Flywheel: For Other Uses, See
Flywheel: For Other Uses, See
Flywheel: For Other Uses, See
Trevithick's 1802 steam locomotive used a flywheel to even out the power of its single cylinder
Flywheel movement
An industrial flywheel.
A flywheel is a rotating mechanical device that is used to store rotational energy. Flywheels have an
inertia called the moment of inertiaand thus resist changes in rotational speed. The amount of
energy stored in a flywheel is proportional to the square of its rotational speed. Energy is transferred
to a flywheel by the application of a torque to it, thereby increasing its rotational speed, and hence its
stored energy. Conversely, a flywheel releases stored energy by applying torque to a mechanical
load, thereby decreasing the flywheel's rotational speed.
Common uses of a flywheel include:
Providing continuous energy when the energy source is discontinuous. For example,
flywheels are used in reciprocating enginesbecause the energy source, torque from the engine,
is intermittent.
Delivering energy at rates beyond the ability of a continuous energy source. This is achieved
by collecting energy in the flywheel over time and then releasing the energy quickly, at rates that
exceed the abilities of the energy source.
Contents
[hide]
1Applications
2History
3Physics
4Material selection
o 5.1High-energy materials
o 5.2Rimmed
6See also
7References
8External links
Applications[edit]
Flywheels are often used to provide continuous energy in systems where the energy source is not
continuous. In such cases, the flywheel stores energy when torque is applied by the energy source,
and it releases stored energy when the energy source is not applying torque to it. For example, a
flywheel is used to maintain constant angular velocity of the crankshaft in a reciprocating engine. In
this case, the flywheelwhich is mounted on the crankshaftstores energy when torque is exerted
on it by a firing piston, and it releases energy to the crankshaft when a piston is in the process of
compressing a fresh charge of air and fuel. Other examples of this are friction motors, which use
flywheel energy to power devices such as toy cars. In uses like this, the distribution of the mass of
the flywheel toward the outside and away from the center is beneficial. Pushing the mass away from
the axis of rotation gives it greater rotational inertia without increasing its total mass. This increases
the efficiency of the flywheel, since it does not have as much difficulty driving its own weight forward
as well as that of the payload.
Modern automobile engine flywheel
A flywheel may also be used to supply intermittent pulses of energy at transfer rates that exceed the
abilities of its energy source, or when such pulses would disrupt the energy supply (e.g., public
electric network). This is achieved by accumulating stored energy in the flywheel over a period of
time, at a rate that is compatible with the energy source, and then releasing that energy at a much
higher rate over a relatively short time when it is needed. For example, flywheels are used in riveting
machines to store energy from the motor and release it during the riveting operation.A flywheel also
doubles the rotational energy received from a source of rotation (e.g motors)
The phenomenon of precession has to be considered when using flywheels in vehicles. A rotating
flywheel responds to any momentum that tends to change the direction of its axis of rotation by a
resulting precession rotation. A vehicle with a vertical-axis flywheel, that is rigidly attached to the
vehicle, would experience a torque applied to the body of the vehicle that would rotate with as the
flywheel precesses. This would produce an alternating rolling and pitching of the vehicle body as it
moved up the incline. The descent of the hill would produce the opposite effect and so it would zero
out the pitching and rolling (roll momentum in response to a pitch change). Two counter-rotating
flywheels may be needed to eliminate this effect. This effect is used in reaction wheels, a type of
flywheel employed in satellites in which the flywheel is used to orient the satellite's instruments
without the use of thruster rockets. Alternatively, the flywheel would be mounted in two yokes, with
axes at mutual right angles, and so allow limited changes to the orientation of the vehicle body
thereby eliminating precession.
History[edit]
The principle of the flywheel is found in the Neolithic spindle and the potter's wheel.[4]
The use of the flywheel as a general mechanical device to equalize the speed of rotation is,
according to the American medievalist Lynn White, recorded in the De diversibus artibus (On various
arts) of the German artisan Theophilus Presbyter (ca. 10701125) who records applying the device
in several of his machines.[4][5]
In the Industrial Revolution, James Watt contributed to the development of the flywheel in the steam
engine, and his contemporary James Pickard used a flywheel combined with a crank to transform
reciprocating motion into rotary motion.
Physics[edit]
A flywheel with variable moment of inertia, conceived by Leonardo da Vinci.
A flywheel is a spinning wheel or disc with a fixed axle so that rotation is only about one axis. Energy
is stored in the rotor as kinetic energy, or more specifically, rotational energy:
where:
is the moment of inertia of the mass about the center of rotation. The moment of inertia is
the measure of resistance to torque applied on a spinning object (i.e. the higher the moment of
inertia, the slower it will spin when a given force is applied).
Material selection[edit]
Flywheels are made from many different materials; the demands of the application determine the
choice of material. Small flywheels made of lead are found in childrens toys. Cast iron flywheels are
used in old steam engines. Flywheels are used in cars to smooth power-transmission. Flywheels
made from high-strength steel or composites have been proposed for use in vehicle power storage
and braking systems.
