Compressed-air energy storage

Compressed-air energy storage

Compressed Air Energy Storage (CAES) refers to the compression of airto be used later as energy source. At utility scale, it can be stored during periods of low energy demand (off-peak), for use in meeting periods of higher demand (peak load). Alternatively it can be used to power tools, or even vehicles. (see also: Pressure vessel)

Types

Compressed air energy storage can be done adiabatically, diabatically, or isothermally:
* With Adiabatic storage, the heat that appears during compression is also stored, then returned to the air when the air is expanded. This is a subject of ongoing study, but no utility scale plants of this type have been built. The theoretical efficiency of adiabatic energy storage approaches 100% for large and/or rapidly cycled devices and/or perfect thermal insulation, but in practice round trip efficiency is expected to be 70%cite web|title=German AACAES project information | url=http://www.bine.info/pdf/publikation/projekt0507englinternetx.pdf | accessdate=2008-02-22] . Heat can be stored in a solid such as concrete or stone, or more likely in a fluid such as hot oil (up to 300C) or a molten-salt (600C).

* With Diabatic storage, the extra heat is removed from the air with inter coolers following compression (thus approaching isothermal compression), and is dissipated into the atmosphere as waste. Upon removal from storage, the air must be re-heated (usually in a natural gas fired burner for utility grade storage or with a heated metal mass for large Uninterruptible Power Supplies) prior to expansion in the turbine to power a generator. The heat discarded in the intercoolers degrades efficiency, but the system is simpler than the adiabatic one, and thus far is the only system which has been implemented commercially. The McIntosh CAES plant requires 0.69kWh of electricity and 1.17kWh of gas for each 1.0kWh of electrical output (a non-CAES natural gas plant can be up to 60% efficient therefore uses 1.67kWh of gas per kWh generated).
* Isothermal compression and expansion (which attempts constant temperature operation by constant heat exchange to the environment) approaches is only practical for rather low power levels, unless very effective heat exchangers can be incorporated. The theoretical efficiency of isothermal energy storage approaches 100% for small and/or slowly cycled devices and/or perfect heat transfer to the environment.In practice neither of these perfect thermodynamic cycles are obtainable, as some heat losses are unavoidable.

A highly efficient arrangement, which fits neatly into none of the above categories, uses high, medium and low pressure pistons in series, with each stage followed by an airblast venturi that draws ambient air (or seawater as in early compressed air torpedo [Compressed air torpedo] designs) over an air-to-air (or air-to-seawater) heat exchanger between each expansion stage. This warms the exhaust of the preceding stage and admits this preheated air to the following stage. This practice was widely practiced on various compressed air vehicles such as H. K. Porter, Inc in mining locomotives ( [ [http://www.dself.dsl.pipex.com/MUSEUM/TRANSPORT/comprair/comprair.htm Compressed-Air Propulsion ] ] see CHARLES HODGES AND THE PORTER COMPOUND AIR LOCOMOTIVES ) and trams. http://www.aircaraccess.com/images/3stage%201.jpg] .

Here the heat of compression is effectively stored in the atmosphere (or sea) and returned later on, but interestingly it is not not the "same" heat.

Compression can be done with electrically powered turbo-compressors, expansion with turbo 'expanders' driving electrical generatorscite web
title=Distributed Energy Program: Compressed Air Energy Storage
url=http://www.eere.energy.gov/de/compressed_air.html
publisher=United States Department of Energyone
accessdate=2006-08-27
] or air engines (generator) to produce electricity.

Air is stored in mass quantity in underground in a cavern created by solution mining (salt is dissolved away) [http://www.answers.com/topic/solution-mining?cat=technology ; http://www.saltinstitute.org/12.html ] or an abandoned mine. Plants are designed to operate on a daily cycle, charging at night and discharging during the day.

Compressed air energy storage can also be used to describe technology on a smaller scale such as exploited by air cars or wind farms in steel or carbon-fiber tanks.

