Superconducting Magnetic Energy Storage A. Morandi, M. Breschi, P. L. Ribani, M Fabbri LIMSA Laboratory of Magnet Engineering and Applied Superconductivity DEI Dep. of Electrical, Electronic and Information Engineering University of Bologna, Italy SUPERCAPACITORS: ON THE PULSE OF A REVOLUTION OCEM Power Electronics Bologna, May 23 2017
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Superconducting Magnetic Energy Storage
A. Morandi, M. Breschi, P. L. Ribani, M Fabbri
LIMSA Laboratory of Magnet Engineering and Applied Superconductivity
DEI Dep. of Electrical, Electronic and Information Engineering
University of Bologna, Italy
SUPERCAPACITORS: ON THE PULSE OF A REVOLUTION
OCEM Power ElectronicsBologna, May 23 2017
2
• Superconductors
• SMES technology
Concepts
Power conditioning system
State of the art
• Applications
• SMES actvities at the University of Bologna
Outline
Cri
tica
l su
rfac
e
Current density, J
Magnetic Induction, B
Temperature, T
Bc
Jc
Superconductors
Heike Kamerlingh Onnes, 1911
J < Jc (B,T)
Superconductivity only occurs below the critical surface in the J-B-T space
• Superconducting properties (Jc,Bc,Tc) of pure elements are too week.
• Practical superconductors are made of compounds or alloys
Resistance disappears at low temperature. “Superconducting” state is entered.
4
• MetalsNb 9.25 K Tc 7.80 K V 5.40 KNbTi 9.8 K
• Intemetallics (A15)Nb3Ge 23.2 K Nb3Si 19 K Nb3Sn 18.1 K Nb3Al 18 K V3Si 17.1 K Ta3Pb 17 K V3Ga 16.8 K Nb3Ga 14.5 K
• “Unusual”Cs3C60 40 K Highest-Tc fulleride
MgB2 39 KBa0.6K0.4BiO3 30 KHoNi2B2C 7.5 K Borocarbides
GdMo6Se8 5.6 K Chevrel Phases
CoLa3 4.28 K
(Some) known superconducting materials
• Cuprates - Ln-SuperconductorsGdBa2Cu3O7 94 K YBa2Cu3O7-d 93 KY2Ba4Cu7O15 93 K
• Cuprates - Bi-SuperconductorsBi1.6Pb0.6Sr2Ca2Sb0.1Cu3Ox 115 KBi2Sr2Ca2Cu3O10 110 K Bi2Sr2CaCu2O9 110 K
BSC limit
Low
Tc
Hig
h T
c
Fusi
on
an
d a
ccel
era
tors
, MR
I, S
MES
MR
I, S
MES
?
Cab
les,
FC
L, r
ota
t. m
ach
ines
, SM
ES, M
RI
5
Stability and AC Loss – Superconducting composites
2 m Ag
20m Cu
20m Cu
50m Hastelloy substrate
1 m HTS
~ 30 nm LMO
~ 30 nm Homo-epi MgO
~ 10 nm IBAD MgO
2 m Ag
20m Cu
20m Cu
50m Hastelloy substrate
1 m HTS
~ 30 nm LMO
~ 30 nm Homo-epi MgO
~ 10 nm IBAD MgO
Composite LTS wireComposite HTS Tape
Quench• Localized transition to normal state can occur triggered by different causes
(mechanical relaxation, non uniformity, .... ).
• A superconductor needs to operate in combination with a normal material which provides a bypass path to current and allows quick diffusion of heat
AC loss• A superconductor is truly lossless only in DC condition.
• Electromagnetic loss occurs during transients or AC operation due to diffusion of magnetic field and induced currents in the normal conducting material.
PCS
Control and protection system
Cooling system
Superconducting coil
grid
Current leads
vacuum + MLI
6
SMES – Superconducting Magnetic Energy Storage
2
0
2
0
2
2
1
22ILd
Bd
BE
coil
7
Advantages
• High deliverable power
• Infinite number of charge discharge cycles
• High efficiency of the charge and discharge phase (round trip)
• Fast response time from stand-by to full power
• No safety hazard
Critical aspects
• Low storage capacity
• Need for high auxiliary power (cooling)
• Idling losses
8
Total heat load• Electromagnetic loss • Heat invasion of supports• Radiation• Heat invasion and Joule
• A controlled power is transferred from the DC bus to the grid by means of the inverter
• The voltage of the DC bus is kept constant by the SMES by means of the two quadrant chopper
Voltage source converter (VSC)
DC/AC –Bidirectional inverter
DC/DC –Two quandrant chopper
10
L
C
Vdc
ISMES
P = 0
If no power is delivered/absorbed the SMES current free-wheels in the chopper
Von IGBT = 0.5 1.5 V
Von DIODE = 0.5 1 V
Losses are produced during the idling phase
PIGBT = ISMES Von IGBT
PDIODE = ISMES Von DIODE
Pidling = 1 10 kW / kA
Idling Loss
• Time constants of RL circuit of typical SMES (1-5 MJ) during the standby phases are in the order of hundreds of seconds, at most
• The whole energy of the SMES is lost in the power electronics within a few minutes
• Continuous recharge/compensation is needed
SMES
Courtesy of D. Cardwell, University of Cambridge
12
L C
Vdc
ISMES
P = 0
The use of a Thermal Actuated Superconducting Switch is
• Possible in principle
• Unfeasible in practice since it lowers the response time of the chopper
13
cs
tP
tP
Efficiency of the SMES System
P, deliverable power t , duration of delivery tcycle , duration of the cycle tidle, duration of idling phases , intrinsic efficiency of the storage device c , efficiency of the convertersPaux , power required for auxiliary services Pidle , power loss (if any) during idling
cycle
idle
power
energy
idleidle
cs
tPtP
tP
cycleauxidleidle
cs
tPtPtP
tP
• SMES is unsuitable for
long term storage
• SMES is well suited for continuous charge / discharge (but AC loss needs to be considered)
14
The state of the art of SMES technology
Japan
Germany
EM Laucher
Japan
USA
Japan
Italy
France
Germany
Power modulatorFlicker
Grid compensation
15
The Kameyama SMES
10 MW – 1 s SMES system
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• Superconductors
• SMES technology
Concepts
Power conditioning system
State of the art
• Applications
• SMES actvities at the University of Bologna
Outline
17
• Cost of battery scales with power and is roughly independent on the energy
• Cost of SMES scales with energy and is roughly independent on the power
SMES based power intensive systems
If large power is required for a limited time SMES can represent a cost effective storage technology
Possible applications
• Pulsed loads (e.g. high energy physics, fusion, … )
• Increase transient peak capacity of Battery based energy storage
• ….
• Frequency regulation
18
DA/AC
load
battery
1. Hybrid SMES - Battery systems
SMES can be conveniently used in combination with battery due to the complementary characteristics
• Battery provides long term base power – hence energy
• SMES provides peak power and fast cycling
DC/DC SMESDC/DC
Low pass control
High pass control
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Power vs time
tota
lb
atte
rySM
ES
Advantages:
• Reduced power rating of batteries
• Reduced wear and tear of batteries (no minor cycling)
• Reduced energy rating of SMES
Cost effective solution
1 MW – 5 s SMES system
2. Protection of sensitive equipment
21
Auxiliary network services provided by PCS of SMES
• Harmonic compensation
• Power factor correction
Iload
Igrid
Ifilter
ISMES
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3. Power modulation by SMES
Ismes
PloadPgrid
Iload
IgridPlo
ad
• No battery can be used for this application due to the prohibitive number of cycles
• Advantages brought by SMES can be significant also for moderate size systems
Pgrid Pload
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4. Hybrid SMES - Liquid Hydrogen (or liquid Air) system
• Liquid Hydrogen is used as energy intensive storage
• Free cooling power is available for SMES due to the presence of LH2 at 20 K