4.7 Article

Assessing and mitigating potential hazards of emerging grid-scale electrical energy storage systems

Journal

PROCESS SAFETY AND ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
Volume 149, Issue -, Pages 994-1016

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.psep.2021.03.042

Keywords

Electrical energy storage (EES) systems; Hazards identification and mitigation; Consequence analysis; Hazard and operability analysis; Engineering and administrative controls

Funding

  1. BK 21 Program - Korean Ministry of Education
  2. 2019 Yankuang Science and Technology project [YKZB 2020-173]

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This study focuses on the hazards and safety issues of large-scale electrical energy storage systems, assessing their potential risks using a hybrid method. Results show that different types of EES systems have varying degrees of accident consequences severity, with extreme operating conditions and operational uncertainty presenting major challenges to safer operation. Implementing a range of control measures from inherent to procedural strategies can help eliminate and mitigate hazards.
Electrical energy storage (EES) systems consisting of multiple process components and containing intensive amounts of energy present inherent hazards coupled with high operational risks. Although the thermal hazards of batteries have aroused widespread attention, the safety issues of emerging large scale EES technologies persist. This study aims to begin to fill this gap by examining the hazards of typical 100 MWh or more EES systems which are used for grid applications. These systems include compressed and liquid air energy storage, CO2 energy storage, thermal storage in concentrating solar power plants, and Power-to-Gas. Hazard assessments are performed using a hybrid method to consider and evaluate the EES systems' potential hazards from three novel aspects: storage, operability, and connectivity. Results reveal that for a similar energy storage capacity, cryogenic liquid systems have the least severe accident consequences while thermal energy storage using synthetic oil exhibits the largest. Concerning the operations in many cases, extreme operating conditions, complicated heat exchanger networks involving multiple flammable working fluids, and system operation intermittency present the major challenges to the safer operation of EES systems. Lastly, these systems themselves form one of many components of the power supply, each of which needs to accommodate fluctuations in supply and demand but also should be prevented from transmitting hazards to each other. Considering both engineering and administrative controls, this paper concludes with a discussion on the four grouped strategies from inherent to procedural for the elimination and mitigation of the identified hazards. Representative solutions and research perspectives including inherently safer design, operation uncertainty management, resilience analysis, energy barriers design, and life cycle safety assessment are suggested for the overall safety enhancement of industrial EES systems. (C) 2021 Institution of Chemical Engineers. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved .

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