Flywheel Energy Storage: The Utility Scale Energy Storage Solution

#Distinguished #Lecturer
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Join us to welcome Prof. Seth Sanders as a Distinguished Lecturer to discuss Flywheel Energy Storage for Utilities.



  Date and Time

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  • Date: 30 Oct 2017
  • Time: 03:00 PM to 04:00 PM
  • All times are (GMT-08:00) Canada/Pacific
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  • 2332 Main Mall
  • Vancouver, British Columbia
  • Canada V6T 1Z4
  • Building: Fred Kaiser Building
  • Room Number: 2020

  • Contact Event Host
  • Starts 06 September 2017 12:00 AM
  • Ends 30 October 2017 12:00 AM
  • All times are (GMT-08:00) Canada/Pacific
  • No Admission Charge


  Speakers

Dr. Seth R. Sanders Dr. Seth R. Sanders of UC Berkeley

Topic:

Flywheel Energy Storage: The Utility Scale Energy Storage Solution

Energy storage is now emerging as an essential electric utility resource to effectively enable higher penetration levels of variable renewable generation resources.  In California, in response to RPS mandates for increased renewable penetration, Assembly Bill 2514, in conjunction with CPUC rulings, has called for 1.3 GW of flexible energy storage to be incorporated into the energy mix by the three California IOUs during the next few years.  Similar actions are being followed in other U.S. states, and worldwide. The talk will review the energy storage landscape, in terms of opportunity, established and emerging storage technologies, and commercial progress. The talk will also focus on the speaker’s interests in advancing flywheel energy storage to meet utility scale challenges.  In short, a flywheel functions as a battery, with kinetic energy storage replacing conventional electrochemical processes.  Based on numerous implementations and products released during the past 20-30 years, there has been a general belief in the power systems community that flywheels are only suited to short term applications, for example in frequency regulation, grid stability enhancement, voltage support, and in UPS and transit system applications.  This is not the case, and the talk will outline how flywheels can be economically designed to meet multi-hour energy shifting applications, that are essential for provision of capacity, and extended integration of variable renewable generation. Some details on product and project development at grid scale energy storage start-up Amber Kinetics will be discussed.


 

Biography:

Seth R. Sanders is Professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences at the University of California, Berkeley. He received S.B. degrees (1981) in Electrical Engineering and Physics, and the S.M. (1985) and Ph.D. (1989) degrees in Electrical Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge. Following an early experience as a Design Engineer at the Honeywell Test Instruments Division in 1981-83, he joined the UC Berkeley faculty in 1989. Dr. Sanders is co-founder and Chief Scientist of Amber Kinetics, Inc., a technology developer, manufacturer, and project developer of utility scale flywheel energy storage systems. His technical interests are in electrical energy and power conversion systems. Dr. Sanders is presently or has recently been active in supervising research projects in the areas of flywheel energy storage, high frequency integrated power conversion circuits, IC designs for power conversion applications, electric machine design, and renewable energy systems. During the 1992-1993 academic year, he was on industrial leave with National Semiconductor, Santa Clara, CA. Dr. Sanders received the NSF Young Investigator Award  and multiple Best Paper Awards from the IEEE Power Electronics and the IEEE Industry Applications Societies. He has served as Chair of the IEEE PELS Technical Committee on Computers in Power Electronics, Chair of the IEEE PELS Technical Committee on Power Conversion Components and Systems, and as Member-At-Large of the IEEE PELS Adcom. He is an IEEE Fellow, a Distinguished Lecturer of the IEEE PELS and IAS societies, and recipient of the IEEE PELS Modeling and Control Technical Achievement Award.

Dr. Seth R. Sanders of UC Berkeley

Topic:

Flywheel Energy Storage: The Utility Scale Energy Storage Solution

Biography: