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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It spins in absolute silence at 25,000 to 52,000 rpm, floating in a vacuum nearly as a devoid of molecules as outer space. Yet, charged within this 12-inch-diameter flywheel is a 190-kW jolt of power.

The thought of it strikes Dirk Freeman as almost eerie, “like levitation,” he says. A former technology consultant to Longmont Broadcasting, now with Blair Media, Freeman recently bought one for KDEN/Telemundo’s multimillion-dollar digital TV transmission facility near Denver, CO. “It’s like something out of science-fiction or the supernatural,” he marvels.

Actually, it’s a condensed carbon-fiber composite flywheel. What makes this extraordinary power density work, is a combination of light weight, at only 25 pounds; a nearly airless environment, which eliminates the heat and wear of its extremely rapid spinning; and a frictionless, bearing-free harness of magnetic-levitation technology.

When Freeman first read about the wheel, made by Pentadyne Power Corp. of Chatsworth, CA, near Los Angeles, he decided he’d someday have to get one.

In time he found uninterruptible power supply (UPS) manufacturer Toshiba, who markets the Pentadyne VSS+DC clean-energy system with their cutting-edge G8000 UPS generator. And, in 2007, he also located an apt home for one at KDEN/Telemundo, thus making this client the first anywhere to apply the fascinating flywheel as a backup for digital broadcast transmission technology (although a number of broadcasters were already using Pentadynes with other UPS packages).

For its part, KDEN/Telemundo is now assured that its signals—beaming from a site in the middle of nowhere, some distance from Denver—will never stop, at least not due to a local outage or voltage sag.

Frictionless = Ultimate Low-Maintenance
For all its 160-kW energy, the flywheel’s power comes in just a burst, which lasts, says Freeman, “at full load, from 17 to 21 seconds”—very brief, yet enough time for the UPS to start the ignition on an integrated Cummins diesel.

Next, as the backup power revs to accept the transmitter’s protected load, the flywheel transitions back to standby, then recharges in seconds. The load never even senses the interrupting blip in its high-quality, conditioned power.

Freeman does concede that, in this kind of application, earlier-generation heavy steel flywheel systems, or lead-acid batteries, “do work as well.” However, the new ultra-light flywheel design offers several practical benefits, which make it far more desirable. Above all, gone from the scene, now, are the burdens of lead battery cells maintenance. These typically entail quarterly visits and frequent monitoring, incur high-operating costs, give only relatively low reliability, and impose a significant burden for physical floorspace. In the case of KDEN/Telemundo, battery packs would have meant adding a 100-square-foot room, with an indoor environment kept, “isolated, cooled, and temperature-controlled” at 25°C (72°F),” Freeman figures.

By contrast, the new 5.7-square-foot, 71-inch tall flywheel cabinet operates comfortably in the same wide range (i.e., 0°C–40°C / 32°F–122°F) as the other UPS components.

And, overall, when comparing the demands of either a battery set or the massive steel-disk flywheels which use metal bearings, Freeman’s Pentadyne promises much more power, in less space, with minuscule maintenance.

And, operationally, since its installation in mid-2007, he reports, “We have repeatedly tested it, including putting it through a simulated crowbar event on the transmitter.” (This test directs tens of thousands of volts instantly to ground, to protect the transmission gear’s inductive output tubes, one of which can cost as much as a Pentadyne flywheel.) Through all the tests and real-world conditions, nothing has yet fazed the system.

Bye-Bye to Batteries?
At sites having even greater power loads, the benefits of eliminating batteries grow even more attractive.

By way of illustration: in one high-end three-phase UPS system offered by Liebert subsidiary Emerson Network Power, in order to get a 540-V internal DC voltage rail, notes Emerson’s power systems senior product manager Bill Campbell, “You need what amounts to two 240-cell battery blocks in series or, if using 12-V jars [like car batteries]… 40 of them in series.”

Campbell notes that Emerson/Liebert (well-recognized as a leading UPS vendors) has sold most of the 300-plus flywheels that Pentadyne has shipped from its Chatsworth factory over the last five years, and has been delighted to be able to offer this alternative.

The scores of batteries that Campbell describes for one UPS system, easily mounts much higher at larger sites and data-centers, and can run into hundreds, and even thousands, of cells. For instance, the 500-bed Sparrow Hospital in Lansing, MI, has previously needed “truckloads” of batteries, notes Jon Harris, who oversees the hospital’s electrical services. On a 1,000-amp circuit, he says, “If I want to ride through an [outage] period of 30 seconds to a minute, I have to put in ... a huge number of batteries, with all their weight and space.”

Of course, space in a hospital is in short supply and expensive. In 2006, Sparrow upgraded to a frictionless carbon-fiber flywheel Liebert FS and Liebert 610 UPS. For Harris, a load that had formerly required a scattered array of more than 100 batteries is now being protected with a single centralized backup.

As for the dollar-and-cents, although the six Liebert FS carbon fiber flywheels at Sparrow did cost more initially, Harris estimates that they should pay for themselves in just three to five years. In fact, the payback curve has been rapidly improving against initial estimates, due to a steep run-up in the cost of lead for batteries.

At any rate, after recovering its investment, Sparrow Hospital anticipates getting a total of more than half a million dollars’ worth of avoided battery costs, over the 20-year flywheel life.

Gone too will be battery-mandated space cooling chores, health and safety risks, environmental controls, and hazardous materials disposal headaches.

Meanwhile, the benefit of regaining several hundred square feet of floor space will be immediate.

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Following its initial order, hospital managers have recently bought a dozen more Liebert UPS systems to back up the cardiology, neurology, catheterization, magnetic resonance, computerized tomography departments, and an IT center.

Hybrid UPS Power Preserves Batteries
Given the wheel’s technical advances, this next point will seem paradoxical, and the “bye-bye batteries” scenario looks a bit premature; it turns out that a second major role for the flywheels comes in complementing rather than replacing batteries. Next Page >

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