Physics of isothermal compressed air storage

One type of reversible air compression and expansion is described by the isothermal process, where the heat of compression and expansion is removed or added to the system at the same rate as it is produced. Compressing air heats it up and the heat must therefore be able to flow to the environment during compression for the temperature to remain constant. In practice this is often not the case, because to properly intercool a compressor requires a compact internal heat exchanger that is optimized for high heat transfer and low pressure drop. Without an internal heat exchanger, isothermal compression can be approached at low flow rates, particularly for small systems. Small compressors have higher inherent heat exchange, due to a higher ratio of surface area to volume. Nevertheless it is useful to describe the limiting case of ideal isothermal compression of an ideal gas:

The ideal gas law, for an isothermal process is::PV=nRT=constant By the definition of work, where A and B are the initial and final states of the system::W_{A o B}=int_{V_A}^{V_B} P,dV =int_{V_A}^{V_B} frac{nRT}{V},dV = nRTint_{V_A}^{V_B} frac{1}{V},dV : = nRT(ln{V_B}-ln{V_A}) = nRTln{frac{V_B}{V_A = nRTln{frac{P_A}{P_B = PVln{frac{P_A}{P_B where, {P_A}{V_A} = {P_B}{V_B} , and so, frac{V_B}{V_A} = frac{P_A}{P_B}

: P is the absolute pressure, : V is the volume of the vessel,: n is the amount of substance of gas,: R is the ideal gas constant,: T is the absolute temperature,: W is the energy stored or released.

This amounts to about 2.271 ln{frac{P_A}{P_B kJ at 0 degrees Celsius (273.15 kelvin) or 2.478 ln{frac{P_A}{P_B kJ at 25 °C (298 K), per mole.

One mole of gas molecules at standard temperature and pressure (0 °C, 0.1 MPa), occupies 22.4 liters and there are 1000 liters in 1 m³. So there are about n = 1000 / 22.4 = 44.6 moles of gas molecules in 1 m³ and we get 101 ln{frac{P_A}{P_B kJ at 0 °C or 111 ln{frac{P_A}{P_B kJ at 25 °C per m³ of gas (at 0.1 MPa = aprox. atmospheric pressure):

An isothermal process is thermodynamically reversible, so to the extent the processes are isothermal, the efficiency of compressed air storage will approach 100%. The equation above represents the maximum energy that can be stored. In practice, the process will not be perfectly isothermal and the compressors and motors will have heat-related energy losses.

When gas is compressed adiabatically, some of the compression work goes into heating the gas. If this heat is then lost to the surroundings, and assuming the same quantity of heat is not added back to the gas upon expansion, the energy storage efficiency will be reduced. Energy storage systems often use large natural underground caverns. This is the preferred system design, due to the very large gas volume, and thus the large quantity of energy that can be stored with only a small change in pressure. The cavern space can be compressed adiabatically and the resulting temperature change and heat losses are small.

Practical constraints in transportation

Energy density and efficiency

Compressing air heats it up and expanding it cools it down. Therefore practical air engines require heat exchangers in order to avoid excessively high or low temperatures and even so don't reach ideal constant temperature conditions. Nevertheless it is useful to describe the maximum energy storable using the isothermal case, which works out to about 110 ln{frac{P_A}{P_B kJ/m3-N at 24°Celsius. One m3-N is one cubic meter of gas volume at normal, i.e. atmospheric pressure, conditions. Thus if 1.0 m3 of ambient air is very slowly compressed into a 5-liter bottle at 200 bar, the potential energy stored is 583 kJ (or 0.16 kWh). A highly efficient air motor could transfer this into kinetic energy if it runs very slowly and manages to expand the air from its initial 200 bar pressure completely down to 1 bar (bottle completely "empty" at ambient pressure). Achieving high efficiency is a technical challenge both due to nonlinear energy storage and the thermodynamic considerations. If the bottle above is emptied down to 10 bar, the energy extractable is about 330 kJ at the motor shaft. The efficiency of isothermal compressed gas storage is theoretically 100% but in practice the process is not isothermal and the two engines (compressor and motor) have additional types of losses.

A standard 200 bar 5 liter steel bottle has a mass of 7.5 kg, a superior one, 5 kg. Bottles reinforced with, or built from, high-tensile fibers such as carbon-fiber or kevlar can be below 2 kg in this size, consistent with the legal safety codes. 1 m3 of air contained inside such a full bottle has a mass of 1.225 kg (at 0°C). Thus, theoretical energy densities are from roughly 70 kJ/kg at the motor shaft for a plain steel bottle to 180 kJ/kg at the motor shaft for an advanced fiber-wound one, whereas practical achievable energy densities for the same containers would be from 40 kJ/kg to 100 kJ/kg. Comparing to the data given for rechargeable batteries, this makes the advanced fiber-reinforced bottle example comparable to the lead-acid battery in terms of energy density and advanced battery systems are several times better. Batteries also provide nearly constant voltage over their entire charge level, whereas the pressure of compressed air storage varies greatly with charge level. It is technically challenging to design air engines to maintain high efficiency and sufficient power over such a wide range of pressures. Compressed air can transfer power at very high rates, which is a principal objective of transportation prime-movers, for acceleration and deceleration; particularly for hybrid vehicles.

