The present patent application relates to energy storage technologies and more particularly to an energy storage bridge that utilizes steel pipes instead of the traditional beams as load carrying girders and in addition as a Compressed Air Energy Storage (CAES) units, to store the energy of unwanted electricity in the grid during low-demand sessions, or the intermittent power of any regenerated energy sources such as wind and solar energy sources.
Underground caverns have been used for Compressed Air Energy Storage in power plants first in Germany Huntorf in 1978 (Crotogina et al 2001) and later in McIntosh power plant of Alabama, USA in 1991 (Linden 2003). The Energy Storage Unit of a power plant is to regulate the mismatching supply and demand of the grid power, so that the electricity would not be wasted when it is not needed. To store the equivalent energy of a power plant, a sizable container is needed. Surface mounted or buried steel pipes have been proposed for small energy storage units (Linden 2003). Suitable underground caverns are difficult to find. Bridge structures are plentiful in many cities and their body space (spacing between girders) is voluminous. If steel pipes are used to store energy, they can be used as load-carrying beams/girders. The key to the application is that the steel pipe when subject to internal air pressure, the pipe is under tension. The hoop stress is twice as much as the axial stress, as illustrated in
The present patent application is directed to an energy storage bridge. In one aspect, the energy storage bridge includes a plurality of bridge girders and a bridge deck disposed on top of the bridge girders and configured for loading the live loads. The bridge girders include a plurality of steel pipes configured to be used as load carrying structural members for carrying the bridge dead load and live loads including vehicle loads and configured to store energy in a form of compressed air contained therein, and a plurality of web plates. The steel pipes are assembled in at least a row aligned vertically. Each web plate connects a row of the steel pipes at a center line separating the steel pipes into two halves. Each bridge girder forms an energy storage unit between two consecutive movement joints of the energy storage bridge. Every two consecutive storage units are joined by a high pressure flexible pipe to form a giant energy storage unit. Each energy storage unit is provided with inlet and outlet pipes to in-take compressed air from electric compressors driven by the grid power or by regenerated powers, and to release the compressed air to generate electricity. The bridge girders are disposed at a predetermined transverse spacing across the width of the bridge deck and configured for supporting the bridge deck as a roadway surface.
The regenerated powers may include wind and solar energies. The heat extracted from the air compression cycle may be used to heat water which is stored in a heat-insulated tank. The water stored in the heat-insulated tank may be supplied to consumers for hot water consumption. The compressed air may be supplied to the consumers for compressed air consumption for air conditioning.
The bridge deck may be a concrete slab or a steel deck or an orthotropic steel plate deck. The energy storage bridge may further include a plurality of web stiffeners welded to the web plates and configured for stiffening the web plates. The high pressure flexible pipes may have a smaller diameter than the steel pipes and the web stiffeners may not be welded to the high pressure flexible pipes.
Holes may be formed in the web plates close to the midspan thereof. The holes may be configured to let the air inside the steel pipes move freely so as to balance the internal pressure of the steel pipes.
The energy storage bridge may further include a plurality of air pressure release units close to supports at the mid-depth of the steel pipes and a plurality of sacrificial valves. Each sacrificial valve includes a profiled bolt socket welded to the wall of the steel pipes, a profiled washer, a gauge plate, a capping ring and a plurality of bolts.
In another aspect, the energy storage bridge includes a plurality of bridge girders and a bridge deck disposed on top of the bridge girders and configured for loading the live loads. The bridge girders includes a plurality of steel pipes configured to be used as load carrying structural members for carrying the bridge dead load and live loads including vehicle loads and configured to store energy in a form of compressed air contained therein. The steel pipes are assembled in at least a row aligned vertically. Two web plates are welded to two sides of each steel pipe respectively. Each bridge girder forms an energy storage unit between two consecutive movement joints of the energy storage bridge. Every two consecutive storage units are joined by a high pressure flexible pipe to form a giant energy storage unit. Each energy storage unit is provided with inlet and outlet pipes to in-take compressed air from electric compressors driven by the grid power or by regenerated powers, and to release the compressed air to generate electricity. The bridge girders are disposed at a predetermined transverse spacing across the width of the bridge deck and configured for supporting the bridge deck as a roadway surface.
In yet another aspect, the energy storage bridge includes a bridge girder and a bridge deck disposed on top of the bridge girder. The bridge girder includes a steel pipe configured to be used as a load carrying structural member for carrying the bridge dead load and live loads including vehicle loads and configured to store energy in a form of compressed air contained therein, and a plurality of web plates. Each steel pipe is connected by two web plates on its two sides. The bridge girder forms an energy storage unit between two consecutive movement joints of the energy storage bridge. Every two consecutive storage units are joined by a high pressure flexible pipe to form a giant energy storage unit. Each energy storage unit is provided with inlet and outlet pipes to in-take compressed air from electric compressors driven by the grid power or by regenerated powers, and to release the compressed air to generate electricity.
Reference will now be made in detail to a preferred embodiment of the energy storage bridge disclosed in the present patent application, examples of which are also provided in the following description. Exemplary embodiments of the energy storage bridge disclosed in the present patent application are described in detail, although it will be apparent to those skilled in the relevant art that some features that are not particularly important to an understanding of the energy storage bridge may not be shown for the sake of clarity.
