EXECUTIVE SUMMARY:
The use of variable-frequency drives (VFDs) to control AC motors has increased dramatically
in recent years. In addition to their low operating cost and high performance, they save
energy. Today, the challenge facing system designers and engineers is to minimize damage
to AC motors from shaft current. From its first minute of operation, a VFD induces
destructive voltages that build up on the motor shaft until they find discharge paths to the
frame (ground). In most cases, the motor bearings present the path of least resistance.
Once voltage is sufficient to overcome the resistance of the oil film layer in the bearing, shaft
current discharges, causing electrical discharge machining (EDM) pits and fusion craters in
the race wall and ball bearings. This phenomenon continues until the bearings become so
severely pitted that fluting, excessive noise, and failure occur.
Mitigation of this damage is possible through various strategies. Some are narrow in application,
and most are costly. Many are not technically feasible. However, a new technology employs
a circumferential ring of conductive micro fibers to discharge harmful currents and provide a
low-cost solution to the problem.
VARIABLE FREQUENCY DRIVES INDUCE
SHAFT CURRENTS IN AC MOTORS
Due in large part to an increased focus on energy
savings, the use of pulse-width-modulated
(PWM) variable-frequency drives (VFDs) to
control AC motors has grown dramatically
over the last few years. While they offer low
operating costs and high performance, VFDs are
not without their problems.
Shaft currents induced by VFDs can lead to motor
failures. Without some form of mitigation, shaft
currents travel to ground through bearings,
causing pitting, fusion craters, fluting excessive
bearing noise, eventual bearing failure, and
subsequent motor failure.
This is not a small problem. Consider:
• Most motor bearings are designed to last
for 100,000 hours, yet motors controlled
by VFDs can fail within one month (720
hours). • An HVAC system contractor recently
reported that, of the 30-60 HP VFDcontrolled
vane axial fans he installed in a
large building project, two failed within
six months and 100% of the motors
failed within one year.
• Several large pulp and paper companies
surveyed noted that the VFD-controlled AC
motors used in their plants typically
months.
• The largest motor manufacturer in the
United States has cited eliminating driverelated
motor failures as its number-one
engineering challenge.
• Today, there are almost a dozen blogs
on the Internet focused on discussing
the problems presented by VFD-induced
shaft currents, sharing information and
experiences, and suggesting solutions.
• Motor failures caused by VFD-induced
shaft currents result in hundreds of
thousands of hours of unplanned
downtime, in the United states alone,
each year. In addition, these failures
affect the performance and mean time
between failure (MTBF) of the original
equipment manufacturing (OEM) systems
in which they are used.
• With recent motor-price increases
(approximately 16% over last year) due
to rising copper prices, this problem will
become even more costly.
ELECTRICAL DAMAGE TO BEARINGS
Due to the high-speed switching
frequencies used in PWM inverters, all
variable frequency drives induce shaft
current in AC motors. The switching
frequencies of insulated-gate bipolar
transistors (IGBT) used in these drives
produce voltages on the motor shaft
during normal operation through electromagnetic induction.
These voltages, which can register 70 volts or
more (peak-to-peak), are easily measured by
touching an oscilloscope probe to the shaft
while the motor is running [Figure 1].
Figure
Once these voltages reach a level sufficient to
overcome the dielectric properties of the grease
in the bearings, they discharge along the path of
least resistance — typically the motor bearings — to the motor housing. (Bearings are designed
to operate with a very thin layer of oil between
the rotating ball and the bearing race.) During
virtually every VFD cycle, induced shaft voltage
discharges from the motor shaft to the frame
via the bearings, leaving a small fusion crater
in the bearing race.
These discharges are so
frequent that before long the entire bearing
race becomes marked with countless pits known
as frosting. As damage continues, the frosting
increases, eventually leading to noisy bearings
and bearing failure. A phenomenon known as
fluting may occur as well, producing
washboard-like ridges across the frosted
bearing race.
Fluting can cause excessive noise
and vibration that, in heating in heating,
ventilation, and air-conditioning system, if
magnified and transmitted by the ducting.
Regardless of the type of bearing or race
damage that occurs, the resulting motor
failure often costs many thousands or even tens
of thousands of dollars in downtime and lost
production.
Failure rates vary widely depending on many
factors, but evidence suggests that a significant
portion of failures occur only 3 to 12 months
after system startup.
Because many of today’s
AC motors have sealed bearings to keep out
dirt and other contaminants, electrical damage
has become the most common cause of bearing
failure in AC motors with VFDs. If half of all AC
motor failures are due to bearing failure, almost
80% of these are caused by electrical damage
to bearings.
