A Review of Flywheel Energy Storage System
This article comprehensively reviews the key components of FESSs, including flywheel rotors, motor types, bearing support
The operation of the electricity network has grown more complex due to the increased adoption of renewable energy resources, such as wind and solar power. Using energy storage technology can improve the stability and quality of the power grid. One such technology is flywheel energy storage systems (FESSs).
A comprehensive review of control strategies of flywheel energy storage system is presented. A case study of model predictive control of matrix converter-fed flywheel energy storage system is implemented. Flywheel energy storage system comes around as a promising and competitive solution. Potential future research work is suggested.
This project explored flywheel energy storage R&D to reach commercial viability for utility scale energy storage. This required advancing the design, manufacturing capability, system cost, storage capacity, efficiency, reliability, safety, and system level operation of flywheel energy storage technology.
Flywheel Energy Storage Systems (FESS) rely on a mechanical working principle: An electric motor is used to spin a rotor of high inertia up to 20,000-50,000 rpm. Electrical energy is thus converted to kinetic energy for storage. For discharging, the motor acts as a generator, braking the rotor to produce electricity.
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