Advantages of compressed air over electric storage are the longer lifetime of pressure vessels compared to batteries and the lower toxicity of the materials used. Costs are thus potentially lower, however advanced pressure vessels are costly to develop and safety-test and at present are more expensive than mass-produced batteries.

As with electric technology, it must be stressed that compressed air energy storage depends on external energy sources and overall consumption can only be as "clean" as these.

afety

As with most technologies, compressed air has safety concerns, mainly the catastrophic rupture of the tank. Highly conservative safety codes make this a rare occurrence at the tradeoff of higher weight. Codes may limit the legal working pressure to less than 40% of the rupture pressure for steel bottles (safety factor of 2.5), and less than 20% for fiber-wound bottles (safety factor of 5). Design rules are according to the ISO 11439 standard. [ [http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail?csnumber=33298 Gas cylinders -- High pressure cylinders for the on-board storage of natural gas as a fuel for automotive vehicles] ] High pressure bottles are fairly strong so that they generally do not rupture in crashes.

Compressed air vehicles

History

The air engine and its idea of using air as an energy carrier is not new. Air has been used since the 19th century to power mine locomotives, and was at one time the basis of naval torpedo propulsion.

Compressed air is still currently used in racecars to provide the initial energy needed to start the car's main power plant, the internal combustion engine (ICE).

Many people have been working on the idea of compressed air vehicles with renewed interest since the 1990s energy crisis.

Engine

A compressed air engine uses the expansion of compressed air to drive the pistons of an engine, an axle, or to drive a turbine.

Sometimes efficiency is increased by the following methods:
* A turbine with continuous expansion at high efficiency
* several stages of expansion
* use of waste heat, notably in a hybrid heat engine design
* use of environmental heat

A highly efficient arrangement uses high, medium and low pressure pistons in series, with each stage followed by an airblast venturi that draws ambient air over an air-to-air heat exchanger between each expansion stage. This warms the exhaust of the preceding stage and admits this preheated air to the following stage..

The only exhaust gas from each stage is cold air which can be as cold as (−15 °C), this may also be used for air conditioning in a car.

Additional heat can be supplied by burning fuel as in 1904 for Whitehead's torpedoes [ [http://www.btinternet.com/~philipr/torps.htm A History of the Torpedo The Early Days ] ] . This improves the range and speed available for a given tank volume at the cost of the additional fuel.

As an alternative to pistons or turbines, the Quasiturbine is also capable of running on compressed air, and is thus also a compressed air engine.

Cars

Several companies claim to have been developing compressed air cars for public use, since about 1990, but none are available yet. Typically the main advantages are claimed to be: no roadside emissions, low cost technology, engine uses food oil for lubrication, and integrated air conditioning.

The tanks may be refilled at a service station (using volume transfer), or in a few hours at home or in parking lots plugging the car into the electric grid via an on-board compressor. The cost of driving such car is typically projected to be around €0.75 per 100 km, with a complete refill at the "tank-station" at about US$3.

Other uses

Besides the use of compressed air engines for propulsion, compressed air is used for power generation and in paintball.Many dentists and shop tools use small turbine expanders for power, and many larger tools used in high electrical shock risk environments are pneumatic driven instead of electrically powered.

Types of systems

Hybrid systems

The system can be a hybrid power generation system, with the stored compressed air mixed with a fuel suitable for an internal combustion engine. For example, natural gas or biogas can be added, then combusted to heat the compressed air, and then expanded in a conventional gas turbine engine (or the rear portion of a jet engine), using the Brayton cycle.

In addition, Compressed air engines can be used in conjunction with an electric battery. The compressed air engine, drawing its energy from compressed air tanks, recharge the electric battery. This system (called a Pne-PHEV or Pneumatic Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicle-system)Fact|date=April 2008 and was being promoted by the apparently defunct Energine [ [http://www.energine.com/phev/e_phev_03.php Energine PHEV-system schematic] ] .

