WHAT ARE BATTERY ENERGY STORAGE SYSTEMS (BESS)?
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The electricity grid is the largest machine humanity has ever made. It operates on a supply-side model – the grid operates on a supply/demand model that attempts to balance supply with end load to maintain stability. When there isn’t enough, the frequency and/or voltage drops or the supply browns or blacks out. These are bad moments that the grid works hard to avoid.
The electricity grid consists of a massive array of parts including:
What it does not traditionally have is any means to STORE electricity to match demand surges. This means that in a grid not equipped with BESS, any excess power generated must be dissipated in the grid. Generators must be kept spinning, ready to be connected the moment demand surges beyond the already connected supply – the “spinning reserve.” In a well-managed grid, the spinning reserve can be 15–30% of capacity to be ready for surges in demand. Battery energy storage systems are tools that address the supply/demand gap, storing excess power to deliver it when it is needed.
The BESS Principle
Battery energy storage systems (BESS) are becoming pivotal in the revolution happening in how we stabilize the grid, integrate renewables, and generally store and utilize electrical energy. BESS operates by storing electrical energy in rechargeable reserves, which can later be discharged to power local or grid-scale demand. Perhaps most importantly, these battery-held reserves are ready to switch into grid supply quickly, as demand or frequency/voltage instability trigger them automatically.
Cummins Inc.'s main target with BESS is behind-the-meter support and integration into in-front-of-the-meter grid operational support. This is relevant to both off-grid and on-grid applications, or local integration of renewables at a site, or power backup for unreliable grid connections.
While these storage systems require investment, they offer some enormous advantages that can represent overwhelming benefits. Chief among these is the speed of response. The battery reserves can usually be switched to grid-synchronized AC at astonishing speed – typically within a few cycles of the AC frequency (50–60?cycles per second or Hz). The highest price of electricity supplied to the grid is a fast-response supply, so the commercial value of the stored power can be 10?to 100?times the normal price.
The right battery technology offers long-term stable reserves – typical lithium-based battery technologies can hold high power levels for years, if necessary. Flow batteries can hold the power almost indefinitely.
How does BESS work?
The energy storage begins at the charger system. This takes the “excess” AC grid or DC solar power and conditions it to recharge the cells. This can be a fast charge or a slow charge, depending on the setup and the current available.BESS systems can enhance local microgrid efficiency markedly, by time-shifting lower-cost power and by smoothly integrating variable sources like solar, wind, etc, for close to full utilization of their output by time-shifting and buffering.
At the battery cell, most commonly one of the lithium types, energy is stored as electrochemical potential, which is supplied as DC potential difference – as opposed to the AC (alternating current) that the grid requires. The individual cells are the building blocks of battery packs, interconnected into packaged cell clusters called packs to build capacity, reliability, and enduring performance. Cells can be cylindrical, prismatic, or pouch construction.
Cylindrical types can allow better cooling circulation but offer lower packing density. Prismatic types stack close and optimize density. Pouch types can be used to conform to more irregular cavities and lacking the rigid enclosure tend to be lighter.
The battery packs are integrated into modules, which are supervised automatically for charge/discharge management, condition monitoring, and cooling. These modules balance performance, safety, and reliability at a granular and automated level, operating as an intermediary between individual cells and the high-level storage system control.
Multiple modules are aggregated and controlled within a containerized power storage solution. Typically termed energy storage units (ESUs) or battery energy storage systems (BESS), these house all necessary components, including:
It’s worth noting that battery charging is NOT free. Typically, the recharge process is around 70–75% efficient. This means for 100?units of excess power available from the grid, the battery stack will uptake 70–75% to be returned as usable power later. The rest is lost as heat.
A steady flow of advances in battery chemistry and fundamental technology is combined with system design and control algorithm innovations. This is done to boost the efficiency, reliability, and budget challenges of BESS, shaping the future of the electricity grid, worldwide.
What are the different types of BESS?
