System for storage and production of electrical energy in a marine environment
10259543 ยท 2019-04-16
Inventors
Cpc classification
B63B2035/4466
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F03G3/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05B2260/42
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03B13/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05B2240/97
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B63B35/44
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
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
F03B13/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
B63B35/44
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F03B13/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03B13/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
The invention relates to a system for the storage and production of electrical energy in a marine environment, wherein at least one ballast is lowered from a high position to a low position and then raised, by means of at least one cable (115) connected to a barge or platform (110). The barge comprises a generator/motor (113) actuated by the cable or actuating same. The ballasts (107, 108) are secured to a partially floating element (106) which is itself connected, by a retaining cable (105), to an element (101) floating on the surface and provided with means for varying the length of said retaining cable (105), the partially floating element (106) comprising a volume of gas compressible according to the surrounding pressure.
Claims
1. An electrical energy storage and production system for use in a marine environment, wherein at least one ballast is lowered and raised between a high position and a low position by at least one cable connected to a surface-floating element, the system comprising a generator configured to actuate said at least one cable or be actuated by said at least one cable, wherein said at least one ballast is stabilized in the high position at a specified depth when secured together with a partially floating element at said depth, said partially floating element being connected through a retaining cable to a secondary surface-floating element equipped with means to change a length of said retaining cable, whereby the partially floating element includes a volume of compressible gas according to an environmental pressure.
2. The system according to the claim 1, where the gas volume is delineated by a flexible wrap.
3. The system according to claim 1, comprising several partially floating elements with secondary surface-floating elements.
4. The system according to claim 1, wherein the surface-floating element is a barge with a block and tackle.
5. The system according to claim 4, comprising multiple blocks and tackles.
6. The system according to claim 3, wherein the several partially floating elements are secured with each other.
7. The system according to claim 3, wherein the surface-floating elements are secured with each other.
8. The system according to claim 1, wherein the retaining cable can be unrolled from about 5 meters to about 150 meters.
9. The system according to claim 1, wherein the at least one ballast can be detached from and attached to the partially floating element by hooking-unhooking.
10. The system according to claim 9, wherein the hooking-unhooking is accomplished via an independent submarine.
11. The system according to claim 1, comprising multiple partially floating elements each associated with a retaining cable, and wherein the retaining cables are unrolled at different lengths.
12. The system according to claim 1, comprising at least one ballast having a water intake and outtake hole.
13. The system according to claim 12, wherein the at least one ballast having the water intake and outtake hole includes at least one pressured gas intake and/or outtake hose.
14. The system according to claim 12, wherein the at least one ballast having the water intake and outtake hole includes a bladder connected to one or more pressured gas hoses.
15. An electrical energy storage and production system for use in a marine environment, wherein at least one ballast is lowered and raised between a high position and a low position by at least one cable connected to a surface-floating element, the system comprising a generator configured to actuate said at least one cable or be actuated by said at least one cable, wherein said at least one ballast is may be stabilized in the high position at a specified depth when secured together with a float, said float including a partially floating element at said depth, said partially floating element being connected through a retaining cable to a second surface-floating element equipped with means to change a length of said retaining cable, whereby the partially floating element includes a volume of compressible gas according to an environmental pressure.
16. An electrical energy storage and production system for use in a marine environment, the system comprising: a barge or platform equipped with means to roll and/or unroll a main cable to which a ballast can be hooked or unhooked up to a depth of 200 meters or more, whereby said means cooperate with an engine coupled with an electrical energy generator; a float including one part on the surface and another bigger part immersed, wherein both parts of said float are linked with a retaining cable, and wherein the immersed part carries at least one ballast and is located at a depth between 10 meters and 150 meters; a gas volume within the immersed part of the float, which may vary with the environmental pressure; means to change a length of said retaining cable of said float; reversible means to transfer the ballast from the immersed part of said float to an immersed end of the main cable; means for hooking and unhooking the ballast to a sea bottom.
17. The system according to claim 1, wherein the retaining cable can be unrolled from about 10 meters to about 100 meters.
18. The system according to claim 10, wherein the submarine includes a robot.
Description
(1) The invention is further described below as various modes of realization in reference to the following figures:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
(12)
(13)
(14)
(15)
(16) In more detail,
(17) Close to the USPVs, there is a barge, with several blocks and tackles, or winches or sheave elevators on it, that make the ballasts go one by one down from the USPVs to the bottom of the sea and up from it, and thus release or store electrical energy thanks to an electrical generator/engine connected to the block and tackle via driving pulleys or connected to the winches or to the sheave elevator.
(18)
(19) The cable (115) of the block and tackle is linked to a hook (117) that can move horizontally thanks to a ROV (116) (ROV=remotely operated vehicle).
(20) In the example of the double block and tackle, both hooks are linked to a ROV (the second hook is not displayed in
(21) Another independent ROV can be used to hook and unhook the ballasts easier from the USPVs (119).