Existing hybrid systems

A hybrid plant was commissioned in Huntorf (Germany) in 1978, and again in McIntosh, Alabama in 1991 (USA). cite journal|title=Squeeze the breeze: Want to get more electricity from the wind? The key lies beneath our feet|journal=New Scientist|date=2007-11-17 |first=Daniel|last=Pendick |volume=195|issue=2623|pages=4 |url=http://environment.newscientist.com/channel/earth/mg19526231.700-rocks-could-be-novel-store-for-wind-energy.html|format=|accessdate=2007-11-17 ] Both systems use off-peak energy for the air compression. cite web|url=http://www.caes.net/mcintosh.html |title=McIntosh project |accessdate=2007-11-17 |work=CAES Development Company corporation website |publisher=CAES Development Company L.L.C. ]

The operating duration of the McIntosh plant is 24 hours, with the extended operation being achieved through the combined burning of a natural gas/compressed air mix.

Future hybrid systems

A proposed hybrid power plant is under consideration in Iowa. The design calls for a 75 - 150 MW wind farm, where the wind power will be used for air compression. [ [http://www.isepa.com/FAQs.asp Frequently Asked Questions] ] Power output of the McIntosh and Iowa gas/compressed air generation systems is in the range of 2-300 MW.

Additional facilities are under development in Norton, Ohio and Iowa Stored Energy Park (ISEP). This 2700 MW Norton project has been started in 2001, but in early 2007 construction had not actually begun. [cite web
title=Staff investigation report and recommendation
url=http://dis.puc.state.oh.us/DISOCR.nsf/0/49C28286DB6EE5388525712C0046945B/$FILE/DIGK2XU4ZGJWTKO%23.txt
publisher=Electric Power Generating Facility in Norton
date=2006-08-03
accessdate=2006-08-27
]

Increased efficiency is expected at ISEP, due to the use of aquifer storage rather than cavern storage. The displacement of water in the aquifer results in regulation of the air pressure by the constant hydrostatic pressure of the water. A spokesperson for ISEP claims "you can optimize your equipment for better efficiency if you have a constant pressure." cite journal|title=Squeeze the breeze: Want to get more electricity from the wind? The key lies beneath our feet|journal=New Scientist|date=2007-11-17 |first=Daniel|last=Pendick |volume=195|issue=2623|pages=4 |url=http://environment.newscientist.com/channel/earth/mg19526231.700-rocks-could-be-novel-store-for-wind-energy.html|format=|accessdate=2007-11-17 ] It is planned to have 75 - 150 MW of capacity. cite web|url=http://www.isepa.com/about_isep.asp |title=About the Iowa Stored Energy Park |accessdate=2007-11-17 |work=ISEPA corporate web site |publisher=Iowa Stored Energy Plant Agency ]

Lake or ocean storage

The need for pressurized vessels or for mining (into salt caverns or aquifers)cite web|url=http://www.wapa.gov/es/pubs/ESB/2003/03Aug/esb084.htm |title=Wind plus compressed air equals efficient energy storage in Iowa proposal |accessdate=2008-04-29 |work=Energy Services Bulletin website |publisher=Western Area Power Administration] can be obviated by placing the pressurized air underwater in flexible containers (e.g. plastic bags) - at the bottom of deep lakes or off sea coasts with steep drop-offs. Challenges include the limited number of suitable locations and the need for very-high-pressure pipelines between shore and depth. However, since the containers would be very inexpensive, the need for great pressure (at great depth) may not be as important. A key benefit of systems built on this concept is that charge and discharge pressures are always constant (as determined by depth): Thus all Carnot inefficiencies can be reduced in the controlled environment of the power plant. Carnot efficiency can be increased by using multiple stages for charge and discharge and by taking advantage of inexpensive heat sinks and heat sources, such as cold water from rivers or hot water from solar ponds. Ideally, the system must very adaptive in this regard - for example, by cooling air before pumping on summer days; also, it must be engineered to avoid repetitive "moments" of inefficiency, such as wasteful pressure changes caused by inadequate piping diameter. [ [http://www.google.com/patents?id=uno9AAAAEBAJ&dq=4873828 Prior art] . Oliver Laing et al. Energy storage for off peak electricity. United States Patent No. 4873828.]

