Kenneth J. Korane
Managing Editor
From all outward appearances, wind turbines are
sleek and elegant works of engineering. But inside, they're
hell on gears and bearings. In
most turbines, the rotors turn
a mechanical transmission that
drives a small, high-speed generator. In terms of capital investment,
this is the most economical and
preferred design — but large and
unpredictable loads often push
gearboxes beyond their limits.
Downtime and unreliability are
two of the main reasons electricity from wind is expensive.
Low-speed, direct-drive generators that eliminate the gearbox are a more-dependable alternative for turbine designers, but
today they can be pricey. Engineers at Timken, Canton, Ohio,
may have an even better answer:
a rugged and powerful planetary
gearbox that can handle extreme
loads.
Reliability problems stem from
the fact that the wind doesn't
blow in a nice, steady stream,
says Gerald Fox, chief technologist of mechanical technology at
Timken. It's turbulent, changes
speed and direction in an instant,
and creates loading conditions that play havoc with mechanical
systems.
"Turbines have a giant rotor, in
some cases as large in diameter
as a football field, generating 1 to
2 million lb-ft of torque," explains
Fox. "The gearboxes commonly
have 75:1 to 100:1 step-up ratios,
taking wind energy from the rotors at about 20 rpm up to 1,500
to 1,800 rpm at the generator."
The trouble is, says Fox, when
wind speed suddenly changes, a
relatively small amount of acceleration and angular movement at
the gearbox input gets multiplied
100 times at the output — building up massive amounts of torsional windup and strain energy
in the gears.
Turbine makers typically use planetary gears to divide torque
along three paths and reduce individual loads on each gear. But torsional loads twist
gears out of alignment,
and slight dimensional variations
in gearbox components — including
shafts, bearings,
gears, and carrier
— means planet gears
don't equally share the load. Misaligned gears,
shock loads, and uneven
forces lead to high localized
stresses and, eventually, fractures along the gear edges. It also
causes bearings to skid rather
than roll, smearing and micropitting the raceways and hastening
failure.
In essence, gearbox designers
face a complex indeterminate
problem. Although scientists can
carefully measure wind speed
and direction, transient dynamic
loads are difficult, if not impossible, to measure and accurately
account for in the design process.
Compounding the problem, notes
Fox, wind turbines continue to
get bigger — from 1-MW systems
a few years ago to 7-MW units in
the works today.
One attempted fix has been
to install costly, high-precision
aerospace gears that reduce manufacturing variations and backlash. But usually, designers try to compensate for uncertainties by
increasing safety factors, using
larger components, and as many
as four rows of cylindrical or
spherical roller bearings. These
efforts have yielded only marginal improvements while making gearboxes bigger, heavier, and
more expensive. And this, in turn,
cascades into larger nacelles and
beefier towers, further driving up
costs.
FLEX PINS
At Timken, engineers have
developed a product called the
Integrated Flex-pin Bearing (IFB)
to equalize gear loads, eliminate
misalignment, and dramatically
improve wind-turbine reliability.
The IFB consists of a double-cantilever pin supporting the bearing and gear. The cantilevered pin
attaches to the carrier wall, and
a cantilevered sleeve mounts to
the free end of the pin. Gears and
bearings mount on the sleeve.
The IFB equalizes loads on
planets by anchoring them onto
a planetary carrier in a torsionally compliant manner. Instead of
fixing the angular position of the
planet gears, as is the case with
conventional systems, flexible
pins deflect circumferentially and
independently along the carrier
pitch circle — which ultimately
equalizes forces on the planets, even while transmitting varying
levels of torque, according to Fox.
Simply stated, external forces
on the gear make "the pin bend in
one direction, the sleeve bend in
the opposite direction, and misalignment angle at the gear face
remains virtually zero," says Fox.
The first true test of the IFB
was in a mechanical transmission from Maag Gear, Winterthur, Switzerland, for a 1.3-MW
N60 turbine built by Nordex, Norderstedt, Germany.
The unit is in Scotland's Orkney
Islands, a site buffeted by some of
the world's most ferocious winds.
Nordex had tried various windturbine gearboxes from several
major manufacturers but, according to company officials and the
wind-farm operators, typical life
was far below expectations. The
IFBs, on the other hand, successfully equalized loading, reduced
internal stresses, and eliminated
failures. "They've been operating
since April of 2004, so we're now
into the fourth year of operation,"
says Fox. "This accumulated service far exceeds that offered by
all previous designs, and the condition of the gears and rollers is
like the day they were installed.
"Because shaft, bearings, and
gears are completely integrated,
there are also significant opportunities for making the units smaller, lighter, and possibly at
reduced costs," says Fox. The
ready-to-mount IFBs feature a
preset bearing clearance, letting
gearbox manufacturers shorten
assembly time. The new design
also offers wind-energy engineers
the possibility to upgrade existing turbines with more powerdense transmissions or improve
performance and reliability for
future projects.
Based on the success of this
design, says Fox, many wind turbines struggling with reliability
today might benefit from a retrofit with the IFB. The same requirement for more reliability holds for
off-highway, aerospace, and other
industrial equipment. This has
led to the creation of the Timken
Flex-drive gearbox.
NEXT-GENERATION DRIVE
While still in the concept
stage, Flex-drive represents the
next generation of planetary gear
trains, says Fox. Timken engineers predict Flex-drive systems
will increase torque transmission
capacity as much as 50% over conventional planetary gearboxes of
the same size, letting manufacturers substantially enhance powertrain reliability.
Flex-drive improves torque
density using several features.
First, it divides torque into more
paths to lower the forces and
stresses on each gear. It replaces
the usual three straddle-mounted
planetary idler gears with up to
eight IFBs that equalize and reduce loads while minimizing, if
not eliminating, misalignment
from system deflection and manufacturing tolerance stack-up.
Next, two arrays of three or
four IFBs are cantilevered towards each other with a small gap
in between. With proper design,
torsional windup of the carrier
cannot cause gear misalignment. Splitting the IFBs into two independent arrays lets one side index with respect to the other such
that when components bend, gear
faces remain perfectly aligned.
Splitting power on two opposing
arrays of tapered roller bearings
also means local bending on one
mesh doesn't affect and amplify
bending on the other.
And in conventional gears, the
tooth profile and lead correction
can only be optimized for one
combination of load and misalignment — generally for severe conditions. This means the full gear
face isn't used in normal operation. "Analysis shows that reducing loads and misalignment can
virtually eliminate the need for
lead correction," says Fox. "Consequently, the Flex-drive can use narrower gears and make better
use of effective length. Thus, we
can make gearboxes smaller or
increase torque density."
Finally, IFBs add circumferential
compliancy among adjacent planets and substantially improve load
distribution, significantly reducing
the safety factor. All this adds up
to an opportunity to improve the
reliability of existing planetary systems with a "drop-in" retrofit, or
create smaller planetary gearing
for wind-turbine power trains still
on the drawing board.
Fox points out that while the
IFB is proven technology, work to
date on the Flex-drive is primarily at the analytical level and still
needs real-world validation. "The
proof is putting it in the customer's equipment, whether a wind generator or an off-highway vehicle. We're currently looking for industry partners," he says.
"The traditional planetarygear world has, to a large extent,
reached the point of diminishing
returns," he emphasizes. "They
can tweak materials and precision to improve performance a
little, but gains today are incremental, a few percent at best.
Flex-drive is revolutionary, an increase in torque density of 50% is
possible, and probably more. And
even if we find out that for some
applications we can't make every
improvement, and the gain is perhaps only 30%, that's still a quantum leap over anything else."
MAKE CONTACT
The Timken Co., timken.com