The efficiency of a flywheel is determined by the amount of energy it can store per unit weight. As
the flywheels rotational speed or angular velocity is increased, the stored energy increases;
however, the centrifugal stresses also increase. If the centrifugal stresses surpass the tensile
strength of the material, the flywheel will break apart. Thus, the tensile strength determines an upper
limit to the amount of energy that a flywheel can store.
In this context, using lead for a flywheel in a childs toy is not efficient; however, the flywheel velocity
never approaches its burst velocity because the limit in this case is the pulling-power of the child. In
other applications, such as an automobile, the flywheel operates at a specified angular velocity and
is constrained by the space it must fit in, so the goal is to maximize the stored energy per unit
volume. The material selection therefore depends on the application.[7]
The table below contains calculated values for materials and comments on their viability for flywheel
applications. CFRP stands for carbon-fiber-reinforced polymer, and GFRP stands for glass-fiber
reinforced polymer.
200-2000 (compression
Ceramics Brittle and weak in tension, therefore eliminate
only)
High strength Mg
100-200 About equal performance to steel and Al-alloys
alloys
[8]
The table below shows calculated values for mass, radius, and angular velocity for storing 500 J.
The carbon-fiber flywheel is by far the most efficient; however, it also has the largest radius. In
applications (like in an automobile) where the volume is constrained, a carbon-fiber flywheel might
not be the best option.
[9]
Regenerative
0.5 3000 50 8,000 33.0 9.1 0.003
braking in trains
Electric power
0.5 600 50 30,000 92.0 26.0 0.043
backup[10]
[11][12][13][14]
For comparison, the energy density of petrol (gasoline) is 44.4 MJ/kg or 12.3 kWh/kg.
High-energy materials[edit]
For a given flywheel design, the kinetic energy is proportional to the ratio of the hoop stress to the
material density and to the mass:
could be called the specific tensile strength. The flywheel material with the highest specific tensile
strength will yield the highest energy storage per unit mass. This is one reason why carbon fiber is a
material of interest.
For a given design the stored energy is proportional to the hoop stress and the volume:
Rimmed[edit]
A rimmed flywheel has a rim, a hub, and spokes.[15] Calculation of the flywheel's moment of inertia
can be more easily analysed by applying various simplifications. For example:
Assume the spokes, shaft and hub have zero moments of inertia, and the flywheel's moment
of inertia is from the rim alone.
The lumped moments of inertia of spokes, hub and shaft may be estimated as a percentage
of the flywheel's moment of inertia, with the majority from the rim, so that
For example, if the moments of inertia of hub, spokes and shaft are deemed negligible, and the rim's
thickness is very small compared to its mean radius (), the radius of rotation of the rim is equal to its
mean radius and thus:
See also[edit]
Dual mass flywheel
Flywheel energy storage
Clutch
References[edit]
1. Jump up^ [1]; "Flywheels move from steam age technology to Formula 1"; Jon Stewart | 1
July 2012, retrieved 2012-07-03
2. Jump up^ [2], "Breakthrough in Ricardo Kinergy second generation high-speed flywheel
technology"; Press release date: 22 August 2011. retrieved 2012-07-03
4. ^ Jump up to:a b Lynn White, Jr., "Theophilus Redivivus", Technology and Culture, Vol. 5, No.
2. (Spring, 1964), Review, pp. 224233 (233)
5. Jump up^ Lynn White, Jr., "Medieval Engineering and the Sociology of Knowledge", The
Pacific Historical Review, Vol. 44, No. 1. (Feb., 1975), pp. 121 (6)
6. Jump up^ [3] (page 10, accessed 1 Dec 2011, Moment of inertia tutorial
7. Jump up^ Ashby, Michael (2011). Materials Selection in Mechanical Design (4th ed.).
Burlington, MA: Butterworth-Heinemann. pp. 142146. ISBN 978-0-08-095223-9.
8. Jump up^ Totten, George E.; Xie, Lin; Funatani, Kiyoshi (2004). Handbook of Mechanical
Alloy Design. New York: Marcel Dekker. ISBN 0-8247-4308-3.
9. Jump up^ Kumar, Mouleeswaran Senthil; Kumar, Yogesh (2012). "Optimization of Flywheel
Materials Using Genetic Algorithm" (PDF). Acta technica Corviniensis-Bulletin of Engineering.
Retrieved1 November 2015.
11. Jump up^ "Flywheel Energy Calculator". Botlanta.org. 2004-01-07. Retrieved 2010-11-30.
13. Jump up^ "Message from the Chair | Department of Physics | University of Prince Edward
Island". Upei.ca. Retrieved 2010-11-30.
15. Jump up^ Flywheel Rotor And Containment Technology Development, FY83. Livermore,
Calif: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory , 1983. pp. 12