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Funded Projects › H2020

CryoHub · Developing Cryogenic Energy Storage at Refrigerated Warehouses as an Interactive Hub to Integrate Renewable Energy in Industrial Food Refrigeration and to Enhance PowerGrid Sustainability

H2020Status: CLOSED1 April 201631 March 2021EU funding €7,045,594Call H2020-LCE-2014-2015

The CryoHub innovation project will investigate and extend the potential of large-scale Cryogenic Energy Storage (CES) and will apply the stored energy for both cooling and energy generation. By employing Renewable Energy Sources (RES) to liquefy and store cryogens, CryoHub will balance the power grid, while meeting the cooling demand of a refrigerated food warehouse and recovering the waste heat from its equipment and components.The intermittent supply is a major obstacle to the RES power market. In reality, RES are fickle forces, prone to over-producing when demand is low and failing to meet requirements when demand peaks. Europe is about to generate 20% of its required energy from RES by 2020, so that the proper RES integration poses continent-wide challenges.The Cryogenic Energy Storage (CES), and particularly the Liquid Air Energy Storage (LAES), is a promising technology enabling on-site storage of RES energy during periods of high generation and its use at peak grid demand. Thus, CES acts as Grid Energy Storage (GES), where cryogen is boiled to drive a turbine and to restore electricity to the grid. To date, CES applications have been rather limited by the poor round trip efficiency (ratio between energies spent for and retrieved from energy storage) due to unrecovered energy losses.The CryoHub project is therefore designed to maximise the CES efficiency by recovering energy from cooling and heating in a perfect RES-driven cycle of cryogen liquefaction, storage, distribution and efficient use. Refrigerated warehouses for chilled and frozen food commodities are large electricity consumers, possess powerful installed capacities for cooling and heating and waste substantial amounts of heat. Such facilities provide the ideal industrial environment to advance and demonstrate the LAES benefits.CryoHub will thus resolve most of the above-mentioned problems at one go, thereby paving the way for broader market prospects for CES-based technologies across Europe.

Consortium · 19 organisations

coordinator

LONDON SOUTH BANK UNIVERSITY LBG

UK · €2,364,411

participant

NV MAYEKAWA EUROPE SA

BE · €7,860

participant

INSTITUT INTERNATIONAL DU FROID

FR · €121,250

participant

THE UNIVERSITY OF BIRMINGHAM

UK · €187,389

participant

EUREC EESV

BE · €95,375

participant

INSTITUTE OF REFRIGERATION

UK · €102,394

participant

PSUTEC SPRL

BE · €104,337

participant

FUNDACION CENER

ES · €411,625

participant

DOHMEYER CONSTRUCTION SPOLKA Z ORGANICZONA ODPOWIEDZIALNOSCIA

PL · €1,760,574

participant

CARBON DATA RESOURCES LTD

UK · €157,035

participant

INSTITUT NATIONAL DE RECHERCHE POUR L'AGRICULTURE, L'ALIMENTATION ET L'ENVIRONNEMENT

FR · €521,250

thirdParty

DOHMEYER UK LTD

UK

participant

ITP NV

BE

participant

CRANFIELD UNIVERSITY

UK · €100,864

participant

TPG DESIGN AND TECHNOLOGY LIMITED

UK · €67,494

thirdParty

DOHMEYER SCIENTIFIC APPLICATION NV

BE

participant

L AIR LIQUIDE SA

FR · €591,457

participant

TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY OF SOFIA

BG · €380,000

participant

FRIGOLOGIX

BE · €72,280

Research fields

View the official record on CORDIS →

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