Caisson Energy Storage

Energy storage in submerged, open bottomed, anchored caissons

(Of course this is energy storage by the displacement of water, however to recover the energy in this configuration, compressed air is used as an intermediate energy carrier and so the efficiency and cost of compressing the air and to recover the energy stored in the compressed air must be considered.)

One of the biggest problems with a large penetration of Wind power in power generation applications, according to Paul – Frederik Bach who ran the Western Denmark Power grid for a number of years is the sudden curtailment of wind farm output over a wide area as storms sweep over.

Hence a means of prolonging the wind turbine output whilst fossil stations on warming ramp up output or load is shed is needed. One possibility is sunken caissons, which could be integrated with the floating support structure for the wind turbine which the Norwegians are already developing. Whilst perfectly feasible, using existing technology, whether or not this is worthwhile is another matter.

Energy storage in sunken caissons

One possibility is to sink the type of caisson used in the Normandy Mulberry Harbours of which - about 115 of these huge structures were built in about 9 months during WW 2 http://www.everything2.org/index.pl?node_id=1306625

They were initially sunk off Folkestone to hide them from enemy observation, and then re floated prior to D Day using compressed air then towed into position and sunk.

In theory similar structures could be constructed and floated into much deeper water, sunk and anchored to the bottom using rock anchors.A flexible air pipe could be brought to the surface, to say a wind turbine base, housing an air compressor and an air turbine generator set.By simply pumping compressed air down to the caisson, water would be ejected lowering the internal water surface to the bottom of the caissons.To recover the stored energy the air valve would be opened and the energy recovered via the air turbine as the water re enters and air is forced out.Note that because the container is open bottomed, there is no internal or external pressure force - both inside and outside the caisson will be at near identical pressures at all times.However there will be massive floatation forces to be restrained but these present no real engineering difficulty.The flexible pipe would simply be a solid steel pipe which over 100 m can cope with significant bending - the Pluto pipelines, to bring fuel to allied troops after D Day were basically a 3 inch dia steel pipe unreeled from a gigantic 10 m diameter cotton real - 17 were laid in a few days across the Channel after D Day just by being unreeled (These Pluto pipes are the basis for modern submerged cables ).The deeper the water, the more energy can be stored per caisson.Since the compressed air will be at high pressure (10 bar at 100m depth) a lower cost air turbine can be used (compared to a low pressure one).The air pressure will be fairly constant as well, meaning an efficient air motor configuration can be chosen.

Note 90% the energy will be in the displaced water only 10% in the compressed air itself.

The calculation is as follows:

Assume the top of the caisson is 100 m below the surface.

A 1 m sq surface will have a water pressure of 100 m3 above it = 100 x 1000kg = 10e5 kg = 10e6 newtons.

Force this surface up by 1 m and you perform 10e6 Newton metres of work = 1.0 M Joules = 1.0 MJ

There are 3.6 MJ / kWh, so 1.0 MJ = 10MJ/3.6MJ = 0.277 kWh.

Scale that up by the volume and you get 0.277 x 20 x 20 x 70 = 7777 kWh = 7.7 MWh

Assuming an in out efficiency of say 50%,

Then the energy available as electricity is probably say 3.5 MWh = 3.5 MW for 1.0 hours.

However, since he average output of a 3.5 MW turbine is only about 1.2 MW, the caisson wold give the average output for 3 hours, or if tailed off linearly, 6 hours, which is enough time to start a coal station from warm.

On the face of it, it would work to have one of these per 3 MW floating wind turbine, and this would store sufficient energy to allow the wind turbine output to be prolonged sufficiently for thermal plants to start up, and or loads to be shed. Whether it is an economically worthwhile proposition is another matter. However considering that the Norwegians are planning constructing floating wind turbines for the North Sea, it would seem to be a logical place to put them, ie as integrated into part of the floatation structure.

An alternative to compressed air to force water from the caisson could be a water pump and turbine, but this would have to be located 100m down which may pose maintenance problems - This would be more efficient than the compressed air system and probably cheaper.

ubmerged tethered bladders

Sea bed anchored energy bags are being researched as solutions to the problem of storing energy generated by renewable sources at The University of Nottingham.

Academics have received €1.4m (£1.1m) in funding from E.ON, one of Europe's leading power and gas companies, to develop a new generation of and undersea storage bags that will collect energy in the form of compressed air.

