Subsea Energy Storage
20200347815 ยท 2020-11-05
Inventors
- Ernst Kristen Helgoy Kloster (Stavanger, NO)
- Stale Moen Tonnessen (Hundvag, NO)
- Argyrios Akritidis (Stavanger, NO)
Cpc classification
F05B2260/42
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02E60/16
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F05B2240/97
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H02K7/1823
ELECTRICITY
F16L1/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02E10/20
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F16L1/19
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03B13/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05B2220/60
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03B13/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F03B13/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03B13/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16L1/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A subsea energy storage installation comprises a pumped-storage system having pumping and hydropower generation components for, selectively, converting electricity into potential energy by expelling water from within a tank into the surrounding sea and for generating electricity from an incoming flow of water re-entering the tank under hydrostatic pressure. The tank comprises at least one elongate rigid pipeline that may he lowered to the seabed as part of a to viable unit or laid on the seabed as a pipe string launched from a surface vessel.
Claims
1. A subsea energy storage installation, comprising: at least one elongate rigid pipeline located at a seabed location to serve as a subsea tank; and a pumped-storage system having pumping and hydropower generation components for, selectively, converting electricity into potential energy by expelling water from within the tank into the surrounding sea and for generating electricity from an incoming flow of water re-entering the tank under hydrostatic pressure; wherein the at least one elongate rigid pipeline trims part of a towable unit that is configured to be lowered to the seabed location or comprises a pipe string configured to be laid at the seabed location.
2. The installation of claim 1, wherein the towable unit or the pipe string incorporates the components of the pumped-storage system.
3. The installation of claim 1, wherein the components of the pumped-storage system are located together at substantially the same location with respect to the length of the pipeline.
4. The installation of claim 1, wherein the components of the pumped-storage system are distributed at different locations with respect to the length of the pipeline.
5. The installation of claim 1, wherein the components of the pumped-storage system are located at one or both of opposed ends of the pipeline.
6. The installation of claim 5, wherein the components of the pumped-storage system are located in at least one towhead of a towable unit that includes the pipeline.
7. The installation of claim 5, wherein the components of the pumped-storage system are located in at least one terminal module of a pipe string that forms the pipeline.
8. The installation of any-preceding claim 1, wherein the components of the pumped-storage system are located at one or more intermediate locations between opposed ends of the pipeline.
9. The installation of claim 8, wherein the components of the pumped-storage system .are located in at least one in-line module of a pipe string that forms the pipeline.
10. The installation of claim 8, wherein the components of the pumped-storage system are offset from, and connected by a spool or jumper pipe to, at least one in-line module of a pipe string that forms the pipeline.
11. The installation of claim 1, wherein the components of the pumped-storage system comprise; at least one pump for expelling water from the pipeline; and at least one machine-driven generator for generating electricity from the incoming flow of water.
12. The installation of claim 11, wherein the machine is a turbine.
13. The installation of claim 11, wherein the pump and the machine communicate with the pipeline through a common manifold.
14. The installation of claim 11, wherein the pump and the machine communicate with the pipeline through a common bulkhead.
15. The installation of claim 11, wherein the pump and the machine communicate with the pipeline at different longitudinal locations.
16. The installation of claim 15, wherein the pump and the machine communicate with the pipeline through respective bulkheads.
17. The installation of claim 1, wherein the components of the pumped-storage system comprise at least one reversible machine coupled to a generator/motor, the machine being driven by the generator/motor to expel water from the tank and driving the generator/motor to generate electricity from the incoming flow of water.
18. The installation of chin 17, wherein the machine is a reversible turbine.
19. The installation of claim 1, wherein the towable unit comprises a bundle of parallel pipes.
20. The installation of 19, wherein the pipes of the bundle are joined to form a common volume.
21. The installation of claim 20, wherein the pipes of the bundle are joined at their ends by a manifold.
22. The installation of claim 21, wherein the manifold is defined by a bulkhead that is common to the pipes of the bundle.
23. The installation of claim 19, wherein the pipes of the bundle are dosed by at least one common bulkhead.
24. The installation of claim 19, wherein the pipes of the bundle are separate from each other and have respective pumped-storage systems.
