Claims
- 1. A flywheel power source, comprising:a flywheel supported by a bearing system for rotation inside an evacuated container; a brushless motor and generator for accelerating and decelerating said flywheel for storing and retrieving energy, said generator having a rotor and a stator; said rotor being coupled to said flywheel, and said stator being made of stationary coils that are wound with multiple-strand individually insulated conductor wire; a heat energy transfer system for passively cooling said stator by heat transfer from including a stator coolant vessel partially filled with said coolant, and said coolant circulates in said coolant vessel solely by natural convection; whereby said liquid coolant limits the maximum temperature of said coils reached during discharging of said flywheel power source.
- 2. A flywheel power source as described in claim 1 wherein:said motor and generator are combined.
- 3. A flywheel power source as described in claim 1 wherein:said generator has a power capacity of between about 100 kilowatts and 5 MW.
- 4. A flywheel power source as described in claim 1 wherein:said generator has a power capacity of more than about 100 KW for less than 2 minutes.
- 5. A flywheel power source as described in claim 1 wherein:said stator container is located inside said evacuated container.
- 6. A flywheel power source as described in claim 1 wherein:said flywheel rotates about a substantially vertical axis.
- 7. A flywheel power source as described in claim 1 wherein:said generator uses a laminated ferromagnetic stator and said stator container also contains said laminations.
- 8. A flywheel power source as described in claim 7 wherein:said laminations contain holes in which space said fluid can occupy.
- 9. A flywheel power source as described in claim 1 wherein:said liquid cools said stator by natural convection.
- 10. A flywheel power source as described in claim 9 wherein:said liquid is a transformer oil.
- 11. A flywheel power source as described in claim 1 wherein:said liquid cools said stator by absorbing energy through boiling.
- 12. A system as defined in claim 1 wherein:said stator container is constructed of metal of wall thickness less than 0.050″ in the portion located between said rotor and said stator.
- 13. A flywheel power source as described in claim 12 wherein:said liquid has a viscosity at 40 degrees Celsius that is less than 200 mm2/sec.
- 14. A flywheel power source as described in claim 12 wherein:said stator container has multiple compartments that direct the flow of liquid by natural convection and increase its velocity over said coils.
- 15. A flywheel power source as described in claim 12 wherein:said stator container increases the buoyancy and liquid flow rate by containing liquid to a height substantially vertically above said coils.
- 16. A flywheel power source as described in claim 12 wherein:said stator container includes a radiator.
- 17. A flywheel power source as described in claim 12 wherein:said stator container has a surface that is outside of said vacuum container.
- 18. A flywheel power source as described in claim 12 wherein:said stator container is attached to a large heat sink.
- 19. A flywheel power source as defined in claim 18 wherein:said liquid has a boiling point at atmospheric pressure that is less than 150 degrees Celsius.
- 20. A flywheel power source as defined in claim 18 wherein:said liquid has a boiling point at the pressure inside said stator container at room temperature that is less than 150 degrees Celsius during normal fully charged operation prior to discharge.
- 21. A flywheel power source as defined in claim 18 wherein:said liquid is selected from a group consisting of fluorcarbon liquids, transformer oil, and water.
- 22. A flywheel power source as defined in claim 18 wherein:said liquid is comprised of two or more different liquids with boiling points that differ by 50 degrees Celsius or more.
- 23. A process of storing and recovering energy in a flywheel power source, comprising:accelerating a flywheel inside an evacuated container with a brushless motor, for storing energy in the form of rotational inertia of said flywheel; decelerating said flywheel with said generator a rotor and a stator for retrieving said stored energy in the form of electrical energy, said generator having a rotor coupled to said flywheel and a stationary stator having coils made of multiple-strand individually insulated conductor wire; passively cooling said stator by heat transfer from said stator to a liquid coolant surrounding said coils, said coolant and said stator being contained in a stator coolant vessel partially filled with said coolant, and said coolant circulates in said coolant vessel solely by natural convection; whereby said liquid coolant limits the maximum temperature of said coils reached during discharging of said flywheel power source.
- 24. The process as defined in claim 23, wherein:said cooling is by subcooled boiling of said coolant adjacent said coils, wherein said coolant stays at an average temperature below the boiling temperature of said coolant inside said vessel, but said coolant liquid boils locally at the stator liquid interface.
Parent Case Info
This relates to U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/234,960 filed on Sep. 23, 2000, and to U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/237,308 filed on Oct. 2, 2000.
US Referenced Citations (12)
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number |
Date |
Country |
48361 |
May 1910 |
AT |
592007 |
Dec 1924 |
FR |
Provisional Applications (2)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
|
60/237308 |
Oct 2000 |
US |
|
60/234960 |
Sep 2000 |
US |