A CLOSER LOOK AT BATTERIES by John Wiles. Perspectives on PV

Similar documents
32 IAEI NEWS March. April

Supply-Side PV Connections

PHOTOVOLTAIC ELECTRICAL POWER SYSTEMS INSPECTOR/INSTALLER CHECKLIST

Load Side PV Connections

2011/2008/2005 NATIONAL ELECTRICAL CODE SOLAR PV CODE COMPLIANCE REFERENCE

Questions from the AHJ To Fuse or Not to Fuse?

APPROACHING. The Inverter. 92 IAEI NEWS May.June approaching the inverter

Code Compliance. Perspectives on PV. Back to the Grid, Designing PV Systems for

705.12(D) The requirements pertaining to the connection. Unraveling the Mysterious. Load Side PV Connections. by John Wiles

CONNECTING INVERTER. by John Wiles

Microinverters and AC PV modules are becoming. Microinverters and AC PV Modules. Different Beasts. Perspectives on PV.

Chapter 6. Batteries. Types and Characteristics Functions and Features Specifications and Ratings Jim Dunlop Solar

Code Calculations. for an Off-Grid PV System

hat inspectors need to know

Technical Summary of Battery Energy Storage Systems

SOLAR PHOTOVOLTAIC SYSTEMS INSPECTOR CHECKLIST

Components for your PV Solar Electric System

Green Building Technology

CHAPTER 10 ELECTRICAL. Notes:

Fire Safety for New Battery Technologies What's in Store for Your Jurisdiction? Kelly Nicolello Senior Regulatory Engineer

2016 Photovoltaic Solar System Plan Review List

Reference: Photovoltaic Systems, p References: Photovoltaic Systems, Chap. 7 National Electrical Code (NEC), Articles 110,

SECTION 1: Field Inspection Guide for Rooftop Photovoltaic (PV) Systems

Electrical Systems. Introduction

Gay E. Canough. OFF-GRID Design. Dr. Gay E. Canough, Master trainer. Living Off the Grid

This is intended to provide uniform application of the codes by the plan check staff and to help the public apply the codes correctly.

SMT. Installation and Operation Manual. Model:SMT WITH MPPT TECHNOLOGY

Know the Code: PV and NEC

Arc Fault Circuit Interrupter (AFCI) FACT SHEET

672W Off Grid Residential Package

Photovoltaic Solar Plan Review

PHOTOVOLTAIC SYSTEMS

Solar PV Standard Electrical Plan

Off Grid Residential Package 1.0KW

Battery Technology for Data Centers and Network Rooms: Site Planning

SAVE THESE INSTRUCTIONS

Off Grid Cabin Special Pkg 1-170W PV

Battery Cables. Wire & Cable

Chapter 3. Direct Current Power. MElec-Ch3-1

Shining a Light On Commercial Building Solar Ready Requirements

CP-250E-60/72-208/240-MC4 Microinverter with Modular Trunk Cable

Application Note Three Phase String Inverters NEC 2014 Compliance

Installation and Construction Notes for EVSE4

Battery Enclosure Installation Instructions

To Ground or Not to Ground: That is Not the Question (in the USA)

Christopher LaForge. IREC Certified Master Trainer. NABCEP Certified Photovoltaic Installation Professional - Emeritus

First Responder System Identification Quiz. Presented by the NY-SUN PV Trainers Network

SUBSTATION EQUIPMENT - Page 1 of 8

Selective Coordination Enforcement:

Ten Deadly Conditions to Check for in Your Boat's Electrical System - Part 2

Grounding Systems. Equipment Grounding & Grounded Conductors

PHOTOVOLTAIC SYSTEM CONTROLLERS SUNSAVER MODELS INCLUDED IN THIS MANUAL SS-6 / SS-6L SS-10 / SS-10L SS-10-24V / SS-10L-24V SS-20L SS-20L-24V

SOLAR PV INSTALLATIONS

CHAPTER 10 ELECTRICAL

Residential microinverter system

Data Bulletin. Wire Temperature Ratings and Terminations INTRODUCTION WHY ARE TEMPERATURE RATINGS IMPORTANT?

