The liquid-cooled energy storage system integrates the energy storage converter, high-voltage control box, water cooling system, fire safety system, and 8 liquid-cooled battery packs into one unit.
How does a thermoelectric cooler work?
Thermoelectric coolers serve a cooling capacity spectrum from approximately 10 to 400 Watts, and can cool by removing heat from control sources through convection, conduction, or liquid means. Thermoelectric devices operate using DC power, leaving them less vulnerable to the black-outs and brown-outs that can impact other types of cooling systems.
Why are energy storage systems important?
Energy storage systems (ESS) have the power to impart flexibility to the electric grid and offer a back-up power source. Energy storage systems are vital when municipalities experience blackouts, states-of-emergency, and infrastructure failures that lead to power outages.
A cooling system that operates on a DC power supply such as a thermoelectric cooler would not be susceptible to black-outs or brown-outs, allowing the ambient temperature of the battery back-up system to be kept constant.
What is a thermoelectric cooler?
Thermoelectric cooler assemblies also provide precise temperature control with accuracies up to 0.01 ̊C of the set point temperature, due to their proportional type control system. The operating range for a typical thermoelectric cooler is -40 ̊C to +65 ̊C for most systems.
For compressor-based systems, the typical operating range is +20 ̊C to +55 ̊C, allowing thermoelectric coolers to operate in a much larger environmental area. Thermoelectric cooler assemblies feature a solid-state construction, so they do not have compressors or motors.
What are thermoelectric cooler assemblies?
Thermoelectric cooler assemblies offer improved thermal control relative to compressor-based air conditioners, maintaining temperature to within 0.5°C of the set point temperature.