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The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 [email protected]

The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 [email protected]

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Page 1: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov

The Space Station Power SystemSolar Array

BatteryPower Management & Distribution

Dave McKissockNASA Glenn Research Center

May 24, [email protected]

Page 2: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov

Compare ISS & Your HomeScratch off items not applicable to both

locations

•Electrical Power•Trash removal•Clean Gutters•Replenish O2

•Waste water removal

•Swim Suit•Lawn Maintenance•Food Preparation

•Bath tub•Exercise Machine•Kitchen Table & Chairs

•Weekly cleaning•Cable TV•Thermal Control•Hot Water Heater•Smoke Alarm

Page 3: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov
Page 4: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov
Page 5: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov

ISS Batteries38 cells wired in series make one Battery Orbital Replacement Unit (Battery ORU)

Page 6: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov

ISS Batteries

Battery ORU Battery ORU

Battery Charge Discharge Unit (BCDU)

One Battery = 2 Battery ORUs

Page 7: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov

Space Station Power SystemOne Channel

Page 8: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov

What’s Next in Space Power?

– Crew Exploration Vehicle– Lunar Lander– Lunar Rover– Lunar Base (?)– Mars Base (?)

Page 9: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov

Poll Question #1

Do you support the new plan for space exploration that returns the space

shuttle to flight, completes assembly of the space station, builds a replacement for the shuttle, returns to the Moon and

then on to Mars and beyond?

Page 10: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov

July 2004 Gallup Survey Results

• With funding for NASA’s program expected not to exceed 1% of the federal budget, 42% of adults surveyed say they support the proposed Exploration program

Page 11: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov

• Solar cells make electricity from sunlight

Electricity

Page 12: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov

Electricity is described in two ways:– Voltage (Volts, V) – Current (Amperes, A)

{ Power = Voltage * Current }

VA

Page 13: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov

• Connect solar cells together…– Series (end to end): to build up voltage – Parallel (side by side): to build up current– This makes a solar array

A

Page 14: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov

end to endSeries or

side by side Parallel?

A

- + - + - + - +- +

V

- +

- +- +- +

(voltages add) (currents add)

end to endSeries or

side by side Parallel?

Page 15: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov

• Example: Airplane model propeller motor– Electric motor wants 12 volts and ½

amperes

– Each solar cell can provide:• ½ volt and ¼ amperes

– How do you connect the solar cells?

Page 16: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov

Poll Question #2

• Need 12V at ½ Amp• Each cell generates ½ V at ¼ Amp

What do I need?

Page 17: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov

Discussion of Poll AnswerD: Both A & C

• 24 cells (end-to-end)– Add ½ volt plus ½ volt 24 times = 12V (or

½ x 24 = 12)

• 2 cells (side by side)– Add ¼ amp plus ¼ amp = ½ amp

• Individual cell performance varies as environment changes

Page 18: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov

Two popular ways to store electrical energy…

Battery Fuel Cell

Page 19: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov

• In battery cell, chemicals react at 2 electrodes and separate charges– stores charges, builds up voltage– if connected to a light bulb, charges flow

(current)

Page 20: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov

• In a fuel cell stack, “stuff” is fed to metal plates, reacts and gives/takes charges– separate charges to build up voltage

H

O

Remember H20 ?

Page 21: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov

Energy Storage

- +- +- +- +- +- +- +- +- +- +- +- +

Series Voltages addV

ParallelCurrents add

A

Page 22: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov

Batteries on Space Station

• Desire 114 Volts

• Willing to take whatever current you get

• Each Nickel-Hydrogen cell (NiH2) produces 1.5V, rated at 81 Amp-Hours

• What series / parallel arrangement do you recommend?

Page 23: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov

Poll Question #3

• Need 114V at whatever Amps• Each cell generates 1½ V at 81 Amp-Hr

What will I need?

Page 24: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov

Discussion of Poll Results

• Correct Answer is “A”, 76 cells in series at 1.5 volts per cell yields 76 x 1.5 = 114 V

• No spare cells for voltage redundancy– Batteries designed to last 6.5 years and

provide needed voltage

• Nuclear power not an option in low earth orbit

Page 25: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov
Page 26: The Space Station Power System Solar Array Battery Power Management & Distribution Dave McKissock NASA Glenn Research Center May 24, 2006 david.b.mckissock@nasa.gov

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