PRODUCT GUIDE Publication No: EN-SBS-PG-001 February 2003

BLOCKING DIODES AND FUSES IN LOW-VOLTAGE PV SYSTEMS

SECTION SOLAR ENERGY ELECTRICAL POWER GENERATION SYSTEM

MASTERsine Inverter PXA Series Installation Guide

SECTION SOLAR ENERGY ELECTRICAL POWER GENERATION SYSTEM

the National PhotoVoltaic protection note 5 I rated Introduction points of interest When to Fuse, When Not to Fuse

LIGHTNING PROTECTION UNIT (LPU)

SAVE THESE INSTRUCTIONS

Solar Power Installation Application

GET GROUNDED. Renewable Energy System Grounding Basics

Solar Photovoltaic Power. Overarching Objectives. How many questions? 9/16/2012. From plan review to Final Inspection

BESS Labelling Location Sign Source Notes

MNPV Installation Instructions

Battery Power Inverters

BZ Products Inc. U.S.A.

SUPPLEMENTAL CORRECTION SHEET FOR SOLAR PHOTOVOLTAIC SYSTEMS - ELECTRICAL

Minnesota Dept. of Commerce, Division of Energy Resources. Distributed Generation Workshop Interconnection Standards

Solar Photovoltaic (PV) System Components

Apollo Solar Inverter Switchgear Module Installation Manual Rev 1.2 Page 1

Cruising Charger Series OWNER S MANUAL

The Traveler Series: Wanderer

Off Grid System Design

Battery Monitoring Why Technology Matters. Mats Karlstrom V.P. Sales & Marketing, Alber

User Manual. Solar Charge Controller 3KW

Matching Your Load With Your PV System

STREAMLINED SOLAR CHECKLIST Owner Name:

INSPECTION REQUIREMENTS: PHOTOVOLTAIC (PV) RESIDENTIAL

3. Customer shall provide space for metering equipment and meter base as per Springville City Power requirements.

OWNERS MANUAL JANUARY 2007 ISO

Special Specification 6058 Battery Back-Up System for Signal Cabinets

The Traveler Series: Wanderer

Duo Battery Charge Controller

Micro3 Grid Tied Residential Package

The Evolution of Arc Fault Circuit Interruption

SOLAR LIGHTING CONTROLLER SUNLIGHT MODELS INCLUDED IN THIS MANUAL SL-10 SL-10-24V SL-20 SL-20-24V

Inspector Training Workshops Module One Photovoltaic Labeling based on 2008 NEC

Introduction to Solar PV. Basics

Dimensions 12/800N 12/1200N D. DC to AC Power Inverters. OWNERS MANUAL for Models: OWNERS MANUAL April ISO 9001:2000 Certified Company

K50. Technical Sheet

TECHNICAL BULLETIN Fig #1 - VRLA Battery Components. Intercell Welded Connection Strap joining neg. plates in parallel.

Guardian Battery Charger Series. Installation and Operations Manual Section 75

A little about me: Course Objective/Intent. Good PV resources:

Central Battery Systems Loadstar AC/DC Systems

Equipment Protection. Listed or Labeled Equipment. Panelboards. Branch Circuit Protection HVAC. Appliances. Supplementary Protection

Transcription:

Perspectives on PV A CLOSER LOOK AT BATTERIES by John Wiles Photo 1. Flooded Lead Acid batteries Energy storage systems, in the form of batteries, when included in a photovoltaic power system are a critical and important item that needs close scrutiny during the plan review and inspection process. Battery systems are found in both off-grid standalone PV systems and in battery-backed up, utility-interactive PV systems. See the March-April 2013 IAEI magazine for an overview of the battery-backed up, utility-interactive PV system. The following information will focus on the dc circuits associated with the battery system. Types of Batteries There are two main types of battery systems being used in PV systems at this time. Both are based on a 58 IAEI NEWS September. October 2013 www.iaei.org

