit of the people never in their minds, gave insane amounts of free tree pollen to their constituents instead of free fruit by eliminating female trees from the possibility of being planted. All that pollen with nothing to do, again, made the few wealthier than thou!

  • @armandos.rodriguez6608
    @armandos.rodriguez6608 Жыл бұрын

    Your at the top of your game Doc,keep up the good work,this is stuff for now and the future. As they say Thanks Loads.

  • @PhilLesh69
    @PhilLesh69 Жыл бұрын

    I think there are or used to be many federal buildings in Washington D.C. that relied on a central heating plant where larger boilers heated water to steam and then they piped it underground to buildings several blocks away. In some East coast cities you can still see steam vents in roads. There used to be a broken steam pipe on 17th street between Pennsylvania ave and H st, near the white house that they installed a chimney pipe over to lift the steam cloud over the cars.

  • @dnsallen
    @dnsallen Жыл бұрын

    I remember the New Alchemists detailing how to make a hot rock store that is basically very similar to this. I always wondered why that idea never took off.

  • @badrinair
    @badrinair Жыл бұрын

    Thank you. Hi, somehow do not agree with the comment that using sand has little or no environmental impact.

  • @danyoutube7491

    @danyoutube7491

    Жыл бұрын

    I know that sand extraction for construction is environmentally damaging and unsustainable in the long term, but that industry needs a particular type of sand such as from rivers whereas the sand in this idea can be from anywhere, e.g. the Sahara desert, so it won't have that negative effect on the environment.

  • @kdjorgensen98
    @kdjorgensen98 Жыл бұрын

    Xcel Energy operates a steam and cold water service in Denver. I've also seen large central steam heating systems on US military installations around the world, though I don't know if those are being phased out as they upgrade buildings. Side note: Ft. Carson, CO is installing a large flow battery on the base. Not sure what prompted it, but it will be interesting to see how it works for them!

  • @damianl3
    @damianl3 Жыл бұрын

    Nice. BTW in NYC we have district heating in Manhattan for commercial properties. That is why steam is constantly leaking from manhole covers here. A side effect is the opportunity for iconic photos of movie stars

  • @rklauco
    @rklauco Жыл бұрын

    As with all the other solutions - I fail to understand why we did not do this before. Seems very simple to me...

  • @TestTest-eb8jr

    @TestTest-eb8jr

    Жыл бұрын

    The reason for not doing it this way is very simple: fossil fuels are/were dirt cheap and easy/easier to use...

  • @matthewtalbot-paine7977
    @matthewtalbot-paine7977 Жыл бұрын

    Sounds good. I mean it just sounds like a heat battery with good retention properties so great.

  • @thewordofgog
    @thewordofgog Жыл бұрын

    On seeing this structure I couldn't help thinking of the old gasometer I could see from my bedroom window growing up. - plus ça change and all that.

  • @rwargo1647
    @rwargo1647 Жыл бұрын

    Off the mark as always David. Try telling the truth. We going to be hungry, cold and poor, thanks to really smart humans like you. Thanks mate.

  • @emilioarroyomohamed
    @emilioarroyomohamed Жыл бұрын

    Using any material at 600 ° C to store heat is very difficult because the thermal conductivity of any insulator goes drastically up with temperature. At 600 ° C perlite is around 0.15 w/km2, for a tank of that size, the loss of heat everyday is massive. That is why they used water on the big tank, because at 98 ° C is possible to use cheap insulation to keep the heat in.

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