Directing the Power: Engineering Professor Aims to Create Change with DC Circuit Breaker Technology

Date

Author

By Andrew Wyder
John Shen lab 1280x850

As John Shen likes to say, Thomas Edison was right鈥攈e was just 100 years or so too early.

Shen, the Grainger Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Illinois Institute of Technology, believes that Edison was right when he said, in the late nineteenth century, that direct current (DC) is a better form of electricity than alternating current (AC).

Yet, despite the benefits of DC electricity鈥擲hen points to it being more efficient and stable as compared to AC electricity鈥攊t has yet to become the preferred source of power for, among others, one key reason: a lack of effective, cost-efficient DC circuit breakers.

Shen and his research team are working to change that.

鈥淒C is coming back. The largest barrier is the lack of circuit breakers for the DC power grid,鈥 Shen says. 鈥淵ou can buy an AC circuit breaker from a Home Depot for $5 or $10 that are very reliable, but you can鈥檛 use those for DC power networks.鈥

Backed by $1.7 million in grants from the Advanced Research Projects Agency Energy (ARPA-E), of the United States Department of Energy, Shen and his research team have been working since December 2017 to develop several solid-state circuit breaker technologies.

The technology would make it easier to utilize DC electricity, an issue since Edison鈥檚 time.

鈥淒C is indeed a more efficient, better form of electricity,鈥 Shen says. 鈥淯nfortunately, at the time, people did not know how to raise the voltage level in DC. They have the transformers for AC, so they can raise the voltage level for long-distance transmission. That鈥檚 why AC won the war. That鈥檚 changed. We do have the means to step up and step down the DC voltage level with power electronic technology.鈥

Among the prototypes that the Illinois Tech graduate students on Shen鈥檚 research team have developed include a 380-volt iBreaker for DC data centers and a new version of Smart Plug devices, which control home appliances via Wi-Fi while also protecting against fire or shock hazards in homes and offices.

That鈥檚 not the end goal of the work, though.

鈥淲e鈥檙e creating more of a platform technology, rather than products,鈥 Shen says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e developing technology. Some of those prototypes are used to demonstrate the capability of the technology.鈥

As priority continues to be placed on products that are energy efficient鈥攎any energy-efficient products run on DC power, which also powers products such as personal computers and LED lamps鈥攖he technology that Shen and his team are developing and hope to eventually take to market would make it easier to utilize DC power. Currently, DC-powered products have to draw power from the AC outlet and then convert it to DC with undesirable power losses.  

鈥淔or the same voltage level, you get 40 percent more DC power using the same set of cables than AC,鈥 Shen says. 鈥淔or DC, you鈥檙e always transmitting at the peak voltage. You鈥檙e utilizing the hardware resources constantly, versus AC, where you鈥檙e only utilizing [the hardware resources] a fraction of the time. That is why DC is becoming popular in high-voltage (HVDC) transmission systems.鈥

鈥淎lmost all of our electronic loads such as computers and printers run on DC power, and some of our renewable power sources such as solar panels generate DC power. By using DC power directly,鈥 Shen adds, 鈥測ou eliminate the DC-AC-DC power conversion stages that hurt your energy efficiency.鈥

The information, data, or work presented herein was funded in part by the Advanced Research Projects Agency Energy (ARPA-E), U.S. Department of Energy, under Award Number DEAR0000890. The views and opinions of authors expressed herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of the United States Government or any agency thereof.

Photo: Grainger Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering John Shen (left) talks to a student behind the iBreaker prototype.