PERSPECTIVES ON PV lead acid battery technology [older than the National Electrical Code (NEC)]. The oldest technology uses a flooded lead acid battery that has removable vent caps and requires the addition of water on a regular basis. See photo 1. A related technology known as the valve-regulated, lead-acid (VRLA) battery uses an internal chemical design to allow the battery case to be effectively sealed. See photo 2. No water can be added to these VRLA batteries. The newer battery types of nickel cadmium and lithium ion have not found their way into PV systems in any substantial numbers yet, probably due to the higher cost of these technologies. Increasing use of these battery types in electrical vehicles (EVs) will probably lower the costs and they will become more frequently used in PV applications. Other advanced technology battery types such as the chemical flow batteries are generally found only in large, experimental installations in utility and industrial applications. Mechanical Installation, Venting and Acid Containment Batteries contain substantial amounts of lead that makes them very heavy. The floor that they rest on must be sufficiently strong, particularly for the larger battery banks, which may weigh several tons. Where battery banks are installed in racks that are more than a foot or so high, those racks must be secured to a substantial wall. Building codes, especially in earthquake zones, require substantial mechanical securing of the batteries. During the normal charging process, flooded lead acid batteries will emit hydrogen gas and sulfuric acid fumes into the surrounding environment. The type and adjustment of the charge controller will determine the amount of outgassing. Although the VRLA batteries are sealed, if the charge controller is misadjusted, becomes defective, or fails, the VRLA battery will also outgas hydrogen and sulfuric acid Photo 2. Valve Regulated Lead Acid (VRLA) batteries www.iaei.org September. October 2013 IAEI NEWS 59

Photo 3. Flooded lead acid batteries in polyethylene containers fumes. Both of these battery types should be installed in a well-ventilated area and should normally not be installed in a living space. In normal operation, the amount of hydrogen gas and sulfuric acid fumes are very limited and are quickly and easily dispersed into the surrounding room without problems. However, if these gases are restricted from being diluted with the surrounding air, an explosive combination of gases and air is possible. Garages and outbuildings are ideal locations for these batteries if they are well ventilated, not sealed, not used as living spaces, and do not have living spaces over them. No attempt should be made to construct a manifold or venting system for these batteries. Power venting systems have a tendency to fail and the high-vent, low-vent system used for combustion appliances like gas furnaces and water heaters is not applicable to batteries since there is no driving energy source equivalent to the heat energy source of a heating system. Power vented manifolds on the batteries should not be used, as they have been responsible for explosions and fires in the past. Batteries installed in well vented locations are acceptable. Catalytic battery vent caps employing a platinum catalyst are available for use on flooded lead acid batteries to reduce hydrogen outgassing and reduce the requirement to add water to the battery. Flooded lead acid batteries contain liquid sulfuric acid, and VRLA batteries include a similar jelled electrolyte. These batteries should be installed in a manner that prevents them from being mechanically abused. Many local building codes require some sort of acid containment for these batteries should the cases become cracked. Installing the batteries in an acid resistant outer container may be sufficient. Note the acid containment system under the batteries in photo 1. There are 60 IAEI NEWS September. October 2013 www.iaei.org

