May-June 2007

A Primer of Flywheel Technology

Not much noise, but lots of buzz

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By Henry Vere

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Most people who know anything about flywheels probably know that they work through the acceleration of a rotor to a very high speed while energy is maintained in this system as inertial energy. Commercially available flywheel energy storage (FES) systems have traditionally been used for small uninterruptible power supply (UPS) systems operating at 4,000 rpm or less and are made of metal.

More advanced FES systems feature high-strength, carbon-composite filaments that spin at speeds from 20,000 rpm to 100,000 rpm in a vacuum enclosure. Magnetic bearings are used in this case due to the buildup of friction—proportional to speed—in conventional mechanical-bearing FES systems. (Friction would be high enough to cause such a great energy loss as to defeat its purpose of energy storage.) Rapid charging of a system occurs in less than 15 minutes.

A long lifespan for most flywheels, high-energy densities, and large maximum power outputs are some of the nuts-and-bolts reasons that flywheels make sense in a growing number of applications. The technology has continued to evolve since the 1950s, when early flywheel-powered buses called gyrobuses began driving through Yverdon, Switzerland. As manufacturers and developers will attest, flywheel systems are growing in industrial applications and distinctive settings.

Sticking to What Works
Austin, TX–based Active Power holds over 42 patents on the technology supporting its integrated flywheel UPS, developed over the past 15 years. The company is a main player in battery-free UPS systems and has offers flywheel products and compressed-air products alike. The company’s chairman, Joe Pinkerton, is the inventor and patent holder on Active Power’s technology. The flywheel system contains an integrated flywheel-UPS system all in one box, making the machine very efficient from a space perspective.

“In today’s environment, where the data-center market is starting to boom again, companies want to use their floor space for selling space to their customers, not for rooms full of batteries,” says Lisa Brown, Active Power’s vice president of marketing and service. “We can put twice the power in half the space, which is a great selling feature for us. Also, the energy-efficiency factor is important. Our customers save much on their utility bills.”

The machinery is manufactured in Active Power’s 120,000-square-foot operations and manufacturing facility in Austin. The company’s equipment is now installed in over 40 countries worldwide.

“We’ve been at this a long time and are undoubtedly the world leader in our field, which is medium-speed flywheels, just under 8,000 rpm,” says Ian Bitterlin, Active Power’s vice president for Europe, Middle East, Asia, and Asia Pacific operations. “We’ve built 1,400 flywheels and are tracking 1,050 of them in the field today with a wide variety of applications.”

Those applications are split currently at about 60% industrial (hospitals and airports) and 40% information technology (IT) uses. “There really aren’t any downsides to our flywheel technology, aside from perhaps the fact that they are nearly always associated with a diesel-generator system,” says Bitterlin. “We effectively have the bridge between the mains failing and the generator starting. A battery gives five to 10 minutes of backup power, while one of our flywheels would be giving 15 to 20 seconds of backup.”

A very small footprint and an efficient UPS system are Active Power’s biggest draw. In an IT application, most UPS systems run at about 50%–60% load, or 40%–50% typically, especially if they’re in a parallel redundancy application, according to Bitterlin.

“In a super-critical application, this ensures that in case one flywheel fails, the other one will be there to pick up the load,” says Bitterlin. “Our system is up to 98% efficient. Whereas many other systems may only be 90% to 93% efficient, the extra percentage points do add up—both for the environment and in real utility costs.”

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Active Power is currently shipping the system for an 8-MW project in Algeria and has provided systems for highly critical computer centers. It is the original equipment manufacturer and technology provider for Caterpillar, branding many of its products with the Caterpillar name after doing all the engineering work.

The mix is gradually changing as Active Power grows direct distribution capability in various markets and sells more products under its own brand name, according to Brown. Next Page >

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