Refractory enclosures for high density energy storage systems
10767364 ยท 2020-09-08
Inventors
Cpc classification
E04H9/10
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E04B1/945
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
A62C3/06
HUMAN NECESSITIES
E04B1/947
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E06B5/162
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
International classification
Abstract
The present is a containment enclosure made from refractory material. The enclosure contains a plurality of panels and a plurality of columns made from refractory material. The enclosure has an interior portion and an exterior portion, and wherein the enclosure contains the effects of extreme fire as well as contains the effects of explosions.
Claims
1. A utility-sized containment enclosure for containing the effects of extreme fires and explosions produced by a high density energy storage system (HDESS) connected to an electric utility, the enclosure comprising: a. a plurality of panels made from refractory material, wherein the refractory material comprises a binder and a refractory matrix material, and b. a plurality of columns made from refractory material, wherein the refractory material comprises a binder and a refractory matrix material; wherein the utility-sized enclosure comprises an interior portion and an exterior portion, wherein the utility-sized containment enclosure comprises one or more means to release internal pressure from within the utility-sized containment enclosure, wherein the means to release internal pressure is selected from the group comprising pressure relief valves, refractory materials, and mechanical joints, and wherein the utility-sized containment enclosure contains the effects of extreme fires and explosions within the utility-sized containment enclosure for a duration of at least four hours.
2. The utility-sized containment enclosure of claim 1, wherein the plurality of panels comprises 6 or more panels.
3. The utility-sized containment enclosure of claim 1, wherein the plurality of refractory columns comprises 4 or more columns.
4. The utility-sized containment enclosure of claim 1, wherein the bulk energy rating of the HDESS is between 40 megawatt-hours to 35 gigawatt-hours.
5. The utility-sized containment enclosure of claim 4, wherein the HDESS source is selected from the group comprising one or more battery banks, hydrogen fueled arrays, supercapacitor set, charging stations, and liquefied natural gas tanks.
6. The utility-sized containment enclosure of claim 5, wherein the battery bank is a metal battery bank.
7. The utility-sized containment enclosure of claim 6, wherein the metal is selected from the group comprising zinc, lead, and lithium.
8. The utility-sized containment enclosure of claim 1, wherein the exterior portion of the utility-sized containment enclosure is rectangular.
9. The utility-sized containment enclosure of claim 1, wherein the exterior portion of the utility-sized containment enclosure is completely closed to the environment.
10. The utility-sized containment enclosure of claim 1, wherein the exterior portion of the utility-sized containment enclosure is partially open to the environment.
11. The utility-sized containment enclosure of claim 1, wherein the interior of the utility-sized containment enclosure further comprises one or more panels made from refractory material.
12. The utility-sized containment enclosure of claim 1, wherein the exterior of the utility-sized containment enclosure further comprises a mechanical structural reinforcement.
13. The utility-sized containment enclosure of claim 12, wherein the mechanical reinforcement comprises a non-refractory mechanical structural reinforcement.
14. The utility-sized containment enclosure of claim 13, wherein the non-refractory mechanical structural reinforcement provides aesthetic features to the enclosure.
15. The utility-sized containment enclosure of claim 13, wherein the non-refractory mechanical structural reinforcement is completely closed to the environment.
16. The utility-sized containment enclosure of claim 13, wherein the non-refractory mechanical structural reinforcement is connected to the refractory material by one or more thermally isolating mechanical connectors.
17. The utility-sized containment enclosure of claim 13, wherein the non-refractory mechanical structural reinforcement is steel.
18. The utility-sized containment enclosure of claim 1, wherein the refractory materials further comprise reinforcement materials.
19. The utility-sized containment enclosure of claim 18, wherein the reinforcement materials are resistant to penetration from ballistics.
20. The utility-sized containment enclosure of claim 18, wherein the reinforcement materials mitigate sound.
Description
DRAWINGS
(1) These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with regard to the following description, appended claims, and accompanying drawings.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(7) As used herein, the following terms and variations thereof have the meanings given below, unless a different meaning is clearly intended by the context in which such term is used.
(8) The terms a, an, and the and similar referents used herein are to be construed to cover both the singular and the plural unless their usage in context indicates otherwise.
(9) As used herein, the term comprise and variations of the term, such as comprising and comprises, are not intended to exclude other additives, components, integers or steps.
(10) As used herein, the term extreme fire refers to a high heat flux fire with temperatures exceeding 900 degrees Celsius, such as, for example, an oil fire or a lithium ion battery bank fire.
(11) The term combustion refers to rapid chemical reactions releasing heat and light energy.
(12) The term refractory material as used herein refers to material containing a refractory composition. Refractory compositions are known, such as in U.S. Pat. No. 8,118,925, which describes a concrete refractory material comprising cement, a binder such as calcium silicate, calcium aluminate, or aluminum silicate, water, and a matrix material. The matrix material comprises both stainless steel fibers and organic fibers. The refractory composition can also contain a reinforcing material.
(13) As used herein, standard concrete refers to material containing common aggregates, a Portland cement binder, and water.
(14) Energy storage systems must have a high energy density to be economically and technically feasible. Bulk energy storage currently has an energy density that tends to approach that of liquid fuels. The trend is toward even higher densities and larger magnitude storage capacities. The inherently hazardous characteristics of large energy storage facilities, together with the extremely high energy release rates during a failure makes safety a top concern. Effective protection against extreme fire and accompanying explosions is essential in the safe use of high density energy storage.
(15) These extreme fires frequently can burn for many hours and generate intensive heat flux, and cannot be extinguished, and hence require special fire containment methods. For example, a utility scale lithium ion battery bank can release as much energy as a gasoline tank of about the same weight.