no generally available, certified/listed battery containers or battery boxes. For the smaller systems, it has been found that heavy-duty polyethylene toolboxes provides sufficient acid containment and also, with lockable tops, meet code requirements to prevent unqualified people from accessing the electrically energized battery terminals [690.72(B) (2)]. See photo 3. Location, Location, Location In small and medium sized PV systems, the batteries operate at a nominal 12, 24, or 48 volts. To minimize voltage drop in the cables at the typical high operating currents, batteries are generally installed as close as possible to the loads that they serve. In PV systems these loads are usually a utility interactive inverter or a stand-alone inverter. In many cases, particularly in stand-alone systems, a power center is used which provides a central location for overcurrent protection, disconnects, and charge control functions. Even in the best of circumstances, it is generally not possible to mount and connect an overcurrent device or a disconnect any closer to the battery terminals than three or four feet. Battery disconnects and overcurrent protection (either fused disconnects or circuit breakers) should not be installed very close to the batteries or inside any battery enclosure due to the potential evolution of hydrogen gas, which, when mixed with air can become an explosive mixture. Also the sulfuric acid fumes released from flooded lead acid batteries will be corrosive in nature and electrical components, other than properly protected cables, should not be in close proximity to these batteries (110.11). When the batteries are located more than 4 5 feet from the utilization equipment, in a different room from the utilization equipment, or the cables must pass through a wall, those cables should be in conduit. The conduit should originate as close to the battery terminals as possible or at the PERSPECTIVES ON PV battery container and then be routed all the way to the power center or other utilization equipment. Cable Types and Sizes THHN, RHW, THW and other commonly available cables listed in Chapter 3 of the code are acceptable for battery installations. Most commonly available plastic (thermoplastic) or rubber insulated (thermoset) cables are considered acid and moisture resistant. The use of cables manufactured with type AWM or MTW conductors may not be accepted by AHJs because they are not typically used in fixed, codecompliant wiring systems. Normal Class B and C stranded conductors can be used with certified/listed equipment that has the correct wire bending spaces. See NEC Chapter 9, Table 10. Unfortunately, not all equipment used with battery systems has been certified/listed and that equipment may have inadequate wire bending space. This has caused many installers to use a fine stranded, flexible cable-like welding or automotive battery Photo 4. Class B stranded cables, top; fine stranded cables, bottom www.iaei.org September. October 2013 IAEI NEWS 61

cable; and these cables do not comply with NEC requirements for fixed, non-mobile, battery installations. Code-compliant cable types such as THHN, RHW, and THW are available in fine stranded, flexible configurations. However, the use of fine stranded flexible cables may pose termination issues. See NEC 110.14, 690.74, photo 4 and Perspectives on PV in the January February 2005 IAEI News. Note a slight problem in the Code in 690.74. Single-conductor flexible cables are generally not available certified/listed for hard service duty. To be corrected in 2017. Some manufactured battery cables may not have the proper terminals where fine stranded flexible cables have been used and are questionable even when a code-complaint cable type has been used. Without the proper terminations, the cables may fail at the terminations at some later date. The cables must be sized based on the continuous current requirements that will be based on charging Figure 1. Series-parallel battery connections. Note: Current travels through equal lengths of conductors in each of the series paths. Battery cables should be the same size and length in each path. All terminations should be identical. Credit Trojan Battery Co. currents from either the PV array or an inverter/charger or on discharging currents, usually to the inverter. Depending on the system design, there may be more than one circuit connected to the battery one circuit for charging, and one circuit for discharging. Where there is a single circuit used for both charging and discharging, the cable must be sized on the largest continuous current in either mode. Although the Code typically requires that conductors be sized and protected based on continuous (3 hours or more) loads, battery based systems may require a slightly different approach. With stand-alone, off-grid inverters, the inverters have a substantial capability to surge currents above their steady-state rating for periods of minutes to an hour, and this may create voltage drop in the cables that poses operational problems. In this case, voltage drop calculations must also be made to ensure that the inverter will operate properly under all conditions of continuous use and surges. Battery banks connected with sets of seriesconnected cells or batteries and parallel sets of cells or batteries should be wired so that the length of cables (and the resulting resistance) would be the same for each series connection to minimize charging and discharging current and voltage imbalances and premature cell/battery failure. See figure 1. Overcurrent Protection Batteries can source high fault currents. It is somewhat difficult to obtain specific short-circuit current data on batteries and even more difficult to determine what those short-circuit currents may be at the output of the battery bank which may consist of numerous series and parallel connected individual batteries. Tests and estimates made several decades ago indicate that for typical residential and small commercial battery banks, the inter-cell/interbattery connectors, the battery cables, the contact resistances, and other factors will typically limit the available short-circuit current at the output of the battery bank to less than 15,000 A. Therefore, any overcurrent device protecting these cables should have an interrupt rating of at least 15,000 A. Both dc rated fuses and dc rated circuit breakers with that rating are available. 62 IAEI NEWS September. October 2013 www.iaei.org

