Shock and Vibration Testing of An Amb Supported Energy Storage Flywheel
Shock and Vibration Testing of An Amb Supported Energy Storage Flywheel
Shock and Vibration Testing of An Amb Supported Energy Storage Flywheel
ABSTRACT
Shock and vibration testing of an Active Magnetic
Bearing (AMB) supported energy storage flywheel is
presented. The flywheel is under development at the
University of Texas - Center for Electromechanics (UTCEM) for application in a transit bus. The flywheel is
gimbal mounted to reduce the gyroscopic forces
transmitted to the magnetic bearings during pitching
and rolling motions of the bus. The system was placed
on a hydraulic terrain simulator and driven through
pitch, roll and shock motions equivalent to 150% of
maximum expected bus frame values. Although the
AMB control approach was originally developed
specifically to ensure rotordynamic stability, relative
rotor/housing motion was typically less than half of the
backup bearing clearance under all tested conditions.
Test results are presented and compared to analytical
predictions for the 35,000 rpm nominal operating
speed. The impact of the AMB control algorithm is
discussed relative to the input forcing function.
INTRODUCTION
UT-CEM is developing a flywheel energy storage
system, or flywheel battery (FWB), for use in a poweraveraging role in a hybrid electric bus. Several aspects
of this project have been detailed recently in the
literature. Hayes [1], described the FWB design
considerations and low speed testing. Hawkins [2]
described the magnetic bearings, control approach and
backup bearings for this system. Hawkins [3] described
stator power consumption measurements with and
without adaptive synchronous cancellation. Murphy [4]
described the considerations of vehicle/flywheel
dynamics that led to the choices of the orientation of
the FWB in the vehicle, the sizing the magnetic
Presented at The 8th Intl. Symp. on Magnetic Bearings, August 26-28, 2002 Mito, Japan
Presented at The 8th Intl. Symp. on Magnetic Bearings, August 26-28, 2002 Mito, Japan
Gyrodynamic Loads
Gyrodynamic or gyroscopic loads are produced
when the flywheel spin axis is changed, usually due to
maneuvering. A spinning flywheel has a relatively large
angular momentum so changing its spin axis requires
significant torque, which must be produced by the
magnetic bearings. The required torque, T is:
T = I P s &
where IP is the polar moment of inertia, s is the spin
speed, and & is the turning rate of the spin axis. The
associated bearing loads, Fb, are approximately:
Fb = T / b
where b is the bearing span. For the composite
flywheel, spinning at 35,000 rpm, a turning rate of
0.117 rad/s (6.7 degrees/sec) for the flywheel spin axis
requires a bearing load of 669 N (150 lb) at each
bearing. For the titanium test flywheel the same turning
rate results in a bearing load of 274 N (54 lb) at the
same 35,000 rpm spin speed.
Rotating Mass Imbalance Loads
Rotating mass imbalance produces synchronous
bearing loads that depend on the mass imbalance and
the dynamics of the rotor/bearing system. Although the
FWB rotor is well balanced the resulting bearing loads
can still be a significant fraction of bearing capacity.
An advantage of using magnetic bearings is that
adaptive synchronous cancellation can be used to nearly
eliminate bearing loading due to mass imbalance. This
has been demonstrated by many authors, and was
described for this flywheel by Hawkins [3].
Design Considerations
Of the five loading sources mentioned above, three
of them, shock, gyrodynamic, and mass imbalance,
require design consideration to mitigate the loads. The
shock loads are reduced by using elastomeric shock
isolators between the gimbal mounting frame and the
housing. The mass imbalance loads are reduced as
mentioned above by using adaptive synchronous
cancellation. Reducing the gyrodynamic loads require
more significant efforts. First, the flywheel is oriented
vertically so that yawing (turning) of the bus does not
require a change in angular momentum of the flywheel,
and thus no bearing reactions. During turns the vehicle
Maneuvering Loads
Vehicle maneuvering refers to the net rigid body
motion of the vehicle, i.e. any event that changes the
vehicle linear momentum such as braking, accelerating,
or turning. The corresponding linear accelerations lead
directly to loads on the FWB bearings; however, such
loads are limited to several tenths of a g due to tire
adhesion.
0.5
0
-0.5
-1
-1.5
3.00
3.50
4.00
4.50
5.00
Time (seconds)
Presented at The 8th Intl. Symp. on Magnetic Bearings, August 26-28, 2002 Mito, Japan
LT1
4
2
LT2
H1
LC2
Angle (degrees)
B1
B3
B2
0
0 A1
-2
50
LC1
RT1
100
A3
150
A2
H2
250
RT2
-4
LC3
-6
200
H4
H3
-8
Time (seconds)
Table Pitch
Table Roll
Presented at The 8th Intl. Symp. on Magnetic Bearings, August 26-28, 2002 Mito, Japan
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
197
197.2
197.4
197.6
197.8
198
198.2
198.4
198.6
198.8
199
Time (sec)
Table
Flywheel
Presented at The 8th Intl. Symp. on Magnetic Bearings, August 26-28, 2002 Mito, Japan
CONCLUSIONS
The reported testing has verified the suitability of
the flywheel battery skid system for field testing in a
transit bus. The gimbal support reduced the flywheel
bearing loads by about 65%. The shock isolators
reduced the transmitted axial shock by 65%. Most
importantly, the control of the flywheel on the magnetic
bearings is maintained for shock and vibration levels
well in excess of the values that are expected in the
transit bus.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This work was completed under funding provided
by the US Dept. of Trans. (DOT) through the Southern
Coalition for Advanced Transportation (SCAT) and by
the Houston Metropolitan Transit Authority (HMTA).
0.3
0.2
0.1
-1
-0.1
-2
-0.2
-3
Displacement (mm)
Acceleration (g)
-0.3
0
0.1
Vertical Table Accel
0.2
0.3
0.4
Time (seconds)
Vertical FWB Accel
Axial Disp
Acceleration (g)
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
0
0.05
0.1
0.15
0.2
0.25
0.3
0.35
0.4
-1
-0.1
-2
-0.2
-3
-0.3
Time (seconds)
Axial Disp
Presented at The 8th Intl. Symp. on Magnetic Bearings, August 26-28, 2002 Mito, Japan