- Flywheel
[
Leonardo da Vinci ]A flywheel is a mechanical device with significant
moment of inertia used as a storage device forrotational energy . Flywheels resist changes in theirrotational speed , which helps steady the rotation of the shaft when a fluctuatingtorque is exerted on it by its power source such as apiston -based (reciprocating)engine , or when the load placed on it is intermittent (such as a pistonpump ). Flywheels can be used to produce very high power pulses as needed for some experiments, where drawing the power from the public network would produce unacceptable spikes. A small motor can accelerate the flywheel between the pulses. Recently, flywheels have become the subject of extensive research as power storage devices for uses in vehicles; seeflywheel energy storage .Physics
Energy is stored in the rotor as
kinetic energy , or more specifically,rotational energy ::where : is the
angular velocity , and: is themoment of inertia of themass about the center of rotation.* The moment of inertia for a solid-cylinder is ,
* for a thin-walled cylinder is ,
* and for a thick-walled cylinder is .where "m" denotes mass, and "r" denotes a radius. More information can be found atlist of moments of inertia When calculating with
SI units, the standards would be for mass,kilograms ; for radius,meters ; and for angular velocity,radians persecond . The resulting answer would be inJoules The amount of energy that can safely be stored in the rotor depends on the point at which the rotor will warp or shatter. The
hoop stress on the rotor is a major consideration in the design of a flywheel energy storage system.:where: is the tensile stress on the rim of the cylinder: is the density of the cylinder: is the radius of the cylinder, and: is the
angular velocity of the cylinder.Examples of energy stored
You can use those equations to do 'back of the napkin' calculations and find the rotational energy stored in various flywheels. I = kmr², and k is from
List of moments of inertia See [http://www.botlanta.org/converters/dale-calc/flywheel.html] , [http://home.hccnet.nl/david.dirkse/math/energy.html] , [http://www.upei.ca/~physics/p261/projects/flywheel1/flywheel1.htm] , [http://hypertextbook.com/facts/2004/KarenSutherland.shtml] , and
Rotational_energy High energy materials
For a given flywheel design, it can be derived from the equations above that the kinetic energy is proportional to the ratio of the hoop stress to the material density.:This parameter could be called the specific tensile strength. The flywheel material with the highest specific tensile strength will yield the highest energy storage. This is one reason why
carbon fiber is a material of interest.Applications
In application of flywheels in vehicles, the phenomenon of
precession has to be considered. 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 would experience a lateral momentum when passing the top of a hill or the bottom of a valley (roll momentum in response to a pitch change). Two counter-rotating flywheels may be needed to eliminate this effect.The flywheel has been used since ancient times, the most common traditional example being thepotter's wheel . In theIndustrial Revolution ,James Watt contributed to the development of the flywheel in thesteam engine , and his contemporaryJames Pickard used a flywheel combined with a crank to transform reciprocating into rotary motion.In a more modern application, a
momentum wheel is a type of flywheel useful in satellite pointing operations, in which the flywheels are used to point the satellite's instruments in the correct directions without the use of thruster rockets.Flywheels are used in
punching machines andriveting machines where it stores energy from the motor and releases it during the main operation (punching and riveting).History
The principle of the flywheel is already found in the Neolithic spindle and the
potter's wheel .Lynn White, Jr., “Theophilus Redivivus”, "Technology and Culture", Vol. 5, No. 2. (Spring, 1964), Review, pp. 224-233 (233)]The flywheel as a general mechanical device for equalizing the speed of rotation is first described in the "Kitab al-Filaha" of the Andalusian engineer Ibn Bassal (fl. 1038-1075), who applies the device in a
chain pump (saqiya) andnoria . [Ahmad Y Hassan , [http://www.history-science-technology.com/Notes/Notes%204.htm Flywheel Effect for a "Saqiya"] .]According to the American medievalist
Lynn Townsend White, Jr. , such a flywheel is also recorded in the "De diversibus artibus" ("On various arts") of the German artisanTheophilus Presbyter (ca. 1070-1125), who records applying the device in several of his machines. [Lynn White, Jr., “Medieval Engineering and the Sociology of Knowledge”, "The Pacific Historical Review", Vol. 44, No. 1. (Feb., 1975), pp. 1-21 (6)]ee also
*
List of energy topics
*Gyroscope
*Inductor
*Reaction wheel
*Plug-in hybrid
*Rechargeable battery
*Regenerative braking
*Electric double-layer capacitor
*Rotational energy References
External links
* [http://www.asterpix.com/console?as=1187647165005-e57383c789 Flywheel highlight] : Hypervideo showing construction and operation of four cylinder internal combustion engine (courtesy of Ford Motor Company)
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