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Battery alternatives suit specialised applications

A Chloride Power Protection product story
Edited by the Engineeringtalk editorial team Jun 16, 2008

Chloride has expanded its technology options to offer customers more choice in selecting the most appropriate power protection solution for their application.

Chloride Power Protection has developed efficient battery-based uninterruptible power supplies (UPS) and extended the scope of its back-up power options by embracing flywheel and fuel cell alternatives.

For most applications, traditional lead-acid batteries remain the most commonly used energy storage solution and Chloride continues to develop more efficient battery backed UPS systems.

There are however some industrial applications where alternatives to batteries may be considered.

Chloride has entered into agreements with Vycon, a developer of flywheels, and IdaTech, a developer of fuel cells.

This enables the company to offer flywheel options with its 80-NET systems and fuel cells for low power UPS applications.

The flywheel energy storage option may offer a practical alternative to lead-acid batteries in some specific types of application requiring only short autonomy times.

Where an application demands only a few seconds of autonomy, the flywheel can deliver a significant improvement in mean time between failure (MTBF) of the power supply.

This will be attractive to certain industrial manufacturing and processing customers for glitch protection.

Flywheels may also be employed in parallel with batteries to provide battery hardening in hybrid applications where severe battery duty risks shortening battery life.

Integration of fuel cell technology with low-power UPS can provide an opportunity for extending autonomy times into days for critical applications at remote locations or areas known to experience long power outages.

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