Volvo Trucks backs new research to turn old diesel engines into green energy storage machines

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11 Jun 2018 08:03:04.127
A pioneering project aims to convert air-polluting diesel engines due for scrap into renewable power storage units that can charge electric bus and lorry fleets. The research is being carried out by the University of Nottingham with support from Volvo Trucks.  
 
While diesel engines are still viewed as economical and efficient power sources - particularly for long distance, commercial vehicles – tough emission standards are increasingly forcing older models off the road. 
 
“What can be done with end-of-life engines is an open question,” said Professor Seamus Garvey, lead investigator for the Faculty of Engineering, University of Nottingham. “One option is to melt them down to recycle the steel, but we propose to explore another possibility – re-task these engines to become machines that compress and expand air to store and release energy. 
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“Power is increasingly being generated from renewable sources that are intermittent by nature – chiefly, the sun and wind. How to store that off-grid energy for use when needed and not just when generated is a pressing issue to solve.”  

Existing energy storage innovations

Batteries are highly suited to energy storage where high powers are required over relatively short periods and their place in future cars, buses and vans is already beyond question.  However, for absorbing and dispensing steady power over timescales of many hours, different technologies are better. Compressed Air Energy Storage (CAES) is one leading alternative.   
  
Established CAES facilities use underground caverns to store pressurised air. When electricity is needed, that air is heated and expanded in an expansion turbine, driving a generator for power production. Such systems can potentially deliver very low-cost storage, but they depend on finding suitable geological locations and the economics are only good at large scale. 

Reversible compressor/expander machines

The proposition being explored by Volvo Trucks and Nottingham University is to transform existing engine hardware (the engine block, crankshaft, conn-rods, pistons and crankshaft bearings) into effective reversible compressor/expander machines, at relatively low cost per unit of power rating.  
  
These machines compress air to put energy into storage or expand stored compressed air to release the energy again. One target application for these machines is at charging stations for fleets of electric buses and trucks.  
 
"The UK would be very nicely catered for beyond 2030 if we had ~50GW of rated power in energy storage facilities. Each individual truck engine would form the low-pressure stage of a three-stage 250kW compression/expansion train. Thus, in theory we could see up to 200,000 truck engines repurposed to drive that level of power." said Professor Garvey.  
  
The work is at a very early stage. Re-manufactured engine hardware from Volvo Trucks is being gifted to the University where engineering researchers will adapt the parts and incorporate them into new compression / expansion machines. The project will run until August 2019.  
 
Commenting on the partnership, John Comer, Head of Product Management, at Volvo Trucks, said: “It is always great to be involved with universities, especially in the UK, that are working on research projects that meet the company’s ethos of ‘driving progress’." 

Green energy ethos at Nottingham 

The innovative machines will form a part of the “High Performance Compression and Expansion” laboratory at the University of Nottingham which is one key element of a £60m capital project in the Midlands called Energy Research Accelerator (ERA). ERA involves the Universities of Birmingham, Warwick, Nottingham, Leicester, Loughborough and Aston, as well as the British Geological Survey.  
 
The University of Nottingham is a leading international centre for energy research and an institution committed to sustainability. The University recently announced it will completely remove any financial investments in fossil fuels within the next 12 months. 
 
Volvo Trucks, based in Gothenburg, Sweden have long been seen as innovators in the field of energy conservation and have had ‘care for the environment’ as one of their core values since the 70s. Since then, the emission of air pollutants from their trucks has been reduced by up to 90 per cent. 

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The University of Nottingham is a research-intensive university with a proud heritage, consistently ranked among the world's top 100. Studying at the University of Nottingham is a life-changing experience and we pride ourselves on unlocking the potential of our 44,000 students - Nottingham was named University of the Year for Graduate Employment in the 2017 Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide, was awarded gold in the TEF 2017 and features in the top 20 of all three major UK rankings. We have a pioneering spirit, expressed in the vision of our founder Sir Jesse Boot, which has seen us lead the way in establishing campuses in China and Malaysia - part of a globally connected network of education, research and industrial engagement. We are ranked eighth for research power in the UK according to REF 2014. We have six beacons of research excellence helping to transform lives and change the world; we are also a major employer and industry partner - locally and globally.

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Story credits

For more information contact Seamus Garvey, Professor of Dynamics, Faculty of Engineering on seamus.garvey@nottingham.ac.uk
EmmaLowry

Emma Lowry - Media Relations Manager

Email: emma.lowry@nottingham.ac.uk  Phone: +44 (0)115 846 7156  Location: University Park

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