Flow Batteries
Just so as you know that vanadium batteries are not something only I am enthusiastic about here is an article that appeared in New Scientist.
"
SITTING at the western end of Bass Strait between the Australian
mainland and Tasmania, King Island might not seem like a beacon to the
future. Yet inside a large metal shed close to the island's west coast
is an electricity storage system that promises to transform the role of
wind energy.
King Island isn't connected to the mainland power grid, and apart
from its own small wind farm it relied for a long time on diesel
generators for its electricity. That changed in 2003 when the local
utility company installed a mammoth rechargeable battery which ensures
that as little wind energy as possible goes to waste. When the wind is
strong, the wind farm's turbines generate more electricity than the
islanders need. The battery is there to soak up the excess and pump it
out again on days when the wind fades and the turbines' output falls.
The battery installation has almost halved the quantity of fuel burnt
by the diesel generators, saving not only money but also at least 2000
tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions each year.
So what's new? For years wind turbines and solar generators have
been linked to back-up batteries that store energy in chemical form. In
the lead-acid batteries most commonly used, the chemicals that store
the energy remain inside the battery. The difference with the
installation on King Island is that when wind power is plentiful the
energy-rich chemicals are pumped out of the battery and into storage
tanks, allowing fresh chemicals in to soak up more charge. To
regenerate the electricity the flow is simply reversed.
Flow batteries like this have the advantage that their storage
capacity can be expanded easily and cheaply by building larger tanks
and adding more chemicals. The technology is already attracting
interest from wind farmers, but flow batteries could also replace all
sorts of conventional electricity storage systems - from the batteries
in electric cars to large-scale hydroelectric pumped storage
reservoirs.
Electricity is very different to commodities like coal or oil that
can be stored up in summer ready to meet peak winter demand. With
electricity, generating companies meet fluctuating demand by adjusting
the supply, from day to day and minute to minute. Typically, they
spread the load over large distribution grids and use a mix of huge,
economical, "base-load" power stations supplemented by smaller,
costlier generators that can be switched on and off at short notice.
Matching supply to demand is particularly problematical when it
comes to renewable energy sources like the wind and the sun. The wind
doesn't always blow when needed, which means that electricity companies
must keep conventional power stations standing by so that on calm days,
or when electricity demand leaps, people will still be able to turn on
the lights. These power sources can also be difficult to slot in and
out of the generation mix. An effective way to store electricity on a
large scale would give renewable power sources a welcome boost.
There is no shortage of ways to do this. Ideas range from storing
energy underground using hot rocks or storing it as electrical charge
in "super capacitors" to using off-peak capacity to pump water into
reservoirs where it can drive generator turbines when demand peaks.
Then there are various kinds of batteries. While each technology has
its advantages, flow batteries seem to have the potential to satisfy
the broadest variety of needs - from small power systems to large-scale
grid storage - at a competitive price.
Flow batteries are more complex than conventional batteries. In a
lead-acid battery, the electrical energy that charges it up is stored
as chemical energy inside the battery. Flow batteries, in contrast, use
two electrolyte solutions, each with a different "redox potential" - a
measure of the electrolyte molecules' affinity for electrons. What's
more, the electrolytes are stored in tanks outside the battery. When
electricity is needed the two electrolytes are pumped into separate
halves of a reaction chamber, where they are kept apart by a thin
membrane. The difference in the redox potential of the two electrolytes
drives electric charges through the dividing membrane, generating a
current that can be collected by electrodes. The flow of charge tends
to even up the redox potentials of the two electrolytes, so a constant
flow of electrolyte is needed to maintain the current. However, the
electrolytes can be recharged. A current driven by an outside source
will reverse the electrochemical reaction and regenerate the
electrolytes, which can be pumped back into the tanks.
No more leaks
The installation at King Island has its origins in the 1980s when
Maria Skyllas-Kazacos, a young Australian chemical engineer, started a
research programme on flow batteries at the University of New South
Wales in Sydney. This focused on one of the big weaknesses of these
devices. The membranes separating the two electrolytes allowed
molecules of electrolyte to leak across. As a result, each solution
became increasingly contaminated with the other, reducing the battery's
output.
Skyllas-Kazacos's solution to this problem was to use the same
chemical element for both electrolytes. She could still provide the
required difference in redox potential by ensuring that the element was
in different "oxidation states" in the two solutions - in other words
its atoms carried different electrical charges. The element she
eventually decided on was the metal vanadium, which can exist in four
different charge states - from V(ii), in which each vanadium atom has
two positive charges, to V(v), with five. Dissolving vanadium pentoxide
in dilute sulphuric acid creates a sulphate solution containing almost
equal numbers of V(iii) and V(iv) ions.
