Sandia National Laboratories researchers have developed a fundamentally new type of rotary electrical contact. The technology is called Twistact, and it will eliminate the need for expensive rare-earth magnets in large wind turbines.
Sandia is now ready to partner with the energy industry to develop the next generation of direct-drive wind turbines.
Sandia’s Twistact is a novel approach to transmitting electrical current between a stationary and rotating frame, or between two rotating assemblies having different speeds or rotational directions. This method is ideal for use in wind turbines.
Sandia National Laboratories scientists began asking themselves difficult questions, according to Jeff Koplow, Sandia research scientist and engineer.
“We knew it would be game-changing if we could find a way to get around the limited service lifetime of conventional rotary electrical contacts,” he said.
“We spent a lot of time considering if there was another plausible way to develop a rotary electrical contact architecture.”
Twistact is what they came up with, a pure-rolling-contact device to transmit electrical current along an ultra-low-resistance pathway. This technology will improve sustainability, reduce maintenance and lower costs.