25. The installation of claim 12, wherein the pipes of the bundle are contained within a carrier pipe.
26. The installation of claim 25, wherein the carrier pipe defines a sealed chamber that is resistant to hydrostatic pressure.
27. The installation of claim 19, wherein the pipes of the bundle surround a core pipe.
28. The installation of claim 26, wherein the core pipe and the pipes of the bundle are joined to form a common volume.
29. The installation of claim 1, wherein the pipeline is anchored to the seabed at intervals along its length.
30. The installation of claim 1, wherein the pipeline comprises a weight coating.
31. The installation of claim 1, wherein the pipeline is at least 500 m long.
32. The installation of claim 1, further including at least one tidal turbine supported by the installation.
33. The installation of claim 1, wherein the pumped-storage system has an inlet for receiving the incoming flow of water at substantially the same depth in the sea as the tank.
34. The installation of claim 1, wherein the pumped-storage system has an outlet for the expelled water at substantially the same depth in the sea as the tank.
35. The installation of claim 1, wherein the pipeline is a pipe-in-pipe structure comprising inner and outer pipes defining an annulus between them that is tilled with a weight filling.
36. The installation ta claim 1, wherein the pipeline comprises a bundle of parallel pipes embedded in a matrix or encapsulated by a shell.
37. A method of installing a subsea energy storage installation, the method comprising: towing to an offshore installation site a unit that comprises at least one elongate rigid pipeline and at least one support structure for pumping and hydropower generation components of a pumped-storage system; and lowering the unit to a seabed location at the installation site where the elongate rigid pipeline serves as a subsea tank.
38. The method of claim 37, comprising lowering the unit with the pumping and hydropower generation components mounted on the support structure.
39. The method of claim 37, comprising using the support structure as a towhead at an end of the pipeline when towing the unit.
40. The method of claim 37, preceded by fabricating and testing the unit at an inshore or onshore location.
41. The method of claim 40, comprising assembling a bundle of elongate rigid pipelines.
42. A method of installing a subsea energy storage installation, the method comprising: at an offshore installation site, launching a pipe string overboared from an installation vessel at the surface to a seabed location to serve as a subsea tank and incorporating one or more modules into the pipe string at the surface, the or each module being a support structure for at least one pumping or hydropower generation component of a pumped-storage system.
43. The method of claim 42, comprising launching the or each module with pumping or hydropower generation components mounted thereon.
44. The method of claim 42, comprising incorporating at least one module at an end of the pipe string.
45. The method of claim 42, comprising incorporating at least one module at an intermediate position between opposed ends of the pipe string.
46. The method of claim 37, comprising anchoring the installation at the seabed location.
47. The method of claim 37, comprising connecting a subsea power cable to at least one pumping or hydropower generation component.
48. The method of claim 47, comprising connecting the subsea power cable when the or each component is at the seabed location.
49. The method of claim 42, comprising anchoring the installation at the seabed location.
50. The method of claim 42, comprising connecting a subsea power cable to at least one pumping or hydropower generation component.
51. The method of claim 50, comprising connecting the subsea power cable when the or each component is at the seabed location.
Description
[0059] In order that the invention may be more readily understood, reference will now be made, by way of example, to the accompanying drawings in which:
[0060]
[0061]
[0062]
[0063]
[0064]
[0065]
[0066]
[0067]
[0068]
[0069]
[0070]
[0071]
[0072]
[0073] Referring firstly to
[0074] Pipes of the bundle 12 serve as one or more energy storage tanks that can be of any reasonable length, and therefore of any internal capacity that may reasonably be required. Such a unit 10 has proven resistance to hydrostatic pressure and can be fabricated and installed in a single operation using well-known and reliable methods.
[0075] As is well known in the art and as will be shown in later drawings, pipes of the bundle 12 may be surrounded by an external carrier pipe. A carrier pipe and/or the pipes within any carrier pipe may be configured to resist the hydrostatic pressure at the operational depth. Alternatively, exposed pressure-resistant pipes of the bundle 12 may be clustered around a central core pipe or spine. A central core pipe may itself be pressure-resistant to add energy-storage capacity to the bundle 12 or it may remain flooded to act solely as a structural element.
