PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Cooler transformers could help electric grid

Stampede2 simulations model transformer hot-spot temperature reductions

Cooler transformers could help electric grid
2024-04-16
(Press-News.org) Most people do not give the U.S. electric grid a second thought — we flip a switch and the lights come on. Behind the scenes are thousands of power plants and utilities linked by millions of miles of transmission lines. And to make raw electricity useful, grid transformers convert high voltage to lower voltage that millions of households can plug into. 

Transformers are aging and approaching an average of being 30 to 40 years old. Plus, they face more stress than ever before brought on by factors such as renewable energy and by extreme weather events such as hurricanes, heat waves, and winter storms.  Case in point — the 2021 event in Texas that left millions powerless. 

That is when University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin) researchers decided to look inside grid transformers to see if they could make them better. Grid transformers are filled with copper windings, other metallic components, and cellulose-based electrical insulation like kraft paper. The cellulose insulation is a great electrical insulator essential in the process of ‘stepping down’ voltage, but it also traps heat, which can lead to overheating.

“We've researched a new class of nanomaterials where we take conventional cellulose-based paper and dope it with high thermal conductivity nanometer and micrometer-sized particles,” said Vaibhav Bahadur, an associate professor in the Cockrell School of Engineering, UT Austin. Bahadur is the corresponding author of a study that modeled the impact of high thermal conductivity paper on the performance and life of grid transformers published March 2024 in Cell Press journal Heliyon. This is the first study that predicts the extent to which tuning the thermal conductivity of paper can enhance transformer life.

Simulations on the Stampede2 supercomputer of the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) helped Bahadur and his collaborators engineer solutions to overheat of grid transformers — a critical component of the electric grid.

Collaborators at the University of Maryland and the USDA Forest Products Laboratory fabricated the high thermal conductivity paper using nanoparticles of boron nitride. Bahadur’s lab built a 3D model of the transformer to mimic an actual grid transformer taken apart and studied by study co-author Robert Hebner, also in the Cockrell School of Engineering.

“The experimental part of the study was critical in testing whether to invest in improving the transformer installation,” Hebner said. “We had a transformer donated to The Center for Electromechanics, which was powered by UT Austin’s one megawatt micro grid. We could connect it and run the temperatures up and down, and we could measure how the transformer behaved. The model and the measurements meshed very well,” Hebner said.

“Our results indicate that if the thermal conductivity is increased by a few times using the engineered paper, the hotspot temperature inside a transformer can be reduced by between 5 to 10 °C,” he added. “In most conditions that should be enough to double or triple the life of the transformer.”

The Bahadur Research Group was awarded allocations on TACC’s Stampede2 supercomputer, a National Science Foundation-funded computational workhorse for UT Austin researchers and thousands of other researchers in the U.S. open science community.

“This model was simulated using TACC resources to predict the thermal performance,” Bahadur said. “We modeled the thermal conductivity as a varying parameter, and we figured out the extent of improvement needed in thermal conductivity to see a meaningful temperature reduction.”

The main computational challenge was the shear immensity of modeling the details inside an actual transformer. 

“To accurately estimate temperatures, we used a fine-sized mesh based on finite element methods and modeled the conduction through the diffusion heat transfer equation — the computational costs are high in doing so,” Bahadur said.  “The main reason we used Stampede2 was to get simulations done in a matter of minutes/hours and not wait for days to get our results.”

Next, the researchers will test a small-scale transformer prototype and add the thermal conducting paper to study how it behaves in an operating environment with fluctuating loads. 

This research has the possibility to find applications in the real world, where new transformers could be made with improved nano and micro particle enhanced thermal insulating paper. Old transformers could be retrofitted with the new paper during routine refurbishment.

“We started not as a transformer project, but as a semiconductor project. This research aims to take a lot of the electronic devices that we have and make them operate better by operating cooler and more efficiently,” Hebner added.

