Current:Home > InvestThe Race to Decarbonize Heavy Industry Heats Up -Elevate Capital Network
The Race to Decarbonize Heavy Industry Heats Up
Surpassing View
Date:2025-04-08 02:58:06
MEDFORD, Mass.—Inside a cinder block office building perhaps best known for the Hindu temple and table tennis club next door, a startup company is testing what may be one of the hottest new developments in clean energy technology.
At the back of a small warehouse laboratory buzzing with fans and motors, an MIT spinoff company called Electrified Thermal Solutions is operating something its founders call the Joule Hive, a thermal battery the size of an elevator.
The Hive is a large, insulated metal box loaded with dozens of white-hot ceramic bricks that convert electricity to heat at temperatures up to 1800 degrees Celsius—well beyond the melting point of steel—and with enough thermal mass to hold the heat for days.
We’re hiring!
Please take a look at the new openings in our newsroom.
See jobsAs the price of renewable energy continues to plummet, one of the biggest challenges for the clean energy transition is finding a way to convert electricity to high temperature heat so societies don’t have to continue burning coal or natural gas to power heavy industries. Another thorny issue is finding a way to store energy—in this case heat—for when the sun doesn’t shine and the wind doesn’t blow.
“If you are running an industrial plant where you’re making cement or steel or glass or ceramics or chemicals or even food or beverage products, you burn a lot of fossil fuels,” Daniel Stack, chief executive of Electrified Thermal Solutions, said. “Our mission is to decarbonize industry with electrified heat.”
The industrial sector accounts for nearly one-fourth of all direct greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S., which drive climate change, according to the EPA. Thermal batteries powered by renewable energy could reduce roughly half of industry’s emissions, according to a 2023 report by the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions, a nonprofit, and its affiliated Renewable Thermal Collaborative.
Additional emissions come from chemical reactions, such as carbon dioxide that is formed as an unwanted byproduct during cement production, and from methane that leaks or is intentionally vented from natural gas pipes and other equipment.
The challenge to replacing fossil fuel combustion as the go to source for heat, is that there aren’t a lot of good options available to produce high temperature heat from electricity, Stack said. Electric heaters, like the wires that turn red hot in a toaster, work well at low temperatures but quickly burn out at higher temperatures. Other, less common materials like molybdenum and silicon carbide heaters can withstand higher temperatures, but are prohibitively expensive.
As a grad student at MIT, Stack wondered if firebricks, the bricks commonly used in residential fireplaces and industrial kilns, could be a less expensive, more durable solution. Bricks do not typically conduct electricity, but by slightly altering the recipe of the metal oxides used to make them, he and ETS co-founder Joey Kabel were able to create bricks that could essentially take the place of wires to conduct electricity and generate heat.
“There’s no exotic metals in here, there’s nothing that’ll burn out,” Stack said standing next to shelves lined with small samples, or “coupons,” of brick that he and his team have tested to find the ones with the best heating properties.
One of Electrified Thermal Solution’s biggest champions is MIT nuclear engineering research scientist Charles Forsberg, Stack’s former thesis advisor and an advisor to the company.
“I have no doubt that this is going to go commercial,” Forsberg, who, along with Stack and MIT hold the patent to the technology, said. “I’m 77, it’s just sort of an intuitive feel of 50 years in the game.”
Forsberg said his only concern was whether Electrified Thermal Solutions would be the ones to bring the technology to fruition, noting that many clean energy technologies have been invented in the U.S. only to gain commercial success in China.
Recent government funding has given the company a significant boost.
In January, ETS received a $5 million U.S. Department of Energy grant to help build its first commercial-scale demonstration project at the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio, an independent organization that provides contract research and development services to government and industrial clients.
The project will demonstrate how the thermal battery could provide high temperature heat for a number of industrial processes including cement manufacturing, which currently relies primarily on burning coal for heat.
Massimo Toso, president and chief executive of Buzzi Unicem USA, one of the largest cement producers in the U.S. and an industrial partner with ETS on the DOE grant, praised the company’s thermal battery.
“ETS’s Joule Hive™ Thermal Battery is the first industrial heat decarbonization solution we have identified that could potentially enable us to cost effectively and completely eliminate the use of fossil fuels in our heating processes,” Toso said in a written statement.
In March, Ashland, a specialty chemical manufacturer based in Wilmington, Delaware, was awarded up to $35 million in a matching grant from the Energy Department to fund what would be the first commercial deployment of ETS’s thermal batteries.