Furthermore, it should be understood that the energy storage bridge disclosed in the present patent application is not limited to the precise embodiments described below and that various changes and modifications thereof may be effected by one skilled in the art without departing from the spirit or scope of the protection. For example, elements and/or features of different illustrative embodiments may be combined with each other and/or substituted for each other within the scope of this disclosure.
To store mass energy only two methods are available: pumped Hydro-electric plant and Compressed Air Energy Storage (CAES). Pumped Hydro-electric plant requires two reservoirs at different levels but its application is restricted by natural terrain. The electricity is stored as potential energy. Compressed Air Energy Storage (CAES) is to compress the air to a high pressure (80 bars in Huntorf plant). Air is abundant in the atmosphere and in CAES method the only hurdle is the compressed air container.
The present patent application is an alternative to the mass energy storage using underground caverns attached to power plants as in the case of Huntorf plant of Germany and in the case of McIntosh plant of Alabama, to regulate the supply and demand of the grid power. Both plants use underground caverns at a depth of 650-850 m (Huntorf) below ground and 450 m (McIntosh) below ground level. Apart from the economical benefit from operating the power plant with a mass energy storage unit, the energy saving scheme also helps to cut the green house gases, and such scheme should be encouraged. However, suitable natural underground caverns are not easy to come by hence an alternative method of using steel pipes buried underground is proposed by Linden 2003.
Bridge structure usually consists of two parts: the girders which can be concrete or steel, and the roadway slab, which is generally made of concrete. The girder needs adequate structural depth, normally in 1/15 to 1/25 of the span. The width of the bridge depends on how many traffic lanes it is to carry. One traffic lane takes up a width of 3.5 m to 3.75 m depending on the countries' standards. The width of the roadway is about 15-16 m, for 3 lanes plus hard shoulder. For a span of typically 35-70 m, the depth is somewhere between 2.3-3.5 m. A box of 3.0 m×8 m=24 m2 to 4.0 m×8.0 m=32 m2 is the typical internal area of the cross-section of box girder. This figure will be doubled in dual carriageway bridges. Many bridges are constructed in great length. The available volume (sectional area times length) is great.
The air volume is provided in the internal void of a box girder or between beams. A rectangular box type structure is not suitable for resisting high air pressure (up to 100 bars, or 10 MN/m2) as it produces unfavorable bending effects. To resist the high air pressure, steel pipes are the only choice, since the internal pressure will produce only in-plane tensile stress, which is a stress to be more favorable than the bending stress, for the steel plate.
The flexible pipes are able to resist high pressure and are commercially available. ESB Units can be linked by high pressure flexible pipes to form a large storage.
Referring to
In case that the first line protection fails to activate the pressure valves at an air pressure higher than the preset pressure P1, a second line of protection will be activated when the air pressure is higher than the threshold pressure P2 (the pressure P2 is greater than the pressure P1). The steel pipes' designed ultimate pressure P3 is higher than the preset pressure P2 by a safety margin.
The gauge plate 22 is pre-formed with grooves as shown in
The storage pipes 1 expand radially and axially under the internal pressure. If the expansion is restrained, lock-in stress will be set up. Therefore, the pipes 1 can only be restrained in one direction, as in the case of the web plate 6 being welded to the pipes 1 in the vertical direction. Expansion of the pipes 1 is then taken place in the transverse direction. By so doing, the expansion will not cause significant lock-in stress. A variation is to weld two webs, one on each side of the pipe as shown in
The diaphragms 3, 4 can be substituted by cross frame as shown in
The principle is that the heat is extracted when the air is compressed and the heat is used to heat water which is then stored in heat insulated tank. The compressed air is at temperature close to the ambient temperature (heat has been extracted to allow air to be compressed to ambient temperature). When the compressed air is decompressed and expands it will absorb heat-a so-called “Air Cycle Air Conditioning” (ACAC). The ACAC technology has been widely used in the commercial aircraft to provide air conditioning to the cabin. In the airplane, the compressed air comes from the aircraft turbo-fan engine. In this application, air is compressed by electric compressors during the low demand sessions of the day when the reserve of power in the grid is unwanted and is otherwise wasted if nobody takes it.
Unlike refrigerant based “Vapor Compression Cycle” air-conditioning, ACAC is refrigerant free hence it will not cause damage to the environment. In practice, the Bridge Storage Unit should be designed to store at least one-day power consumption in Energy for air-conditioning so that it can provide 24 hours service. This can be done with tandem storage units. The hot water and compressed air will supply to the local community by buried pipes.
This application has multiple benefits on environment. It saves the unwanted electricity in the grid. It turns the unwanted energy into wanted hot water and air-conditioning using refrigerant free ACAC technology. It improves the indoor air quality by ducting fresh cool air into the room, instead of circulating the indoor air as it does in the conventional air-conditioning.
All the technologies are available and matured. The innovation is the use of bridge body for energy storage using CASE technology and the application of compressed air to provide hot water and air-conditioning to the local community that the bridge belongs to.
While the present patent application has been shown and described with particular references to a number of embodiments thereof, it should be noted that various other changes or modifications may be made without departing from the scope of the present invention.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/211,194, entitled “ENERGY STORAGE BRIDGE”, filed on Sep. 16, 2008.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 12211194 | Sep 2008 | US |
Child | 12967004 | US |