[0076] The various pipes of the bundle 12 are typically of steel but any of them could be largely of polymers or of composite materials. Additional layers or components can be added to the pipes, such as an internal liner or an outer coating. Such additional layers or components may comprise polymer, metal or composite materials. Also, pipes can be single-walled or of double-walled pipe-in-pipe (PiP) construction.
[0077] Other elongate elements such as auxiliary pipes and cables may be included in the bundle 12, extending in parallel with the other pipes of the bundle 12 in well-known fashion to carry fluids, power and data signals between the towheads 14, 16. As is conventional, longitudinally-distributed transverse spacers may hold the various pipes and other elongate elements of the bundle 12 relative to each other.
[0078] A typical pipeline bundle 12 is a few kilometres in length, for example about 2 km long. Its maximum length may be constrained by the availability of land at onshore fabrication facilities such as spoolbases or yards, However, a pipeline bundle 12 can be made longer by fabricating it from multiple bundle sections attached end-to-end. In principle, therefore, a bundle 12 assembled from two or more such bundle sections could be of any reasonable length.
[0079] Thus, the unit 10 is shown in
[0080] Either or both of the towheads 14, 16 contain turbine and pump arrangements, examples of which will be described with reference to later drawings. In this way, after the unit 10 has been installed, water can be pumped from within the pipes of the bundle 12 into the surrounding sea, to be readmitted through the or each turbine under hydrostatic pressure to drive a generator that produces electricity on demand.
[0081] Integrating the bundle 12 and the towheads 14, 16 to form the towable unit 10 allows the unit 10 to be prefabricated, assembled and tested onshore or in sheltered water before it is towed offshore for installation. Conveniently, therefore, multiple elongate elements can be towed together to an installation site as a single integral unit and installed on the seabed simultaneously in one operation. Reducing the number of subsea-connected interfaces simplifies the installation process and improves the reliability of the system, as compared with connecting units at a subsea location and performing tests there instead.
[0082] The towheads 14, 16 incorporate buoyancy, or provide for buoyancy to be attached, to offset their weight during towing. For example, buoyancy may be added directly to the towheads 14, 16 by attaching buoys or buoyancy modules to them.
[0083] The bundle 12 may also contribute buoyancy to the unit 10 by virtue of air or other gas contained within a sealed carrier pipe. However, as noted above, an external carrier pipe is optional; pipes of the bundle 12 may instead be clustered around a central core pipe or spine. Additional external buoyancy may also be provided on, or attached to, a carrier pipe, a core pipe or other pipes of the bundle 12.
[0084] Various towing methods may be used to transport the unit 10 to an offshore installation site. In particular, the unit 10 may be towed at various depths in the water. The choice of towing depth involves a trade-off between various factors. For example, the unit 10 may be surface-towed at or near to the surface 18, which is easiest to manage. However, surface water dynamics may generate fatigue in the pipeline bundle 12, which is the limiting factor that determines the allowable tow distance. Conversely, towing near the seabed 20 protects the bundle 12 from the influence of surface water dynamics and limits risks during subsequent lowering to the seabed 20 at the installation site. However, controlling the unit 10 is more challenging at depth and is only feasible if the contours of the seabed 20 permit.
[0085]
[0086] Mid-water towing is a good compromise that ensures low-stress installation without the use of large crane vessels that depend on low sea states. This makes installation less weather-sensitive and reduces the cost of installation vessels significantly. However, mid-water towing requires precise management of buoyancy.
[0087] In all towing methods, the unit 10 is held in tension by chains or lines 22 extending fore and aft from the respective towheads 14, 16 to respective installation vessels such as tugs 24. The bundle 12 acts in tension between the towheads 14, 16 during towing, with tensile loads being borne principally by a carrier pipe or core pipe of the bundle 12.
[0088] The speeds of, and spacing between, the tugs 24 are adjusted to keep the unit 10 at the required depth having regard to the effect of drag forces and tension in the chains 22. Optionally, a third patrol/survey vessel 26 ahead of the leading tug 24 surveys the route and monitors the towing operation.
[0089] In the CDTM, the bundle 12 is made neutrally or slightly negatively buoyant at the required depth by the addition of buoyancy and/or ballast chains spaced along its length. In the example shown, ballast chains 28 spaced along the bundle 12 add weight that offsets the buoyancy of the bundle 12. As a result of the added ballast weight, the bundle 12 hangs between the towheads 14, 16 as a catenary.
