-- EXPANDING HORIZONS FOR ENERGY STORAGE SYSTEMS
EV&AE(EV batts, HEVS, FCEVs - EPRI Volume 2 Number 1 May 1999)
Like the rapidly advancing technologies that help drive the electric transportation industry, EPRI's science and technology research on energy storage systems is evolving to meet the needs of customers and a changing industry. The Energy Storage Systems target is expanding its original focus on battery research and development into three major areas.
While battery research remains an important staple, the target is launching new projects to examine potential battery applications beyond the transportation market - as a strategy for expanding the battery market. Meanwhile, technology advancements in hybrid and fuel cell energy systems are driving demand for their commercialization. EPRI will take an active role in R&D collaborations to evaluate the benefits and identify appropriate applications for these energy systems in transportation markets and beyond.
EXPANDING BATTERY MARKETS Like the football player who does an end-run around the opponents to score, EPRI is making a conscious decision to explore other applications that could use batteries currently being developed for the EV market, with the goal of increasing production and bringing down prices.
"The market for batteries just for EVs is going to stay small for some time, but the market for batteries for other applications is growing," says EPRI's Bob Swaroop, manager, Energy Storage Systems. Eventually, Swaroop reasons, the technology that we know works well in EVs today but is too expensive to expect to see a large market demand for soon, will be mass-produced for a wide range of other end uses. Once those advanced batteries reach mass-production levels, their prices will drop, allowing EVs to be more affordable.
There is a precedent for EPRI to support work that develops new advanced battery applications, Swaroop notes. Although the Japanese developed lithium-ion batteries for various uses including EVs, cost created a barrier for EV applications due to their energy storage capacity needs. In response, developers found other applications requiring high energy density in smaller capacities, such as consumer electronics, to build the market. Likewise, nickel-metal hydride batteries being developed for the EV market have first found their way into computers and consumer electronics used throughout the world. Swaroop adds that even though lithium-polymer batteries are still under development, marketers are broadening their horizons to consider potential uses including utility load management applications, buses, and smaller on- and off-road vehicles such as neighborhood electric vehicles.
EPRI's Energy Storage Systems target will continue to develop batteries with the United States Advanced Battery Consortium (USABC) with an eye for new markets. EPRI and USABC are launching a new project to evaluate whether batteries developed initially to power EVs also could be useful in distributed storage or stationary applications.
The distributed storage concept is familiar to commercial utility customers, whose monthly bills typically include both energy and peak demand components. Commercial customers may be able to save substantially on their monthly costs by reducing the peak power they demand from their utility company. In theory, they can accomplish this by drawing their needed extra power (and its associated energy) from batteries stored on-site instead of depending on the utility to supply it.
EPRI is the prime contractor on this USABC project. The Energy Storage Systems target, working with Southern California Edison and Georgia Tech's National Electric Energy Testing Research and Applications Center (NEETRAC), will test high-energy batteries for durability, performance and lifecycle in stationary applications.
Bruce Rauhe, principal research engineer with Southern Company Services, and Naum Pinsky, manager of EV battery testing and evaluation, SCE, are co-managing this program. It follows on previous USABC research involving used nickel-metal hybrid batteries that no longer provided enough capacity to meet the power needs of an EV but were suitable and serviceable for other applications. The earlier research provided impressive results, Pinsky says.
"We had to identify places where we could use these used batteries, which are typically quite large - 100 Ahr - and we found significant potential in stationary applications," Pinsky explains.
In this follow-on project with new batteries, the battery components and critical materials are the same - even if the batteries are not EV batteries.
"The point is, we need to improve performance and reduce cost," Pinsky adds, "and the way to do that is to find more uses for these batteries - in transportation and stationary applications."
Rauhe explains that the project will test nickel-metal hydride and lithium-polymer batteries in laboratory and field settings. The project will start with load management strategies such as load leveling and peak shaving.
The value of the project, explains Rauhe, is that it provides a tool to address customer and utility issues with power quality and cost of electricity. Ninety-nine percent of the time, the customer doesn't need full power, but the utility must supply the infrastructure and be prepared to deliver full (peak) power any time it is needed.
"It's like building the church for Easter and Christmas," Rauhe muses.