(16) To be able to confine extreme fires and explosions to their origin requires materials that are resistant to high heat fluxes and high temperatures and can withstand long fire durations. While the most common industrial construction materials, such as concrete and steel, are nonflammable or noncombustible, these materials are not resistant to the typical fire conditions present in an extreme fire within an HDESS facility. In fact, steel and standard concrete lose about 50% of their room temperature strength at about half the working temperature of an extreme fire typical of an oil fire or a lithium ion battery bank fire.
(17) Steel usually regains most of its strength once it cools back to room temperature, but steel structural components, such as I-beams, will deform significantly in an extreme fire. They will not regain their original shapes and will separate from the concrete matrix, thus collapsing the structure. Furthermore, standard concrete cannot be used in an extreme fire because standard concrete suffers an irreversible chemical change at relatively low fire temperatures and reverts back to its basic ingredients: sand and limestone.
(18) However, refractory concrete can withstand extreme fires. Refractory concrete temporarily loses only about 10% of its room temperature strength at the maximum fire temperatures ranging from about 900 to 1,200 degrees Celsius. In fact, the thermal properties of refractories can be enhanced by firing the materials at high temperatures. Refractory concrete is a superior material that can meet the thermal and structural requirements for enclosures designed to contain the extreme fires associated with HDESS facilities.
(19) Despite its excellent thermal and structural properties, it was only until the last decade that refractory concrete material has been used in structural applications. The first commercial use of refractory concrete material was in the form of large monolithic components to construct fire walls for the purpose of containing oil fires in power substations (U.S. Pat. Nos. 8,118,925, and 8,221,540).
(20) As described above, the refractory material used in the present invention is made up of a composition comprising cement, a binder, water, and a matrix material which has both stainless steel fibers and organic fibers. The cement used can be any suitable cement, such as Portland cement. The binder can be any suitable binder, such as calcium silicate, calcium aluminate, or aluminum silicate. The refractory composition can also contain a reinforcing material to increase point of impact strength, ballistic resistance, as well as mitigate sound. The reinforcing material can be, for example, an organic material such as, aromatic polyamide (sold by DuPont under the trademark Kevlar), carbon, composites, or an inorganic material such as, for example, stainless steel, graphene, or special high temperature glass.
(21) The refractory materials can be cast into large panels suitable for use in constructing the particular enclosure to specified measurements. For example, refractory panels used in the present invention are typically between about 5 feet and about 10 feet in length, between about 2 feet and about 5 feet in width and between about 1 inch and about 3 inches in thickness. Such refractory fire containment panels typically weigh between about 400 pounds and about 800 pounds.
(22) The cost of the materials used in refractory concrete make enclosures made from refractory materials more expensive than traditional construction materials on a per pound basis. However, refractory concrete might be the only technical solution in certain uses, as is the case for HDESS facilities. In such applications, practical and economic designs can be achieved by judiciously combining refractory concrete with conventional materials.
(23) Previously, refractory materials have been used to protect items such as equipment from high temperatures from external sources. However, refractory materials have not been previously used to enclose or contain high temperature fires or explosions, as in the present invention.
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(25) Other materials such as coatings and reinforcements can be applied to the refractory panels to increase their blast strength, sound absorption, and ballistic resistance as needed. The enclosures 10 can be closed completely or partially open.
(26) A plurality of columns 16 support the vertical refractory panel walls 11, which slide into the column grooves in the case of a tongue and groove assembly. The number of columns 16 is variable depending on the shape of the enclosure 10 and the size of the walls 11 used. The walls 11 are attached to the columns 16. The attachments can be, for example, specially designed hardware embedded into the columns and covered with a coating of refractory mortar such that the hardware is shielded against high temperatures. The coating of refractory mortar should be a minimum of three inches thick. It is contemplated that additional intermediate columns 16 might be needed for larger enclosures 10.
(27) Blast and fire-resistant doors 18 are shown in
(28) The auxiliary buildings for control, HVAC, telecommunications, personnel, etc. would be located outside the enclosure 10. The enclosure 10 keeps these buildings isolated and safe from extreme fire or explosion caused by the contents inside the enclosure 10.
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(30) It is also contemplated that the refractory material used in the enclosure 10 could be engineered to direct blast stresses to the nearest relief points, such as the pressure relief valves 20 or mechanical joints as well as to absorb energy in the refractory material's matrix. This could be done using embedded oriented fibers, a sacrificial porous coating (as done for acoustic energy absorption), and/or flexible ingredients in the mix.
(31) The cost of an enclosure 10 made from refractory material can be substantially reduced by supplementing the load bearing columns 16 containing refractory material with one or more lower cost standard concrete columns 28 and beams 29 that share the mechanical load of the enclosure 10, as shown in
(32) Only standard concrete columns 28 and beams 29 are shown in
(33) A preferred embodiment of the present invention is shown in
(34) Additional variations could be introduced by the use of other structurally acceptable materials, as the refractory enclosure provides the primary thermal and blast protection. For example, ornamental concrete or wood could be used to present an aesthetically pleasing faade. It is also contemplated that the enclosures of the invention can be quickly installed or disassembled and transported for reuse at other sites. Furthermore, the enclosures of the invention can be scaled up or down as energy storage needs increase or decrease.
(35) Although the present invention has been described in considerable detail with reference to certain preferred embodiments, other embodiments are possible. The steps disclosed for the present methods, for example, are not intended to be limiting nor are they intended to indicate that each step is necessarily essential to the method, but instead are exemplary steps only. Therefore, the scope of the appended claims should not be limited to the description of preferred embodiments contained in this disclosure. All references cited herein are incorporated by reference in their entirety.