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And it was invented in Britain!
Any table of specific heat capacities will do. Just multiply by the relative densities to get the heat capacity per unit volume. Concrete has about 20% of the specific heat capacity of water, and about 2.5 times the density. In practice it would be comparable with oak which has about half the specific heat capacity and 0.8 times the density of water. Either is a lot easier to play with than sand or water, which need containment!
Hi,I haven't had any suggestions to my question, what chemical when mixed with water makes it hold more heat?C
I'm trying to zone in on the most practical test, I can do, taking lots of things into consideration.
If you are going to sink a bore below the house, use the soil as a heat store. Search for reversible ground-source heat pumps and save yourself a lot of hard work! Preferably, put the bore some way outside the dwelling boundary so you don't disturb the foundations when you alter the subsoil temperature.
Quote from: Camerart on 03/06/2022 08:33:40I'm trying to zone in on the most practical test, I can do, taking lots of things into consideration.Mixing a bag of concrete with a bucket of water is very easy, and you can make the resulting solid any shape you like.
Quote from: Camerart on 03/06/2022 08:35:30Hi,I haven't had any suggestions to my question, what chemical when mixed with water makes it hold more heat?CIt isn't obvious that there is an answer.Do you mean something like thisSalt hydrate technologyHerehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_energy_storage#Thermo-chemical_Heat_Storage [nofollow]