(22) The barge (110) can be anchored to the bottom of the sea or maintained by one or several pitch propellers. If it is anchored, it can be moved horizontally by linking the anchoring cables to winches that can be controlled, so that the barge is positioned close to the USPV while loading or unloading, or close to the storage zone on the bottom of the sea.
(23) The USPVs can be stand-alone or linked with each other several ways.
(24)
(25)
(26)
(27)
(28)
(29) The position 606 shows a USPV loaded with 3 moving ballasts and 1 fixed ballast, the lifting bag has maximum volume and is positioned at a shallow depth.
(30) The position 607 shows a USPV loaded with 2 moving ballasts and 1 fixed ballast, the lifting bag is then positioned deeper so that the heavier pressure reduces the volume and the Archimedian buoyancy from the lifting bag to uphold only 2 ballasts.
(31) The position 608 shows a USPV loaded with only one moving ballast. The position 603 show an empty USPV without any moving ballast, thus including only one fixed ballast. This fixed ballast prevents the lifting bag from going up, since even deeper, there remains a residual volume that cannot be compensated by the relative weight of the membrane of the empty lifting bag.
(32) The hook 601 is loaded with a ballast while the hook 602 (the other hook of the double block and tackle) is not loaded. No matter if the platform is working in loading or unloading mode (respectively successive uplift or lowering of the ballasts one by one), there is always one loaded hook and one unloaded hook in the double block and tackle.
(33) The position 604 shows ballasts on the sea bottom (605).
(34)
(35)
(36) At least two handles (807) are designed to fix the ballasts to the hook of the block and tackle: one in front (for upward movements), the other on the rear (for downward movements). These handles are advantageously made of a cable (for example made of drawn stainless steel) with floats (803) that keep the handles in suspension above the ballast, which makes hooking operations easier, in particular when the ballasts lie on the sea bottom. They are linked to the ballast through a short cable (802) in order to make attaching and detaching and possibly the work of the auxiliary ROV (119 in
(37) Emitters of light signals (809, 810) or sonars (811) or emitters of any other king of waves are arranged in various places of the ballast or handles to make attaching and detaching easier, particularly if such operations are automated.
(38)
(39)
(40) A valve (1001) can be opened with remote control or automatically; it releases any possible surplus of gas and copes with technical failures, in particular if the lifting bag comes up higher than scheduled (for example because of a heating of the gas inside), and thus restricts the risk of brutal surfacing of the lifting bag.
(41) A flexible hose (1001) may link the lifting bag to a compressor (1004) including a possible buffer tank (1003) to increase or reduce the amount of air inside the lifting bag. This device makes it possible to balance the systems in case of technical failures or to temporary restore the balance of the system, for example when the lifting bag has gone up to a higher position and the air within has cooled. This air will heat with the ambient temperature, and a variation of the amount of air inside the lifting bag may be desirable, even if varying depth can play the same role.
(42) Another way to accelerate the warming of the gas inside the lifting bag, for example just after the rise of the level inside the lifting bag (expansion=cooling), is to inject an amount of heat thanks to an electrical resistance (1009) connected through an electrical cable (1006) to a battery (1005) or any other power supply.
(43) A security mechanism makes it possible to quickly increase the floating capacity of the USPV; it includes an auxiliary lifting bag (1007) partly filled with a gas and fixed with a cable (1008) to the main lifting bag. This lifting bag can be released by a remote control (command unit 1009) or automatically if required, when the USPV starts going down too much and, for example, when the upper float reaches a too-significant average immersion level. When releasing this lifting bag, it will go up and its volume will increase; it will then be able to generate a higher Archimedian buoyancy and compensate a possible disbalance.
(44) In
(45) The amount of water can vary automatically, since the ballast includes several holes to let water in and compress the pocket of gas when the ballast gets down. It can also vary by remote control by injecting gas or by pumping and injecting water via flexible hoses, compressors, pumps and valves not displayed in the figure.
(46)
(47) The set of USPVs, attached to each other this way, can also be anchored with one or several anchoring cables (401); the lifting bags that are the upper floats can have an adapted volume to manage the whole forces they are submitted to; these forces can be different whether the system is a USPV only linked to other USPVs or also linked to an anchoring cable.
(48)
(49)
(50) It shall be understood that the structure can include several blocks and tackles platforms and several blocks and tackles (or double blocks and tackles) may be positioned on only one barge.
(51) The number of ballasts per USPV in the figures is exemplary but not restrictive. You can store only one or far more ballasts on a USPV.
(52) The invention is essentially illustrated in double block and tackle mode, but other equivalent systems can be considered (lifts, driving pulleys, capstan, etc.)
(53) Hooks can have an automatic or remote controlled complete closure, if required, out of security.
(54) In every variant, the USPVs may be connected with various electrical, hydraulic or pneumatic connections.