Design of a Low-Loss, Low-Cost Rolling Element Bearing System for a 5 kWh/100 kW Flywheel Energy Storage System
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Motivation and Current State of the Art
2.1. Bearing Systems in Currently Available FESS
Research in Low-Cost, Low-Loss FESS Bearings
- I
- “Experimental Characterization of Low-Speed Passive Discharge Losses of a Flywheel Energy Storage System” by M. Skinner and P. Mertiny [22].
- II
- “Flywheel Energy Storage System with Spherical Spiral Groove Bearing” by J.-I. Itoh and N. Yamada [23].
- III
- “Flywheel energy storage system with a permanent magnet bearing and a pair of hybrid ceramic ball bearings” by S. Jiang, W. Hongchang and S. Wen [24].
- To assess the torque loss of rolling bearings in FESS, windage losses must also be considered/isolated, which requires thorough evacuation of the tested flywheel system.
- Passive discharge losses in FESS are rarely dealt with in the literature, with the following publications presenting similar methods and results:
- ○
- Skinner and Mertiny’s paper [22], for instance, focuses on windage losses and a curve-fit model for overall losses, whereas the publication at hand goes into greater detail regarding bearing system design.
- ○
- Suzuki et al. [23] investigate and optimize inner bearing geometry to achieve friction loss optimization. In comparison, the publication at hand is based on off-the-shelf bearings and deals with the bearing periphery for optimization purposes. Therefore, advantages regarding cost for small batch size are be taken into account.
- ○
- Jiang et al. [24] conducted a study, which focuses on machine dynamics of a FESS rotor and include measurements of rolling bearing system power losses. A comparison with the results of the work at hand is given in Section 4.1.
2.2. Bearing and Other Losses in FESS
- Self-discharge
- Service life
- Maintenance intervals
- Thermal management
- System cost
2.3. Main Aim of This Work
2.4. Description of the 5-kWh–100-kW FESS
2.5. Operating Parameters and Target Properties of the Projected FESS
3. Functional Requirements in Bearing System Design for FESS
3.1. Machine Dynamics
- the resilient mounting of the bearing shield in the housing
- the spring preload, which does not provide an end stop
- a low angular stiffness of the bearing on the shaft
3.2. Bearing Loads
3.2.1. Radial Bearing Loads
3.2.2. Axial Bearing Loads
- (a)
- The rotor weight
- (b)
- (Intentional) axial bearing preload
- (a)
- Magnetic Rotor Weight Compensation
- (b)
- Axial Bearing Preloading
- Setup A consists of coil springs attached on each bearing shield. This configuration ensures constant, precisely adjustable axial preload. Nevertheless, this configuration is very prone to vibrations and attention must be paid to axial oscillations as a result of potential external axial excitations. These excitations may be caused by overall system machine dynamics or the naturally instable characteristics of an attracting magnetic weight compensation.
- In Setup B a spring presses the opposite bearing shield against an end-stop. This design is very robust and simple, but it must be assured that rotor weight compensation does not exceed 100% and relieve the bearing pressed against the end-stop as this state would lead to issues regarding bearing kinematics as discussed in Section 3.2.3.
3.2.3. Bearing Kinematics
- Minimum Load Limit
- Spin-to-Roll Ratio
- An increase in external axial bearing load
- Decreasing rotational speed
- The use of ceramic rolling elements (hybrid bearings—this effect may be attributed to the higher modulous of elasticity of ceramic (e.g., Si3N4) rolling elements and the lower density compared to steel, resulting in reduced centripetal forces).
3.2.4. Bearing Fatigue Limit
3.2.5. Adjustment of Preload and Weight Compensation
4. Thermal Management and Lubrication
- Bearing thermal conductance
- Bearing torque loss
4.1. Thermal Properties of the Bearing System
4.2. Lubrication
- Maximum permissible temperature of the cage: This part is usually made from polyamide and limited at around 100–120 °C or PEEK for higher temperatures up to 150 °C [37].
- Service life of the lubricant: When operated above the so-called continuous limit temperature), the service life of the lubricant is reduced exponentially [28].
5. Final System Specifications
6. Summary and Conclusions
- The use of rolling element bearings is significantly cheaper than active magnetic bearings.
- -
- AMBs may be advantageous in terms of service life and offer adjustable stiffness and damping, which is beneficial in terms of achieving reliable machine dynamics behavior [48].
- -
- Drawbacks because of low damping in REBs are compensated for by the introduction of an elastomer suspension, which provides external (viscous) damping to the bearing system. Compared to widely used squeeze film dampers [24], elastomer suspension concepts are advantageous in terms of cost.
- -
- Limited service life of REBs can be improved through different measures, such as magnetic weight compensation and supercritical machine dynamics operation strategy. Both aspects are dealt with in Section 3.
- The use of easy to manufacture passive vibration isolation measures (cast elastomer structures using 3-D printed casts) is cheaper than active measures such as squeeze film dampers or piezo actuators.
- The resilient bearing seat allows looser tolerancing (and super-critical rotor operation) resulting in reduced manufacturing cost.