Joule Hives would be installed at Ashland’s ISP Chemicals plant in Calvert City, Kentucky that requires large volumes of high temperature steam to run its operations.
Curt Jawdy, a senior manager with the Tennessee Valley Authority, a partner on the grant and the local electric utility for Calvert City, said ETS’s ability to charge its thermal battery during off peak hours allows industrial facilities to decarbonize without placing greater strain on the utility’s electric grid.
Jawdy said he also liked the company’s technology.
Electrified Thermal Solutions’ electrically conductive bricks. Credit: Barry Chin/The Boston Globe
“Simpler is always better,” he said. “The fact that the brick is also the heating element, and you just supply electricity to the brick itself, simplifies the system significantly.”
The project would replace natural gas-fired boilers at the Calvert City plant with ETS’s thermal batteries. Air blown through the Joule Hive batteries would transfer flame-temperature heat to the boilers to generate steam.
The project would reduce greenhouse gas emissions associated with steam generation at the plant by nearly 70 percent, according to the DOE.
In 2022, Ashland released 72,000 tons of carbon dioxide from burning natural gas at the plant, according to data the company reported to the Environmental Protection Agency.
Those emissions are equal to the annual greenhouse gas emissions of 17,000 automobiles, a significant source of climate pollution in a town of 2,500 people, the EPA says.
The DOE grant would split the cost of the project with Ashland up to a total of $70 million. Ashland would oversee the installation of the thermal batteries at its facility, a process that would involve a certain amount of risk for such a first of its kind installation.
Carolmarie Brown, a spokeswoman for Ashland, said the company is still evaluating the project.
“There are many factors driving the decisions we will make as we proceed,” Brown said. “Large scale decarbonization includes thorough evaluations of the options, projects and innovations to move forward, and we’re in the early phase of the process.”
As Ashland continues to evaluate the project, Stack and colleagues are continuing to scale up their capabilities.
From the company’s beginning in 2020, ETS has outsourced production of its electrically conductive bricks to an industrial brick manufacturer that follows ETS’s proprietary recipe. After several years placing orders for small test batches of bricks, ETS recently received its first multi-ton order.
“Now, if you want two tons, [or, if] you want 2,000 tons, the manufacturer is ready to do that for us,” Stack said. “We’re off to the races.”
Share this article
veryGood! (427)
Related
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- Sudan paramilitary leader says he’s committed to cease-fire, but no progress on proposed peace talks
- Claiborne ‘Buddy’ McDonald, a respected Mississippi judge and prosecutor, dies at 75
- Nikki Haley’s Republican rivals are ramping up their attacks on her as Iowa’s caucuses near
- Sonya Massey's family keeps eyes on 'full justice' one month after shooting
- Kaitlyn Bristowe Disappointed in Ex Jason Tartick for Leaning Into the Victim Mentality After Breakup
- Wisconsin redistricting consultants to be paid up to $100,000 each
- AP Week in Pictures: Latin America and Caribbean
- How effective is the Hyundai, Kia anti-theft software? New study offers insights.
- Older adults can save on 2023 taxes by claiming an extra deduction. Here's how to do it.
Ranking
- Judge says Mexican ex-official tried to bribe inmates in a bid for new US drug trial
- Thousands attend the funeral of a top Hamas official killed in an apparent Israeli strike in Beirut
- Huge waves will keep battering California in January. Climate change is making them worse.
- Make Life Easier With $3 Stanley Tumbler Accessories— Spill Stoppers, Snack Trays, Carrying Cases & More
- Oklahoma parole board recommends governor spare the life of man on death row
- Taco Bell's new box meals make it easy to cook a crunchwrap or quesadilla at home
- The US Tennis Association is reviewing its safeguarding policies and procedures
- New York City subway train derails in collision with another train, injuring more than 20 people
Recommendation
North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
Bachelor Nation's Brayden Bowers and Christina Mandrell Get Engaged at Golden Bachelor Wedding
Glynis Johns, ‘Mary Poppins’ star who first sang Sondheim’s ‘Send in the Clowns,’ dies at 100
Unsealed documents show again how Jeffrey Epstein leveraged his powerful connections
Tropical rains flood homes in an inland Georgia neighborhood for the second time since 2016
Strike kills 12 people, mostly children, in Gaza area declared safe zone by Israel
California forces retailers to have 'gender-neutral' toy aisles. Why not let kids be kids?
Mountain Dew Baja Blast is turning 20 — and now, you can find it in your local grocery store for the rest of the year