[0090] When the unit 10 reaches an installation site, the unit 10 is lowered toward the seabed 20 while the lines 22 are paid out from the tugs 24. The unit 10 can be lowered to the seabed 20 by removing external buoyancy from the unit 10 or by adding ballast to the unit 10. The unit 10 then settles on the seabed 20 as shown in
[0091]
[0092]
[0093] Turning next to
[0094]
[0095] Conveniently, as shown in
[0096] The modules 46 are exemplified here by a terminal or end module 46A welded to an end of the pipeline 42 and an optional in-line module 46B welded between neighbouring sections of the pipeline 42 disposed end-to-end. Another terminal or end module 46A will be welded in due course to the other end of the pipeline 42, to close and seal that end of the pipeline 42 on completion.
[0097] Any or all of the modules 46 comprises fluid-handling equipment such as valves, pumps and/or turbines in fluid communication with the pipeline 42 and/or ancillary equipment such as generators and motors. That equipment is supported mechanically by a structural frame. As is conventional, the modules 46 could have mudmat foundations 48 as shown but other foundations such as the aforementioned piles of the first embodiment could be used instead.
[0098] The pipeline 42 may be of single-walled construction or could instead be of twin-walled pipe-in-pipe (PiP) construction. Again, the pipeline 42 may be of steel, polymer or composite material and may comprise additional layers or components such as an internal liner or an outer coating. For example, some installation techniques such as S-lay will allow the pipeline 42 to have an outer weight coating of concrete to stabilise it on the seabed 20.
[0099] In reel-lay operations, a pipeline 42 is initially spooled onto and stored on a reel on an installation vessel 44, which visits a coastal spoolbase at which the pipeline is fabricated. During installation offshore, the pipeline 42 is unspooled from the reel and then overboarded into the sea to hang from the vessel as a catenary. However, for the purposes of the invention, S-lay and J-lay methods may be preferred for installing a pipeline 42 of suitably large diameter.
[0100] In S-lay operations, the pipeline 42 is assembled from pipe joints along a horizontal firing line on an installation vessel 44 offshore. As it is assembled, the pipeline 42 is launched into the sea over a laying ramp or stinger to hang from the vessel 44 as a catenary. The pipeline 42 assumes an S-shape comprising an overbend over the stinger and an opposed sagbend approaching the seabed 20.
[0101] Conversely, in J-lay operations as shown in
[0102] Pipe joints are lifted into the tower 50 to be welded to the top of a suspended pipe string 52. The tower 50 is shown here as being vertical for simplicity but in practice it could be pivoted or gimballed to depart from the vertical. Welding operations are performed at a welding station 54 near the base of the tower 50.
[0103] A fixed lower bushing 56 beneath the welding station 54 and a travelling upper bushing or clamp 58 on the tower 50 support the pipe string 52 in alternation. The lower bushing 56 and the travelling clamp 58 cooperate in a hand-over-hand arrangement to lower the pipe string 52 as successive pipe joints are added.
[0104] After the pipeline 42 has been installed, a power cable 34 extends from the accessories 46, for example to connect them to an electrical power grid via a control system as in the first embodiment. Similarly, each accessory 46 provides a convenient foundation or support for a respective tidal turbine 40, which again is an optional feature to generate supplemental electricity from subsea currents. Again, anchors such as staples or pins could be spaced along the pipeline 42 to fix the pipeline 42 to the seabed 20, but such anchors are not shown in this drawing.
[0105]
[0106]
[0107] In each case, the bundle 12 comprises a group of pipes 60 extending in parallel between bulkheads 62 that close and seal respective ends of each pipe 60. The pipes 60 are held together by transverse spacers 64 spaced along the length of the bundle 12. Collectively, the pipes 60 define an energy storage volume from which water can be pumped out to charge the unit 10 and that can be flooded to generate electricity from the inrushing flow of water.
[0108] The bulkheads 62 are shared between the pipes 60 in this example but there could instead be individual bulkheads for each pipe 60. Here, at least one of the common or shared bulkheads 62 comprises a manifold chamber 66 that connects the pipes 60 to each other to form a common energy storage volume.
