IBC Tote: Difference between revisions
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*Honda 1000EU gives 1kwhr for a quart of gas. | *Honda 1000EU gives 1kwhr for a quart of gas. | ||
*Tesla PowerWall is 14kWhr at $14k installed [https://news.energysage.com/tesla-powerwall-battery-complete-review/#:~:text=Key%20takeaways,a%20home%20on%20it's%20own.] | *Tesla PowerWall is 14kWhr at $14k installed [https://news.energysage.com/tesla-powerwall-battery-complete-review/#:~:text=Key%20takeaways,a%20home%20on%20it's%20own.] | ||
*IBC totes for hydrogen yield | |||
=Energy Storage= | =Energy Storage= |
Revision as of 19:37, 7 August 2022
About
Can be stacked 2 high when full - 330 Gallon Tote
Specifications
- 160F max temp. [1]
- 140 max temp hearsay - [2]
- Max fill temperature - [3] - is that continuous or only for filling?
140F [4]
- Dimensions see [5]
- Permeation of hydrogen through HDPE - [6]
- 20 lb propane tank - 4 gal of propane = 3 gge. Thus, 1.3 gge hydrogen is almost half a propane tank.
- $100/tote easy used. $400/new.
- Honda 1000EU gives 1kwhr for a quart of gas.
- Tesla PowerWall is 14kWhr at $14k installed [7]
- IBC totes for hydrogen yield
Energy Storage
- From 80F to 140F, we have 60F, so using Water Heating Calculator - we get 37 kWhr stored per tote. 24000 BTU is 7 kW.
- Thus, we store 5 hours of a heat pump's thermal output in a single IBC tote! This is very much practical for thermal storage in winter.
- We would need 5 totes to store heat for one day, 10 totes for 2 days' worth. This appears to be a practical option.
- However, standard heat pumps output 92F heat. Thus, a different working fluid would need to be used to achieve a higher temperature. This would be a good point of innovation for off-grid storage
- The immeidiate solution is to use PV to heat via resistive heating. We would need a minimum of 16 hours heat per day, or 112 kWhr. Assuming only 6 hours of light in the winter, this would need a 19kW PV panel system. Not good. Or, a wind turbine.