Award
Portfolio Data
Magnetic Bearings for Supercritical CO2 Service
Award Year: 2018
UEI: PKMJNWK4V2U1
HUBZone Owned: No
Woman Owned: No
Socially and Economically Disadvantaged: No
Congressional District: N/A
Tagged as:
SBIR
Phase II
Awarding Agency
DOE
Total Award Amount: $999,795
Contract Number: DE-SC0017776
Agency Tracking Number: 240709
Solicitation Topic Code: 29f
Solicitation Number: DE-FOA-0001795
Abstract
The technology development for the supercritical CO2 (sCO2) power plant is well underway, and the first pilot plants are now under construction. The new pilot plants are sized for a 10 MW net power output; a good size to gain valuable data for larger utility scale power plants. This is also a very good size for the smaller, distributed power applications. The distributed power application is envisaged as the primary application for the roll out of the technology. The reliability of the plants during the introductory phase will be very important. A panel of power plant executives at the recent DOE conference on sCO2 has made it clear that the initial cost, operating cost, and up-time reliability must be demonstrated before any significant investment at the public utility level is seen. Pursuant to this point, the reliability of the system will be the next great focus for the sCO2 systems. When a Failure Modes and Effects Analysis (FMEA) is done at a system level, machinery design with fault tolerance will be a priority. Machinery up-time and system contamination effects will be high on the list of risks. The new machines proposed for the pilot plants use oil bearings and gas seals. A turbocompressor with two gas seals and another machine with integral gear and 4 gas seals will be installed in the plants. It is well understood that reliability for turbomachinery is highly dependent upon the bearing and sealing systems. Upsets, surges, fluid-driven instability, start-up variations, and variation in thrust loading are all acceptable if the bearings and seals can tolerate them. Concepts NREC has proposed a design approach to improve reliability by addressing the bearing and seals. This approach includes: 1) Reduce the number of seals down to one seal. 2) Eliminate the oil entirely with magnetic bearings. Elimination of the oil removes a source of seal distress, and also serves to eliminate the possibility of fouling of the heat exchangers. The magnetic bearings will provide improved monitoring capability and can be used for active fluid force measurement in a machine.
Award Schedule
-
2018
Solicitation Year -
2018
Award Year -
August 27, 2018
Award Start Date -
August 20, 2020
Award End Date
Principal Investigator
Name: Kevin Fairman
Phone: (781) 937-4617
Email: kdf@conceptsnrec.com
Business Contact
Name: Art Steinberg
Phone: (802) 280-6114
Email: asteinberg@conceptsnrec.com
Research Institution
Name: N/A