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Cooler transformers could help electric grid Cooler transformers could help electric grid 2

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Oregon State researchers advance pigment chemistry with moon-inspired reddish magentas

Oregon State researchers advance pigment chemistry with moon-inspired reddish magentas
2024-04-16
CORVALLIS, Oregon – An Oregon State University researcher who made color history in 2009 with a vivid blue pigment has developed durable, reddish magentas inspired by lunar mineralogy and ancient Egyptian chemistry. Mas Subramanian, distinguished professor of chemistry, and collaborators at OSU report the findings of the study, funded by the National Science Foundation, in the journal Chemistry of Materials. The new pigments, which could be used as energy-efficient coatings for vehicles and buildings, are based on divalent chromium, Cr2+,  and are ...

Conformity to masculine gender norms is linked to muscle dysmorphia among young people

2024-04-16
Toronto, ON - A new research study out of the University of Toronto sheds light on the intricate relationship between conformity to masculine gender norms and muscle dysmorphia symptomatology among a diverse sample of Canadian adolescents and young adults. The study entitled "Exploring the Association Between Conformity to Masculine Gender Norms and Muscle Dysmorphia Symptomatology in a Gender-Diverse Canadian Population" was recently published in the journal Sex Roles. Muscle dysmorphia, characterized ...

EuBiologics’ simplified OCV achieves WHO PQ

EuBiologics’ simplified OCV achieves WHO PQ
2024-04-16
- Euvichol-S, developed jointly by EuBiologics and IVI, improves productivity by approximately 40% over Euvichol-Plus® - Production and supply of Euvichol-S expected to help address cholera vaccine shortages   April 15, 2024, SEOUL, Republic of Korea – EuBiologics and the International Vaccine Institute (IVI) announced that Euvichol-S, an improved oral cholera vaccine (OCV) developed jointly by EuBiologics and IVI, has achieved World Health Organization prequalification (PQ). Euvichol-S ...

GPT-4 matches radiologists in detecting errors in radiology reports

2024-04-16
OAK BROOK, Ill. – Large language model GPT-4 matched the performance of radiologists in detecting errors in radiology reports, according to research published today in Radiology, a journal of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA). Errors in radiology reports may occur due to resident-to-attending discrepancies, speech recognition inaccuracies and high workload. Large language models, such as GPT-4, have the potential to enhance the report generation process. “Our research offers a novel examination of the potential of OpenAI’s GPT-4,” said study lead author Roman J. Gertz, M.D., resident in the Department ...

SwRI to discuss automotive decarbonization, automation at SAE International’s WCX™ 2024

SwRI to discuss automotive decarbonization, automation at SAE International’s WCX™ 2024
2024-04-16
SAN ANTONIO — August 16, 2024 —Southwest Research Institute helps the automotive industry transition to smart, sustainable mobility, developing hybrid, electric and hydrogen solutions and applying artificial intelligence for safe, eco-friendly driving. SwRI engineers will be in Detroit April 16-18 to share their expertise at the 2024 SAE International WCX™ World Congress Experience. WCX invites mechanical, electrical and software engineers working in mobility from around the world to share new knowledge and advancements. “The automotive and transportation sectors are going through tremendous change and challenges as they navigate ...

From a cryptic genetic element in the human gut to a sensitive biomarker

2024-04-16
A component of the human intestinal flora that has been little studied to date is the focus of a new study. Plasmids are small extrachromosomal genetic elements that frequently occur in bacterial cells and can influence microbial lifestyles – yet their diversity in natural habitats is poorly understood. An international team led by Prof. Dr. A. Murat Eren from the Helmholtz Institute for Functional Marine Biodiversity at the University of Oldenburg (HIFMB) reports in the science journal Cell, a mysterious plasmid, is one of the most numerous genetic elements in the human gut that could potentially serve as a powerful biomarker for identifying ...

Researchers can help shipowners achieve ambitious climate targets

Researchers can help shipowners achieve ambitious climate targets
2024-04-16
Shipowners around the world are in a very difficult position, because they are having to order new ships now that will run on fuel and technologies that are not yet fully developed. A new study suggests that ammonia could be a smart and energy-efficient fuel in the race to achieve net zero in shipping. Researchers at the Department of Industrial Economics and Technology Management (IØT) and the Department of Marine Technology (IMT) at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) ...