When Skyllas-Kazacos added the solution to the two chambers of her
flow battery and connected an outside power supply to the electrodes,
she found that the vanadium at the positive electrode changed into the
V(v) form while at the negative electrode it all converted to the V(ii)
form. With the external battery disconnected, electrons flowed
spontaneously from the V(ii) ions to the V(v) ions and the flow battery
generated a current (see Graphic). Best of all, it didn't matter too
much if a few vanadium ions on one side of the membrane leaked across
to the other: this slightly discharged the battery, but after a
recharge the electrolyte on each side was as good as new.
After more than a decade of development, Skyllas-Kazacos's
technology was licensed to a Melbourne-based company called Pinnacle
VRB, which installed the vanadium flow battery on King Island. With
70,000 litres of vanadium sulphate solution stored in large metal
tanks, the battery can deliver 400 kilowatts for 2 hours at a stretch.
It has increased the average proportion of wind-derived electricity in
the island's grid from about 12 per cent to more than 40 per cent.
It hasn't all been plain sailing, though. For example, engineers
have had to solve a perennial problem with flow batteries - how to
prevent leaks that allow energy to literally dribble away - as well as
working out how to construct long-lasting membranes.
With the installation at King Island up and running, it shows the
advantages of vanadium flow batteries over conventional electricity
storage. Their working lifetime is limited only by that of the membrane
and other hardware, and is expected to be several times the two to
three-year lifespan of a lead-acid battery. Like lead-acid batteries,
they deliver up to 80 per cent of the electricity used to charge them,
but they also maintain this efficiency for years.
One of the key advantages of flow batteries is their scalability.
To increase peak power output you add more battery cells, but the
amount of energy they will store - and therefore the time they will
operate on a full charge - can be expanded almost indefinitely by
building bigger tanks and filling them with chemicals. The result is
that the batteries can be used in a wide range of roles, from
1-kilowatt-hour units (like a large automotive battery, say), to
power-station scales of hundreds of megawatt-hours.
Small vanadium flow batteries are already operating in Japan, where
they are used for applications such as back-up power at industrial
plants. In the US, a 2-megawatt-hour battery installed in Castle Valley
in south-east Utah has allowed the local power company PacifiCorp to
meet increasing peak power demands without needing to increase the
capacity of the ageing 300-kilometre distribution line that feeds the
area.
The vanadium-based technology developed at the University of New
South Wales is now being put to use by VRB Power Systems, based in
Vancouver, Canada. Last year the company signed a $6.3 million contract
to construct a 12-megawatt-hour vanadium battery at the Sorne Hill wind
farm in Donegal, Ireland. The idea is to offer a guaranteed supply of
wind-generated electricity, and improve the economics of the wind farm
by selling stored electricity to the grid at peak times when prices are
highest.
The company has commissioned a new production line with the
capacity to turn out 2500 5-kilowatt batteries each year. The first
dozen of these new batteries are currently under evaluation by
customers including the National Research Council Canada and one of
North America's biggest cellphone companies.
This is an important stage of development. At present, as with any
new technology lacking economies of scale, flow battery systems are
more expensive than competing products, but that could change once the
new production line is running.
Basic research is continuing too. Vanadium sulphate solutions
cannot be made very concentrated so the energy stored in a given volume
of vanadium flow batteries is about half that of lead-acid batteries.
This rules them out for applications where compactness and low weight
are at premium - electric cars being a prime example. So
Skyllas-Kazacos and her team want to replace vanadium sulphate with
vanadium bromide, which is more than twice as soluble. She expects that
research to be completed by 2008.
VRB Power Systems has already tested its units in electric golf
carts. Just as with existing electric vehicles, a car equipped with a
flow battery could be charged by plugging it into an electric socket.
Enticingly, though, flow batteries might one day allow drivers to
refill the tank with energised electrolyte. The spent solution can be
recycled.
"Drivers could refill the tank with energised vanadium"
Whether or not we will one day top up our cars with vanadium, King
Island has proved that flow batteries already have a practical role to
play, keeping wind-generated electricity humming through the wires even
when the breeze drops. You might not even notice it's there - but
that's probably the biggest compliment you could pay it.
From issue 2586 of New Scientist magazine, 13 January 2007, page 39-41"
Yet another hat tip to one of my favourite blogs Peak Energy.
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