[PA131/08 — June 16 2008]

Likely costs

Mulberry Harbours

Phoenix: The primary breakwater was to be provided by concrete caissons. These were to be from 25 to 60 feet high and 174 to 204 feet long. The displacement was up to 6,000 tons. http://www.hksw.org/despatches_107_1_a.htm

115 of these were built in about 9 months:

http://www.everything2.org/index.pl?node_id=1306625

Pluto – pipeline under the ocean

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Pluto After full-scale testing of a 45 nautical mile (83 km) HAIS pipe between Swansea in Wales and Watermouth in North Devon, the first line to France was laid on August 12, 1944, over the 70 nautical miles (130 km) from the Isle of Wight through the English Channel to Cherbourg. A further HAIS pipe and two HAMELs followed. As the fighting moved closer to Germany, 17 other lines (11 HAIS and 6 HAMEL) were laid from Dungeness to Ambleteuse in the Pas-de-Calais.

Note the 3 inch pipe bent around the 10 m dia drum Pluto //http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/hi/picture_gallery/04/uk_d_day_inventions/html/6.stm//

Pluto was Pipeline Under The Ocean, vital arteries that pumped millions of gallons of fuel from Britain to Allied forces in France. Two lines were built, codenamed Dumbo and Bambi. Pumping stations were disguised as ice cream shops, garages and bungalows. The sea bed cables were laid by 30ft diameter Conun drums pulled by tugs. This is one of more than 1,000 secret photographs of the pipeline operation newly released and available to be viewed free at The National Archives in Kew.

Likely costs

Concrete is about £300 per tonne in place.http://www.hksw.org/despatches_107_1_a.htm says the displacement was 6000 tonnes so that means to make them would cost about £1.8m. (But most of that cost could be paid for as part of the flotation structure of an off shore mill).

A fully installed gas turbine generator set of 3.5 MW is probably say £400/kw but that includes the combustor and compressor bit, so assume say £300/kW ie the air turbine generator might be about £1m. The compressor say the same again. So probably do each one costs £5m, but a lot of that cost would be born anyway by the floating turbine.

The going rate estimate for an offshore turbine is £3000 per kW so you would expect to pay £10m for the whole turbine anyway.

Of course the Mulberry caisson is an arbitrary choice simply because we know we can build them in a hurry. Obviously you would use a more economical shape - probably spherical. That would bring costs down.

Only detailed modelling can reveal if this sort of thing is worth while. Fun idea though.

See also

* Alternative fuel
* Alternative propulsion
* Battery electric vehicle
* Compressed air torpedo
* Compressed air vehicle (CAV)
* Compressed air (other uses)
* Compressed natural gas cylinders.
* Fireless locomotive
* Grid energy storage
* Iowa Stored Energy Park
* Liquid nitrogen economy
* Pneumatic motor
* Pneumatics
* Pumped-storage hydroelectricity
* Quasiturbine
* Vehicle-to-grid
* Zero-emissions vehicle

References

External links

*Wikia|cair
* [http://www.sandia.gov/media/NewsRel/NR2001/norton.htm Solution to some of country’s energy woes might be little more than hot air] (Sandia National Labs, DoE).
*MSNBC article, [http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10695864/ Cities to Store Wind Power for Later Use] , January 4, 2006
* [http://www.seco.cpa.state.tx.us/re_wind-reserve.htm Compressed air storage]
* [http://www.economist.com/science/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9539806 Power storage: Trapped wind]
* [http://www.star-telegram.com/business/story/183870.html TXU, Shell to harvest Panhandle's wind energy]
* [http://www.theaircar.com/further_applications.html Electrification and renewable energy storage using MDI systems] .
* [http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/07_41/b4053092.htm Catching The Wind In A Bottle A group of Midwest utilities is building a plant that will store excess wind power underground]
* [http://www.generalcompression.com Compressing with Wind turbine]
* [http://www.mcpeurope.net/4em/upload/eng_Compressed_Air_Systems-EN.pdf THE EUROPEAN MOTOR CHALLENGE PROGRAMME Compressed Air Systems Module] .
* [http://www.caes.net/mcintosh.html Alabama Electric Cooperative McIntosh Project]
* [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D0CEEDE103DF93AA1575AC0A967958260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=print New York Times Article: Technology; Using Compressed Air To Store Up Electricity]
* [http://www.aircaraccess.com/index.htm Pneumatic Options (general resource with history, photos, comprehensive external links)]


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