The invention relates generally to a method and system to improve the capacity factor of energy resources characterized by distributed intermittent power sources, such as wind turbines in a wind farm, by thermally efficient energy storage in compressed air. More specifically the invention relates to distributed compressed air energy storage with a heat interchange network for high thermal efficiency.
Intermittency and availability of wind and related energy resources are typically at variance with power demand resulting in under-utilization and modest intrinsic capacity factors for such power sources. The problem of intermittency and availability of some energy resources may be mitigated by incorporation of energy storage systems to accumulate energy during off-peak power demand and release the energy during peak power demand. Compressed Air Energy Storage devices store energy by using an electric motor to compress air which is then stored and later used to generate electricity by expanding the compressed air through turbines. Compressed air energy storage systems have limited environmental impact and operational constraints, are long lived, and represent mature and reliable technology with high power capture advantages over most other energy storage approaches to mitigating the intermittency and availability problem of wind resources. Conventional Compressed Air Energy Storage employing large scale underground formations for air storage can boost current capacity factors of wind turbines of on-land wind farms by almost a factor of two. Unfortunately favorable geologic resources are usually not available collocated or in close proximity with most offshore wind and some other power resources.
Although conventional Compressed Air Energy Storage systems have limited system efficiency due mostly to thermal energy losses in the compressor and expander trains which operate on different schedules, they possess very high economics of scale, and reliability that derives from use of proven conventional turbomachinery. Related technologies with potentially higher thermal system efficiencies than conventional Compressed Air Energy Storage systems, such as various “near” isothermal compressor-expander Compressed Air Energy Storage technology that utilize new compressor and expander systems (for example United States Patents Bolinger 2010: U.S. Pat. No. 7,802,426 and Fong et al 2012: U.S. Pat. No. 8,182,240), must undergo long and extensive development before the elements approach the functional and reliability levels of conventional Compressed Air Energy Storage components.
Conventional compressed air energy storage systems also have advantages including: the compression time can be optimized to market conditions; operational flexibility; scalability; low emission, since only supplemental heating may be needed; flexible equipment sourcing—combustion and expansion turbines and air compressors are standard industry components; lowest capital cost per kilowatt hour delivered for bulk storage, among competing technologies—pumped hydro, flywheels, batteries, super-capacitor, magnetic, thermal, etc. While batteries are also cost effective, abuse tolerant, and critical for the electrification of personal transportation systems, they lack the brute capacity required for most wind power regulation.
It is an object of the present invention to facilitate high thermally efficient compressed air energy storage system utilizing conventional components.
Current Compressed Air Energy Storage employing large scale underground air storage or otherwise consolidated air storage have compression chain technology that uses intercoolers and an aftercooler to reduce the temperature of the injected air thereby enhancing the compression efficiency, reducing the storage volume requirement and minimizing thermal stress on the storage volume walls. With a large number of compressor stages and intercooling the system theoretical efficiency can approach that for adiabatic compression. Conventional turbo expander chains require fuel to be combusted to heat the compressed air during expansion to improve the process capacity and efficiency. Additional approaches to improve efficiency and boost capacity include turbine blade cooling, humidification, and steam injection schemes. However both cooling of the compressed air during compression and heating it during expansion represent significant loss of energy because the heat generation and heat utilization are essentially separated in-time to off-peak hours and peak demand hours. The use of equally consolidated long-term thermal energy storage which is fraught with inefficiencies is only marginally effective in alleviating the energy loss. Also the electrical energy generation per unit of air storage capacity is dependent on the compressed air supply pressure and consolidated or underground (aquifer) air storage systems have limited pressure capacity due to physical considerations.
The present invention comprises of a method and system that retains all the proven components and relevant capacity improvement options of conventional Compressed Air Energy Storage but (1) distributes the air storage, compression and expansion to a multiplicity of storage tanks and compressor-expander trains at each wind turbine (intermittent power source) in a farm; the much reduced size turbine based storage tanks may operate at much higher pressures than is feasible with geologic formations and large consolidated storage means thus overcoming the loss of economy of scale in the distributed system, (2) includes a thermal energy interchange network linking all the turbine stations with well insulated controlled cooling and heating circuits, (3) includes distributed and central or supervisory control functions to dynamically schedule individual wind turbine power production or energy storage or compressed air power production, in concert with regular wind farm operational objectives, including optimization of system thermal efficiency and capacity factor; and (4) integrates the items 1-3 functionally and physically with the wind farm or distributed intermittent power resource.