[0109] The bundles 12 in
[0110]
[0111] The turbine 72 drives a generator 78 that is connected to a power cable 34 for onward transmission of electrical power when the turbine 72 spins in a flow of inrushing water. The turbine 72 and the generator 78 are coaxial and may, as shown, turn together about an axis that is substantially parallel to the longitudinal direction of the bundle 12.
[0112] A valve 80, exemplified here as a ball valve, is shown here downstream of the turbine 72 between the bulkhead 62 and the turbine 72 so as to close the outlet 76. The valve 80 could instead be upstream of the turbine 72 so as to close the inlet 74. When the valve 80 is closed, the unit 10 is in a stand-by mode ready to be charged with energy by emptying the pipes 60 against hydrostatic pressure or to be discharged by flooding the pipes 60 under hydrostatic pressure. However, the valve 80 is shown here as being open to allow water to flow through the turbine 72 when the unit 10 is being charged or discharged.
[0113] In
[0114] In
[0115] A pump valve 86, also exemplified here as a ball valve, is shown here upstream of the pump 82 between the bulkhead 62 and the pump 82 to close an inlet 88 of the pump 82 adjacent to the bulkhead 62. The pump valve 86 could instead be downstream of the pump 82 so as to close an outlet 90 of the pump 82 remote from the bulkhead 62.
[0116]
[0117]
[0118] Another module 46 could be at the other end of the pipeline 42 shown in
[0119] In these examples, the pipe string 52 of the pipeline 42 defines an energy storage volume from which water can be pumped out when charging with energy and flooded to generate electricity from the inrushing flow of water. The pipe string 52 may be of single-walled construction or of twin-walled pipe-in-pipe (PiP) construction,
[0120] To illustrate some variants, the pipe string 52 in
[0121] In
[0122] In
[0123] Also, like
[0124] Turning next to
[0125] In these examples, the towheads 14, 16 both contain pumping and generating equipment in a mirrored arrangement. As noted above, such an arrangement could be applied to pipes 60 connected by manifold chambers 66 like those in
[0126] In
[0127] In
[0128] It is preferred, but not essential, that pumping and/or generating equipment is located in a structure such as a towhead 14, 16 or an accessory module 46 at an end of a pipeline 42 or bundle 12. In principle, however, a pipeline 42 or bundle 12 used in a power plant of the invention could have its ends closed by passive structures such as bulkheads 62. In that case, pumping and/or generating equipment may be located at, or connected to, an in-line or intermediate location part-way along the length of the pipeline 42 or bundle 12.
[0129] To illustrate this possibility,
[0130] In each case, an in-line module in the form of a tee 94 is incorporated between successive lengths of the pipe string 52. The tee 94 has a side port 96 that communicates between the outlet 76 of a turbine 72 and the interior of the pipeline 42.
[0131] As in preceding embodiments, a valve 80 is positioned downstream of the turbine 72 but it could instead be positioned upstream of the turbine to close an inlet 74 of the turbine 72.
[0132]
[0133] As in the preceding embodiments, the turbine 72 and the generator 78 are coaxial but in these examples they turn together about an axis that is transverse to, in this case substantially orthogonal to, the longitudinal direction of the pipeline 42.
[0134] In the examples shown in
[0135]
[0136]
[0137] The matrix 114 extends along or encapsulates substantially the entire length of the pipe bundle 110 to afford resistance to differential pressure. Thus, as with the concrete-reinforced PiP structure 102 of
[0138] The pipe bundle 110 is typically limited to around 200m in length. However, the combined storage capacity of the bundled pipes 112 compensates for this limitation. In this respect, the pipes 112 may be interconnected for fluid communication between them.
[0139] Many other variations are possible without departing from the inventive concept. For example, one or more pumping and power-generation components could be lowered subsequently to pre-installed support structures incorporated in towheads or modules.
[0140] The pipeline bundle of the first embodiment could be replaced by a single pipe, potentially of twin-walled pipe-in-pipe (PiP) construction, extending between the towheads to define a subsea energy storage tank.
[0141] Whilst turbines are preferred to convert kinetic energy from inrushing water into rotary motion to drive generators, other machines could be used for that purpose instead.
[0142] Examples of such machines may comprise screws or pistons.