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GE Research Awarded $5.8 MM ARPA-E Project to Develop Super-Fast DC Circuit Breaker that allows Big Urban Cities to Access More Remote Clean, Renewable Energy

-New circuit breaker essential to supporting next generation Medium Voltage Direct Current (MVDC) distribution grid that more efficiently delivers electricity into major cities from remote wind farms and other clean power installations
-Will expand access to new clean power sources for cities in more congested areas where there is little or no room to install new electrical distribution capacity
-The development of MVDC systems could create new T&D market for the grid industry


NISKAYUNA, NY  – WEBWIRE

GE Research today announced it has been awarded $5.8 MM in funding from the U.S. Department of Energy’s Advanced Research Projects Agency - Energy (ARPA-E) for a three-year project to develop and demonstrate a super-fast DC Circuit Breaker that is essential for enabling next generation MVDC grids.  This project is part of a broader interest by ARPA-E to upgrade existing alternating current (AC) distribution grids and expand opportunities for congested areas to access remote clean energy sources to meet their future power needs.

“Many big urban cities today are facing higher electricity demands because of growing applications such as electric vehicle charging, with limited options for tapping into new energy sources,” said Timothy Sommerer, Principal Scientist at GE Research and Principal Investigator on the MVDC program.  “By upgrading existing AC distributions grids to MVDC grids, it would allow these cities to cast a much wider net in securing new clean renewable energy sources.” 

Sommerer continued, “The new super-fast DC circuit breaker we’re developing is an essential component for enabling the distribution grid upgrade from AC to MVDC. Because DC doesn’t inherently contain natural breaks like AC that help manage faults, you need to have a switch with an extremely fast response time that can create these breaks. That’s exactly the challenge GE’s technology will address.” 

Sommerer explained the team will leverage GE Research’s innovative gas discharge tube technology to develop the MVDC circuit breaker. Gas discharge tubes switch without mechanical motion by transitioning the internal gas between its ordinary insulating state and a highly conductive gas plasma. This allows for the much faster response times that are required to handle DC currents. 

The MVDC distribution lines envisioned will support up to 100,000 volts and more than 100 megawatts of power to meet the needs of large cities. The land area required to power a city by renewable sources like wind, solar, and hydro is 3–10 times larger than the city itself and is usually some distance from the city.  At the same time electric urban power demand is increasing as vehicles and other fuel-burning power users go electric.  In general, the increasing utilization of DC current in electricity transmission has the potential to greatly expand where utilities can draw power from to meet their energy needs in two important ways.  First, electric power can move more efficiently over long distances on high-voltage DC lines vs. AC. And second, an MVDC distribution grid can then take that HVDC power and distribute it more efficiently and effectively into a large urban area.

“The development of DC grid technologies could vastly increase the flexibility utilities have in addressing future power needs,” Sommerer said. “Imagine the day when cities like New York, Chicago, or Los Angeles have the option of accessing electricity from multiple wind installations in the Midwest to meet electric vehicle charging needs.” 

About GE Research

GE Research is GE’s innovation powerhouse where research meets reality. We are a world-class team of 1,000+ scientific, engineering and marketing minds (600+ Ph. Ds), working at the intersection of physics and markets, physical and digital technologies, and across a broad set of industries to deliver world-changing innovations and capabilities for our customers.  To learn more, visit our website at https://www.ge.com/research/. 


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