DC rated, current-limiting fuses are commonly available and will provide some protection for downstream components. DC rated circuit breakers, on the other hand, have little or no current limiting capabilities. Any equipment in the dc battery conductor path should have sufficient shortcircuit interrupt capabilities where circuit breakers are used. Normally, in small residential and small commercial battery banks, the individual strings (series connected cells/batteries) of batteries are not fused. Series and parallel connections are made within the battery bank and then the overall output is provided with overcurrent protection. This would generally indicate that the cables within the battery bank be able to handle the entire current of the battery bank (and not be sized to handle just a proportional part of the total battery current). In parallel connected sets of batteries or cells the individual cells and batteries may not age at the same rate and the currents may tend to be higher in some of the series connections than in others. For that reason, it is somewhat difficult to fuse individual strings of batteries because they may be required to carry more and more current as other strings of batteries age and carry less current. Also installing an overcurrent device inside the battery bank on a single string or several strings poses both maintenance and potentially explosion hazards. In larger battery installations (where room size battery banks are involved) individual strings of batteries or cells may have a fused disconnect on each string. That fused disconnect must be located in an area that allows easy access and is not subject to hydrogen gas/sulfuric acid fumes. The size of the conductors for each battery string and the overcurrent device rating require careful consideration because of the potential for unequal currents in the battery series circuits as the battery bank ages. Part VIII of NEC Article 690 has numerous requirements that are relatively clear that apply to battery installations. Proper maintenance of the battery banks is the key to maintaining battery longevity and keeping PERSPECTIVES ON PV the various currents balanced. The batteries are able to generate more shortcircuit current than the typical charging source and there should be an overcurrent protection device near the batteries. The overcurrent device has to be sized at least at 125% of the continuous current (either charge or discharge, whichever is greater) and if the charging currents are greater than the discharging currents, an overcurrent device may be required at the charging source. A disconnect may be required at the battery to not only service the fuse (a circuit breaker includes the disconnect), but also to provide a method of disconnecting the battery circuit from other connected devices. Fuses that bolt directly to the battery terminals are generally not acceptable in code-compliant installations because they are very difficult for unqualified people to service on the always-energized battery terminals. Summary Plan reviewers and inspectors should check battery installations for substantial mechanical installation, correct cable types and sizes, proper placement and rating of overcurrent devices and disconnects, good conduit installation techniques, and proper ventilation. For More Information The author has retired from the Southwest Technology Development Institute at New Mexico State University, but is devoting about 25% of his time to PV activities in order to keep involved in writing these Perspectives on PV articles in the IAEI News and to stay active in the NEC and UL Standards development. He can be reached, sometimes, at: e-mail: jwiles@nmsu.edu, Phone: 575-646-6105 The Southwest Technology Development Institute web site maintains a PV Systems Inspector/Installer Checklist and all copies of the previous Perspectives on PV articles for easy downloading. A color copy of the latest version (1.93) of the 150-page, Photovoltaic Power Systems and the 2005 National Electrical Code: Suggested Practices, written by the author, may be downloaded from this web site: http://www.nmsu.edu/~tdi/ Photovoltaics/Codes-Stds/Codes-Stds.html It should be updated to the 2008 and 2011 NEC before the 2014 NEC arrives. www.iaei.org September. October 2013 IAEI NEWS 63