This breakthrough combined with the superconducting cable now available not only allows power to be accumulated but allows huge amounts of power to be routinely shifted coast to coast when optimal.
It was not apparent to me before, but such a system lives well
underground eliminating a host of problems and vulnerabilities.
We will evolve to a grid that is almost untouchable to even natural
disaster. More critically the bulk of line loss will now disappear
except that close to the customer and even that is again a legacy
issue that can be optimized. We do prefer AC in the home and areas
of heavy human traffic. What is needed is super efficient rectifiers
close by because buried cables can bring DC safely into the
neighborhood.
This will mean a huge increase in power availability without building
new capacity.
ABB Advance Makes
Renewable-Energy Supergrids Practical
A high-power circuit
breaker makes it possible to create highly efficient DC power grids.
November 12, 2012
http://www.technologyreview.com/news/507331/abb-advance-makes-renewable-energy-supergrids-practical/
http://www.technologyreview.com/news/507331/abb-advance-makes-renewable-energy-supergrids-practical/
ABB, the large power
and automation company, has developed technology that could provide
an efficient way to transmit power from widely distributed solar
panels, wind turbines, and other sources of renewable energy. The new
technology is a fast and efficient circuit breaker for
high-voltage direct-current (DC) power lines, a device that has
eluded technologists for 100 years. The breaker makes it possible to
join high-voltage DC transmission lines to form a resilient power
grid.
If renewable energy is
ever to account for a large part of the total energy supply,
countries will need to install new, large-scale transmission grids,
both to get power to cities from remote areas such as deserts that
often have the best renewable resources, and to combine power from
widely distributed wind turbines and solar panels, which can help
average out fluctuations in their output. In Europe, there's been
talk for years of a supergrid that would pull together power from
hydroelectric dams in Scandinavia with wind farms in Germany and
large solar farms in Spain and even North Africa (see “A Supergrid
for Europe”).
But such a supergrid
has faced serious technical hurdles. The transmission lines that make
up conventional power grids use alternating current (AC), which loses
large amounts of power over long distances unless complicated and
expensive measures are taken. DC is more efficient over long
distances, and it offers the additional benefit of working well
underground and underwater, reducing or eliminating the need for the
unsightly transmission towers that can make it difficult to site new
transmission lines.
DC lines have long
been used to transmit power across the North Sea, and from large
hydroelectric dams to cities. But until ABB's advance, it wasn't safe
to connect DC lines into a large-scale grid.
ABB's circuit breaker
changes that. Within five milliseconds it can stop the flow of a huge
amount of power—equal to the entire output of a nuclear power
plant, ABB says. The breakers could be used to nearly instantaneously
reroute power in a DC grid around a problem, allowing the grid to
keep functioning. “Ordinarily, if something goes wrong anywhere,
all the power goes off,” says Claes Rytoft, ABB’s chief
technology officer. “The breaker can cut out the faulty line and
keep the rest healthy.”
Researchers have been
trying to develop high-voltage DC circuit breakers for a century (see
“Edison’s Revenge: The Rise of DC Power”). Mechanical switches
alone didn't work—they shut off power too slowly. Power electronics
made of transistors that can switch on and off large amounts of power
offered a possible solution, but they proved far too inefficient.
ABB's solution combines power electronics with a mechanical switch to
create a hybrid system that's both fast and efficient. The new
circuit breaker could also be far less expensive than systems that
use only transistors.
“The cost of the
power electronics breaker was humongous,” says Ram Adapa, a power
delivery technical leader at the Electric Power Research Institute.
“The hybrid breaker should be less costly.”
With the major hurdle
to DC grids out of the way, ABB is now developing algorithms to
control them. The system will still need to work in concert with AC
lines for distributing the power in local communities, since there is
no inexpensive DC equivalent of the transformers needed to step down
power to the relatively low voltages used in homes and businesses.
One of the first markets for the new technology could be Germany,
which has decided to turn off its nuclear power plants and rely
heavily on renewable energy (see “The Great German Energy
Experiment”).
The degree to which
high-voltage DC grids can help renewables may depend on the economics
of installing underground cables versus overhead lines. Obtaining
rights-of-way is one of the biggest obstacles to installing new
transmission lines in many countries, and underground installations
don’t require obtaining new rights-of-way, since they can be easily
installed along existing roadways. ABB says that when the entire
system cost is taken into account, underground installations are only
slightly more expensive than overhead ones. But Adapa is skeptical,
saying that underground installations could cost five times as much.
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