Operational and commercially available BESS setups come in various types, each with unique characteristics that are better suited to particular applications, environments, or operational differences. Although many technological details in the control and battery management systems (BMS) are different, at their core, BESS are classified by the nature of the cell/battery systems they employ. The different types of BESS are listed below:
Pros and cons of battery types
BESS systems can use a variety of battery types with relative advantages and disadvantages that are worth considering. For example, Lithium Iron Phosphate (LFP) batteries offer longer-term deep cycle durability than Lithium polymer (LiPo) and they are resistant to dendrite growth so they pose no fire risk. Their day-one capacity is a little lower than LiPo, but after a few hundred cycles they'll hold up better in capacity.
Nickel-manganese-cobalt (NMC) batteries, on the other hand, have a shorter deep cycle life expectancy than LFPs but they offer increased power density and considerably better cold weather performance, particularly in charging, which can reduce operating overheads. It's for these reasons that NMC and LFP batteries are increasingly prevalent in BESS applications.
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How lithium batteries work
Lithium batteries function through electrochemical reactions involving lithium ions moving between the battery's positive (anode) and negative (cathode) electrodes, with material motion blocked by a separator that allows ion transport in the electrolyte. Lithium batteries typically contain a cathode (the +ve) formed from a lithium compound such as LiCoO2, NCA, NMC, LiFePO4?and LTO. These remain typical in the newer, solid-state embodiments. An anode (the -ve) is usually made of carbon (graphite or graphene). Coatings applied to the electrodes aid as barriers to the formation of dendrites, metallic threads that form on the surface of the electrodes and can pierce the separator and cause short circuits. These coatings include polymers or ceramics, depending on the manufacturer. Between the electrodes there is typically:
Electrolytes : There are three classes of electrolytes used in lithium battery technology including:
Separators: Porous membrane structures that force a physical gap between the anode and cathode, while allowing lithium ions to pass through during charge and discharge. Separators are generally constructed from high-porosity polyethylene (PE), often containing a polypropylene (PP) element to improve robustness.
During charging, lithium ions are electrically “pushed” from the positive electrode to the negative electrode through the electrolyte and become adsorbed onto/into the anode carbon. Electrons flow from anode to cathode in the outer circuit during charging. The charge current pushes electrons from anode to cathode. During discharge, these ions move back to the positive electrode, releasing electrical energy, and current flows in the outside circuit from cathode to anode. This ionic movement is greatly assisted by the crystalline structures within the electrode materials and energized by the flow of electrons through the external circuit in both charge and discharge.
The voltage and capacity of lithium batteries vary with the electrode/electrolyte chemistry and internal design, with voltages ranging from 3.6?V to 3.7?V per cell. Capacity relates to the amount of electrolyte and the size and construction of the electrodes. The discharge rate depends on many details and the internal safety systems in the cell and the battery. These prevent overcharging, over- discharging, and thermal runaway.
Systems within a BESS
A battery energy storage system (BESS) is typically composed of the following:
Cell raw materials and construction
Lithium-ion batteries are made in three basic forms – rigid cylindrical, rigid prismatic (square or rectangular section), and nonrigid pouch cells. The raw materials for all of these typically include:
Other components
A functioning BESS container system or installation also consists of the following:
BESS applications
BESS installations fit a wide variety of applications across various sectors including:
Why BESS is crucial for on-demand energy storage systems?
BESS plays an increasingly crucial role in self-healing, anti-fragile electricity grids. They help integrate renewable energy sources, improving energy efficiency and enhancing voltage/frequency reliability and overall system resilience.
Careful application of BESS removes the operational limit that otherwise applies to electricity grids in accommodating intermittent (solar, wind, tidal, wave) power sources that are otherwise considered junk power when oversupply happens. The spinning reserve requirement limits most grids to 15–25% intermittent sources. Whenever BESS acts as a buffer, however, this spinning reserve can be the BESS system, with no wasted energy. This versatile scalability makes BESS indispensable in the transition towards a more sustainable and resilient energy future.
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