Researchers have developed a fundamentally new type of rotary electrical contact that addresses the two limitations of conventional brush/slip ring technology: 1) short operating lifetime due to sliding-contact wear, and 2) electrical arcing associated with contact bounce.

A 2-channel Twistact device for a multi-megawatt, direct-drive wind turbine application.

The Twistact technology has a variety of potential applications but was initially motivated by the need to eliminate rare earth magnets in utility-scale direct-drive wind turbines. As wind turbines are being scaled up in size to achieve better economies of scale, direct-drive wind turbine technology is being adopted by the wind industry to eliminate gearbox lifetime limitations. The rare earth magnets used in these permanent-magnet rotor assemblies of direct-drive wind turbines present two challenges: high initial cost and the supply chain uncertainties of reliance on rare earth metals.

Rare earth metals such as neodymium and dysprosium have always been in short supply and competing applications like electric vehicles are increasing demand. The unpredictability of the future rare earth supply chain is a hindrance to large-scale proliferation of wind power because it increases risk to investor return on investment. Moreover, the mining of rare earth metals is notorious for its adverse environmental impact.

Twistact technology provides a solution both to high-maintenance brush/ slip ring assemblies and rare earth metal-dependent wind turbines. Twistact technology comprises a pure-rolling-contact device that transmits electrical current between a stationary and rotating frame (or two rotating assemblies having different speeds and/or direction of rotation) along an ultra-low-resistance path (e.g. 1 milliohm). Twistact devices accomplish pure-rolling-contact galvanic connection using a flexible, electrically conductive belt and a matching set of epicyclic sheaves.

Laboratory testing has proven that a single Twistact device will be capable of operating over the full 30-year service time of a multi-megawatt, direct-drive wind turbine without maintenance or replacement. A techno-economic analysis study undertaken by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory on behalf of the Department of Energy determined that the substitution of rare-earth magnets with a wire-wound rotor and Twistact module in a 10-MW direct-drive wind turbine eliminates the need for rare earth magnets without incurring any penalties in power generation efficiency or levelized cost of energy (LCOE).

For more information, contact Sandia National Laboratories, Intellectual Property Office, at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., or visit here .