The utility or a third party can offer a battery load management system to modify the customer's apparent power use, Rauhe explains. "From the customer's perspective, there's no change in operation - in fact the process is transparent - but it can reduce the customer's monthly bills." From a utility perspective, Rauhe continues, it can reduce the need to install or upgrade infrastructure to meet peak demand, enabling the utility to better manage loads and impacts on the grid.
On the surface, examining stationary applications for high-power, high-energy batteries may seem like a departure for the Energy Storage Systems target, yet this expanded focus represents the long-term approach guiding the target and the Transportation Area's vision for future markets.
HYBRID ENERGY STORAGE SYSTEMS EVALUATION Hybrid energy storage systems show promise for transportation applications. Hybrids appear poised to meet regulatory requirements for lower emissions and to deliver power and performance to meet consumer demand. Perhaps the greatest benefit of hybrids - at least from a cost standpoint - is that, while they still use high-energy batteries, they require much less battery storage capacity than the 20- 30 kWh necessary for pure EVs. The amount could vary from 2-3 kWh to 10-15 kWh, depending on whether the system design is fuel-only or grid-connected.
While hybrids appear to be an excellent technology for transportation, there remain many unknowns about these developing systems. In response, EPRI is launching an extensive study of existing hybrid technologies and characteristics. Transportation Area Manager Eric Heim, who is managing this project, says EPRI plans to conduct the first impartial assessment of the leading attributes of hybrids.
"We want to determine which hybrid options make the most sense, and what's reasonable in the foreseeable future from a technology standpoint." This effort will compare the characteristics of hybrids with various drive train options such as gasoline, CNG and diesel, and evaluate their respective emissions, energy efficiencies, lifecycle costs and consumer acceptance.
FUEL CELLS: ENERGY STORAGE SYSTEMS OF TOMORROW? The new direction for the Energy Storage Systems target also will explore fuel cell energy systems in conjunction with EPRI's existing fuel cell program for stationary applications. The Transportation Area will bring automakers into the fold to collaborate on a variety of projects that are currently in development. While the transportation and stationary applications for fuel cells are clearly quite different, Swaroop expects that EPRI will be involved in bench- and preliminary on-road test- ing of early prototype fuel cell and hybrid vehicles by the Year 2000.
Tom Jones, principal engineer in American Electric Power's Technology Development Division and a longtime participant in the Energy Storage Systems target, explains that there is an important synergy between fuel cells for both stationary and transportation applications. Fuel cells likely will be commercialized first in stationary applications, but he adds that incorporating fuel cells into transportation technologies will bring their prices down due to volume in the transportation market. In addition, a fuel cell on board a vehicle might be connected to the grid to supply energy when the vehicle is not in use, which, Jones points out, is about 95 % of the time.
"If, in the long haul, fuel cells used in vehicles also provided energy to the grid, it would have a significant impact on the way we do business," Jones explains. When considered solely for a single application, fuel cells may have difficulty competing with present technologies. But taken as a potential energy source for dual applications, capital investment and overall costs are reduced significantly, Jones adds.
Jones cautions that fuel cells for transportation may not be the optimal design for stationary use, and further research is necessary to consider potential trade-offs. Still, he recalls a presentation in which EPRI's Steve Gehl, director of Strategic Technology, noted that over the next 50 years the world may need an estimated 10,000 GW of new energy supply. According to Gehl, the auto industry currently manufactures this amount of energy every five years in the form of internal combustion engines. "What if?" asks Jones rhetorically.
EPRI plays an important role in developing and investing in technologies for the long term, Jones says. "This is where EPRI has value and can benefit our industry as a whole." In the newly deregulated competitive market, energy providers are less likely to invest in technologies that don't provide an immediate payback because they are seen as risky. "But since EPRI can collaborate with utilities, as an industry, to pursue these long-haul technologies, it minimizes the risk for us all."
[To order this report, FS-112939, contact EPRI Customer Service, 800-313-3774, ASKEPRI@epri.com ]
EPRI. POWERING PROGRESS Bob Swaroop, Project Manager, Transportation Area Phone: 650.855.1097, Fax: 650.855.2737, e-mail: rswaroop@epri.com
Staff Perspectives Editor: J Knapp Communications 530.756.3611, e-mail: jknapp@mother.com
EPRI, 3412 Hillview Avenue, Palo Alto, California 94304 P.O. Box 10412, Palo Alto, California 94303 800.313.3774 or 650.855.2000 www.epri.com c (1999) Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI), Inc. -- |