Florida Wildlife Corridor eases worst impacts of climate change

Florida Wildlife Corridor eases worst impacts of climate change
2024-04-16
From rising temperatures and altered precipitation patterns to intense weather events such as hurricanes, Florida is experiencing significant climate-related challenges in tandem with skyrocketing insurance rates. As the state’s population continues to surge by 1,000 new residents a day, it is projected to lose 3.5 million acres of land to development by 2070, threatening Florida’s future ability to maintain biodiversity and ecosystem services. A first-of-its-kind study highlights how Florida can buffer itself against both climate change ...

Creating an island paradise in a fusion reactor

Creating an island paradise in a fusion reactor
2024-04-16
In their ongoing quest to develop a range of methods for managing plasma so it can be used to generate electricity in a process known as fusion, researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) have shown how two old methods can be combined to provide greater flexibility.  While the two methods – known as electron cyclotron current drive (ECCD) and applying resonant magnetic perturbations (RMP) – have long been studied, this is the first time researchers have simulated how they can be used together to ...

Field-margin wetlands alone can’t fix the Gulf of Mexico’s dead zone

2024-04-16
Each summer, a hypoxic dead zone forms in the Gulf of Mexico, making some marine habitats unlivable. The dead zone is caused by nutrients—primarily from agricultural fertilizers—flowing into the Gulf from the Mississippi River. Restoring wetlands at field margins has been proposed to intercept some of the runoff, as wetland plants and soils are capable of absorbing nutrients like a living sponge. But estimates of nutrient removal by restored wetlands have varied widely. Shan Zuidema and colleagues took a whole-system approach to modeling the potential for wetlands to ameliorate the flow of nitrate to the ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Efforts to reduce kids' screen time weakened by unequal access to green space

Study reveals rising interest in permanent contraception after Roe v. Wade was overturned

U of M Medical School study finds point-of-care ultrasound enhances early pregnancy care, cuts emergency visits by 81%

Ice patches on Beartooth Plateau reveal how ancient landscape differed from today’s

MMRI scientist publishes breakthrough study detailing how ketones improves blood flow to the heart

2025 Seismological Society of America Annual Meeting

New AI tool uses routine blood tests to predict immunotherapy response for many cancers

1 in 4 U.S. veterans aged 60+ report having being diagnosed with cardiovascular disease at some point, with potential implications for their physical and mental health

These 11 genes may help us better understand forever chemicals’ effects on the brain

Microplastics widespread in seafood people eat

Lead pollution likely caused widespread IQ declines in ancient Rome, new study finds

Researchers reveal ancient dietary habits and early human use of plant foods

NRG Oncology adds new theranostics subcommittee to organization, new leadership members for CCDR and early phase trial oversight committees

New NEJM Perspective article highlights urgent need for widespread adoption of Fracture Liaison Services (FLS) to combat rising burden of osteoporosis-related fractures

Hornwort genomes provide clues on how plants conquered the land

New mechanism discovered that triggers immune response in cells with damaged DNA

Model proposed for treating loneliness in borderline personality disorder

Marco Demaria named editor-in-chief of Aging (Aging-US)

A healthy diet is key to a healthy gut microbiome

New study links millions of diabetes and heart disease cases globally to sugary drinks

Fluoride exposure and children’s IQ scores

Trends in treatment need and receipt for substance use disorders in the US

Gender-affirming medications rarely prescribed to US adolescents

Burden of infections in early life and risk of infections and systemic antibiotics use in childhood

New study shows plummeting STIs with doxyPEP use

Newly discovered 'kiss and capture' mechanism explains the formation of Pluto and its largest moon

New method tracks the 'learning curve' of AI to decode complex genomic data

Nutrient enrichment: an emerging threat to tropical forests

Scientists identify low-cost adsorbents for removing impurities from landfill gas

CDC grant funds initiatives for breast cancer patients

[Press-News.org] Cooler transformers could help electric grid
Stampede2 simulations model transformer hot-spot temperature reductions