March-April 2008

Power Riding on Thin Air

Flywheel promises 50,000-hour MTBF and near-zero maintenance.

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By David Engle

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Not Gambling with Power Surety
Cache Creek Casino Resort in rural Brooks, CA, north of Sacramento provides several more examples of how the flywheel can provide additional flexibility and reliability.

Project manager and electrical specialist Tim Horton notes that the site has historically suffered outages, which sometimes lasted hours, and thus UPS reliability is all-important. Casino slot machines and table games are, he says, “very critical loads for us and must be on uninterruptible power; every voltage event or outage comes at great inconvenience to all.”

Horton’s first UPS, which was purchased four years ago and is still in use, relies on a large steel rotary flywheel. Unfortunately, not long after the casino’s opening in 2004, the wheel had a run of bad luck, blowing bearings and losing a breaker.

So, a quest began to find, as he puts it, “the side ‘B’ for the casino’s A/B power need—a nice, clean, uninterruptible power for the gaming floor,” one giving adequate kilovolt-amperes and spin-time to allow for the backup generator to start, “and to handle uneven power with swells and sags.”

As he searched the marketplace, Horton did keep the door open for steel flywheels, and he evaluated two vendors’ models; however, phone calls to other casino operations for references revealed that, “They were having terrible trouble,” just as he’d had, with bad bearings and motherboards. Service techs were always busy fixing them.

Ultimately, based on positive past experiences with Liebert, he opted for its 610 model UPS; and, for the energy storage plant, he integrated five 225-kW Pentadyne carbon fiber flywheels and two battery banks. The total came to 1,000 kilovolt-amperes, for a plus-one redundancy cushion of about 40%.

In the new system, a bidder’s quote for delivering these five high-performance flywheels surprisingly beat out the rival bid for a single, enormous (room-filling), steel-wheel-equipped UPS.

All in all, then, it was a highly attractive proposition. And, so far at least, the new system has worked out beautifully.

First, says Horton, the flexibility in having five wheels means that the failure of one (unlikely though that may be) will cause just minor inconvenience and merely a fractional loss of backup. “The generator will still synch within eight seconds,” he says, and the slot machines will keep spinning.

Second, electrical maintenance, whether scheduled or otherwise, can occur without the necessity of powering-up the generator, as was necessary before.

Third, the five-cabinet modularity will allow for the shifting of resources around the property, from one quadrant to another, as needs dictate. On this score, for even more versatility, Horton recently purchase a Liebert integrated static switch, “so now I can move loads around automatically, in case of a failure, or for the sake of maintenance, and also in the event of outages,” he says. “I can switch from one unit to another and never have downtime… [The switch] has given us redundancy. I can keep the floor up and our customers happy during the phase-in of the new equipment,” which was occurring in mid-2007. “It’s an amazing switch,” he sums up, and says he’s in the process of ordering more to manage the entire property.

Looking ahead, with modular flywheels, Horton says, “You can series the flywheels together as much as you need to back your load. We stopped at five—giving us four-plus-one—but left future space in the system for added load… if we need more time.” Neither kind of flexibility was possible before. According to Horton, size, flexibility, price, operational ease, and state-of-the-art technology “made this a much easier proposition for us. We are very satisfied so far. We’re having beautiful luck with them, and excellent service.”

Cost and Payback
Horton preferred not to discuss the project’s total cost figures, except to note, again, that, of the five-flywheels, UPS came in, surprisingly, as the low bid, in addition to being the preferred solution technically.

At the San José Airport, Naik reports that his department spent about $50,000 on a UPS, and another $50,000 for the Pentadyne flywheel as the power source. Given the wheel’s dramatically lower maintenance need, its 6-year mean-time-between-failure rating, its ability to prolong battery life, and the prospect of enhanced overall energy surety, he says, “It was not a tough sell.” In fact, more flywheels will be on order for the city’s new airport terminal, now under construction.

A Pentadyne-equipped UPS will typically cost more, Campbell concedes, but the difference compared to a lower-first-cost battery plant will be recovered within a few years. Thereafter, over the system life cycle a customer will be “far better off,” he says, as a Pentadyne flywheel is much less expensive to operate and maintain, and provides exceptional uptime.

Remarkable MTBF, and the extraordinarily light wear-tear and maintenance, are due to: the absence of any bearings; the elimination of the need for costly overhaul; the avoidance of scheduled downtime expense; and the elimination of a mechanical pump otherwise required to maintain a high vacuum, as Pentadyne’s Johnny Gonzales, vice president of sales, points out.

Keith Field, Pentadyne’s marketing vice president, adds that the flywheel’s operating costs are dramatically lower than those of earlier-generation steel flywheels. “The standby draw of the entire flywheel system is only 275 watts,” he says. Without any bearing and pump maintenance intervals to worry about—each costing several thousand dollars and hours of downtime— “the Pentadyne system,” says Field, “is probably the highest uptime availability energy storage product on the market.” The only recommended service is replacement of a set of capacitors (as is typical of any UPS), requiring one hour every six years, at a cost of a few hundred dollars.

Toshiba’s Greg Mack, who is business unit manager for the company’s UPS division, has found that, “Sites that have few power problems and no step loads, like data centers, get return on investment by the time of what would be the first battery string replacement: about three or four years.” In the medical equipment sector, he adds, “Payback is much faster.” Certain medical equipment “creates havoc for batteries,” wearing them out as often as “every 12 to 18 months, due to the frequent cycling,” he says. All in all, a compact flywheel for hospitals, in lieu of batteries is “a perfect solution.”

Flywheel Tech: The ‘Revolution’
Pentadyne’s Field summarizes by offering a brief perspective on the flywheel’s physics and early development, early in this decade.

Previous-generation steel flywheels, introduced in the 1990s, had relied on a massive puck weighing half a ton and measuring several feet in diameter, he notes. At that size, rolling on bearings, it could spin at 7,000 rpm.

However, such great mass can theoretically be reduced without a loss of power, if speed can be increased. Indeed, “Doubling rpm quadruples the energy capacity,” he says.

That principle spurred Pentadyne to develop a smaller, lighter wheel “that spins seven times faster,” he says. The end product coming from Pentadyne’s R&D shop was a mere 25-pound carbon-fiber cylinder— “about size of a racing tire on a go cart,” as one customer puts it.

Besides using mag-lev technology, “the other big breakthrough,” Field continues, ‘is the systems’ powerful internal vacuum, which reduces aerodynamic drag.”

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This is accomplished with a vacuum sleeve on the rotating shaft, eliminating the need for mechanical pump, and reducing maintenance even further. End result: no friction, no heat, no energy loss, and very high power density.

From this, a patented synchronous-reluctance motor-generator produces the high power. It all adds up to a floating flywheel, which boasts, he says, “an extremely energy-efficient design.”  

Author's Bio: David Engle, a writer based in La Mesa, CA, specializes in construction-related topics.

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