Efficiency and capacity improvements result from the matching of heat production of the energy-storing turbines with the heat demand of the turbines producing power from stored energy. The compression and expansion phases of each turbine station is no longer directly coupled to the global off-peak and peak power demand cycle, and the conventional fuel requirement during expansion is grossly reduced or eliminated but without the attendant need for formal long-term thermal energy storage due to advanced management of the thermal energy interchanges in the heat network, The optimal scheduling of the turbines' energy storage and power production and generation phases is in addition to the other complex objectives of power and load control of the wind farm. Wind turbines are spread over a large area, and not all turbines encounter the same transient wind conditions. Moreover the layout of turbines on the farm, whether dictated by geographical features, prevailing wind direction or other factors introduce turbine aerodynamic interaction into the control mix. Separation of the compression and turbo-expander components and operations implies that the compressor size can be optimized independently of the turbo-expander design and standard production compressors may be used in the system configuration.
These features and advantages of the invention are made more apparent when considered in connection with the accompanying drawings conveying application of a preferred embodiment to an offshore wind farm, as an example, which is not to be considered limiting its scope to other embodiments or applications which the invention is capable of contemplating. These drawings which are not to scale or exact shape or form, omit for clarity, routine items of structure, equipment, software and hardware, including those for annunciation, sensing and control, that are obvious to one skilled in the art, while illustrating the method and system of the invention according to:
Referring to
Referring to
The exploitation of the invention by industry is obvious from the nature of the invention and the description here-in of a preferred embodiment. However, separate considerations may apply for new wind farms and existing wind farms. For a new wind farm, the design of the wind turbine tower and support would consider the air storage high pressure tank 219, if it is to be incorporated within the tower and support structure. Similarly the expanded utility of the tower platform 104 would be taken into account in its design. For existing wind farms, the air storage tank 219, and the compressor 216 and expander/generator 217 trains may be incorporated, if feasible, in the wind turbine tower and support through appropriate retrofits and reinforcements of these structures or otherwise contained in appropriately designed additional offshore structure contiguous with each wind turbine unit. For both new and existing wind farms, the thermal energy interchange network of cooling circuits 209 and heating circuits 210 may be composed of uninsulated and insulated undersea flow pipes and accessories, utilizing established technology for offshore oiligas production subsea substations and pipeline systems.
The wind farm management and operation control system requires significant changes from conventional wind farm control systems. Ordinarily, this is a hierarchical system of a farm level controller 308, and turbine level controller 215. The turbine level control, in turn, could be in three levels: turbine supervisory control, operational control and subsystem control, which ensure various actuators, yaw drive, pitch drives, the generator, and the power electronics realize and maintain their set points. The typical objective of the farm level controller is control of the farm generated power which may need to track some external power demand; and coordinated control of the power production by individual farm turbines to mitigate variations in wind flow conditions at turbine sites and aerodynamic interactions of the turbines. With typical turbine operations in four regimes: (1) turbine not run—wind speed below cut-in speed, (2) turbine run with speed control—wind speed above cut-in speed but below allowable value for high rotor speed, (3) turbine run under power-limited control for safe electrical and mechanical loads—wind speed above allowable value for high rotor speed but below furling wind speed, and (4) turbine shut down—wind speed at or above furling speed; the turbine supervisory controller typically determines when the turbine is started or stopped and conducts turbine health monitoring tasks, while the turbine operational controller regulates turbine operation in regimes 2 and 3. In exploiting the invention, the turbine subsystem controls multiply to include the additional components associated with the compressor and expander/generator trains and the air storage tank; the farm level controller objectives expand to include regulation of flow and energy interchange in the heat network and optimization of thermal efficiency throughout the farm. The “operation” regimes of each turbine station (this includes when turbine is not run or when turbine is shut down) become elaborated, with each regime incorporating combinations of (a) turbine “operation” without compressed air energy storage and compressed air power production, (b) turbine “operation” with compressed air energy storage, and (c) turbine “operation” with compressed air power production. The turbine supervisory controller functions and objectives are accordingly elaborated.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/US2016/026841 | 4/9/2016 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
62116564 | Feb 2015 | US |