6.1. Conclusions and Future Recommendations
6.2. Torque Loss and Thermal Conductance
6.3. Emergency Mode and Performance Enhancing Coatings
6.4. Reduced Cost and Manufacturing Tolerances
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Company | Country | Year | Type | Energy Content | Power Rating | Speed | Life Span | Bearing | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
kWh | kW | rpm | Years | ||||||
Siemens | GER | 2014 | prototype | 0.5 | 120 | 10,000 | n.a. | AMB | [9] |
Velkess | USA | 2011 | prototype | 5–15 | 9 | 9000 | 10 years | REB | [10] |
Active Power (750HD UPS) | USA | 2015 | series | 2.9 | 675 | 7700 | 20 years | REB | [11] |
Temporal Power | CAN | 2016 | series | 50 | 1000 | 12,000 | 20 years | REB | [12] |
Beacon Power | USA | 2008 | series | 25 | 100 | 16,000 | n.a. | AMB | [13] |
Quantum Power | USA | 2015 | prototype | 360 | 150 | 6000 | 20 years | REB | [9] |
Kinetic Traction Systems | USA | 2015 | series | 1.5 | 333 | 36,000 | 10 Mio cycles | AMB | [14] |
PowerTHRU | USA | 2014 | series | 0.53 | 225 | 52,000 | 20 years’ service interval | AMB | [15] |
Calnetix Vycon (VDC-XXE) | USA | 2015 | series | 1.67 | 300 | 36,750 | 20 years | AMB | [16] |
Calnetix Vycon (VDC-XXT) | USA | 2015 | series | 1.74 | 450 | 36,750 | 20 years | AMB | [16] |
Rosseta (T4) | GER | 2011 | prototype | 1.5 | 250 | 50,000 | 20 years | REB | [17] |
Boeing Phantom | USA | 2007 | prototype | 5 | 100 | 15,000 | >25 years | AMB | [18] |
Dynastore | GER | 2006 | prototype | 11 | 2000 | 10,000 | n.a. | AMB | [19] |
Amber Kinetics (GEN-2) | USA | 2015 | series | 25 | 6.25 | 8500 | 30 years | REB | [20] |
Storenetic (EnWheel 22/60) | GER | 2018 | series | 3.6 | 22/80 | 45,000 | n.a. | AMB | [21] |
Resonance Frequency | Damping Ratio | Stiffness |
---|---|---|
190.5 Hz | 0.035 | 4.1 N/µm |
Electromagnet | Permanent Magnet |
---|---|
Requires electric power during operation | No power required during operation |
Increased geometric complexity due to required cooling channel and windings | Off the shelf magnets limited in size and strength |
Unstable characteristic with decreasing air gap | Inhomogeneous magnetization in circumferential direction results in eddy current losses |
Homogenous magnetic field easily feasible | Segmented magnets for large rotors exhibit inhomogeneous magnetic field |
Good controllability |
Influencing Factor | Thermal Behavior | |
---|---|---|
Power Loss | Thermal Conductance | |
Increase of bearing load | Increase a | Increase b |
Increase of rotational speed | Increase a | Increase b |
Thermal Reference Speed | Conditions Present in FESS | |
---|---|---|
Axis of rotation | horizontal | vertical |
Lubrication | Oil bath lubrication | Minimum quantity lubrication with grease |
External load | Only radial load FR = 0.05 × C0 FA = 0 | Primarily axial load FR < 0.001 × C0 FA < 0.02 × C0 |
150 N Preload | 210 N Preload | 270 N Preload | |
---|---|---|---|
Bearing temperature (inner ring) | 148.6 °C | 137.4 °C | 126.4 °C |
NyeTorr 6200 | 179a | UNIFLOR 8771 | |
---|---|---|---|
Base oil | MAC | PAO | PFPE |
Vapor pressure (25 °C) in mbar | 6.27 × 10−12 | 4.00 × 10−8 | 7.40 × 10−10 |
Vapor Pressure (100 °C) in mbar | 4.27 × 10−8 | 1.33 × 10−5 | n.a. |
Vapor pressure (150 °C) in mbar | 2.67 × 10−6 | Temp. limit exceeded | 1.68 × 10−6 |
Reference | [44] | [45] | [46] |
Specifications of the 5 kWh/100 kW FESS | |||
---|---|---|---|
Energy content | 5 kWh | Operational speed range | 10,000 rpm–30,000 rpm |
Total mass | 146 kg | Bearing arrangement | X-arrangement |
Orientation rotational axis | vertical | Bearing | Myonic-SRD 30550VA, contact angle: 15°, bore diameter: 30 mm |
Surrounding pressure | 10−4 mbar | Preload concept | Spring preload: 300 N |
Lubrication | Vacuum suitable grease |
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Haidl, P.; Buchroithner, A. Design of a Low-Loss, Low-Cost Rolling Element Bearing System for a 5 kWh/100 kW Flywheel Energy Storage System. Energies 2021, 14, 7195. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14217195
Haidl P, Buchroithner A. Design of a Low-Loss, Low-Cost Rolling Element Bearing System for a 5 kWh/100 kW Flywheel Energy Storage System. Energies. 2021; 14(21):7195. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14217195
Chicago/Turabian StyleHaidl, Peter, and Armin Buchroithner. 2021. "Design of a Low-Loss, Low-Cost Rolling Element Bearing System for a 5 kWh/100 kW Flywheel Energy Storage System" Energies 14, no. 21: 7195. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14217195
APA StyleHaidl, P., & Buchroithner, A. (2021). Design of a Low-Loss, Low-Cost Rolling Element Bearing System for a 5 kWh/100 kW Flywheel Energy Storage System. Energies, 14(21), 7195. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14217195