New bearing race: Viewed under a scanning
electron microscope, a new bearing race wall is
a smooth surface [Figure 2]. As the motor runs,
a track eventually forms where the bearing ball
contacts the wall. With no electrical discharge
damage, this type of mechanical wear would be
the only cause of degradation.
Pitting: shows a frosted bearing race wall
after 5400 hours of continuous use in a VFD/AC
motor system. Early damage typically takes the
form of pitting. These fusion craters increase in
number and size as each cycle of induced voltage
discharges from the shaft through the bearings
to the frame and ground. Soon the entire race is
covered with millions of pits. As new fusion craters
form over old ones, eventually a “frosted” surface — easily visible to the naked eye — appears.
Fluting: In a phenomenon know as fluting,
[Figure 4], the operational frequency of the VFD
causes concentrated pitting at regular intervals
along the bearing race wall, forming a “washboard” pattern. This pattern results in vibration and noise.
In an HVAC system, this noise can be transmitted
throughout a facility via air ducts.
STRATEGIES FOR MITIGATING SHAFT
CURRENT DAMAGE
As demonstrated above, electrical damage to
VFD/AC motor bearings begins at startup and
grows progressively worse. As a result of this
damage, the bearings eventually fail. To prevent
such damage in the first place, the induced
shaft current must be diverted from the
bearings by insulation and/or an alternate path
to ground.
Insulation: Insulating motor bearings is a
solution that tends to shift the problem elsewhere
as shaft current looks for another path to
ground. Sometimes, because of the capacitive
effect of the ceramic insulation, high-frequency
VFD-induced currents actually pass through the
insulating layer and cause bearing failure. If
attached equipment, such as a pump, provides
this path, the other equipment often winds up
with bearing damage of its own. Insulation and
other bearing-isolation strategies can be costly
to implement.
Alternate discharge paths: When properly
implemented, these strategies are preferable to
insulation because they neutralize shaft current.
Techniques range in cost and sometimes can only
be applied selectively, depending on motor size
or application. The ideal solution would provide
a very-low-resistance path from shaft to frame,
would be low-cost, and could be broadly applied
across all VFD/AC motor applications, affording
the greatest degree of bearing protection and
maximum return on investment.
SHAFT-CURRENT MITIGATION
TECHNOLOGIES
Although there are a number of technologies
now available to protect AC motor bearings
from damage due to shaft currents, few meet
all the criteria of effectiveness, low cost, and
application versatility.
1. Faraday shield: The shield prevents
the VFD current from being induced onto
the shaft by effectively blocking it with a
capacitive barrier between the stator and
rotor. However, this solution is
extremely difficult to implement, very
expensive and has been generally
abandoned as a practical solution.
2. Insulated bearings: Insulating
material, usually a nonconductive resin or
ceramic layer, isolates the bearings and
prevents shaft current from discharging
through them to the frame. This forces
current to seek another path to ground,
such as through an attached pump or
tachometer or even the load. Due to
the high cost of insulating the bearing
journals, this solution is generally limited
to larger-sized NEMA motors. Sometimes,
high-frequency VFD-induced currents
actually pass through the insulating layer
and cause bearing damage anyway.
Another drawback is the potential for
contaminated insulation, which can, overtime, establish a current path through
the bearings.
3. Ceramic bearings: The use of
nonconductive ceramic balls prevents
the discharge of shaft current through
this type of bearing. As with other
isolation measures, shaft current will
seek an alternate path to ground. This
technology is very costly, and in most
cases motors with ceramic bearings
must be special ordered and have long
lead times. In addition, because ceramic
bearings and steel bearings differ in
compressive strength, ceramic bearings
must be resized in most cases to handle
mechanical static and dynamic loadings.
4. Conductive grease: In theory, because
this grease contains conductive particles,
it would provide a lower-impedance path
through the bearing and would bleed off
shaft current through the bearing without
the damaging discharge. Unfortunately,
the conductive particles in these lubricants
increase mechanical wear to the bearing,
rendering the lubricants ineffective and
often causing premature failures. This
method has been widely abandoned as a
viable solution to bearing currents.
5. Grounding brush: A metal brush
contacting the motor shaft is a more
practical and economical way to provide a
low-impedance path to ground, especially
for larger NEMA-frame motors. However,
these brushes pose several problems of
their own:
a. They are subject to wear because
of the mechanical contact with the
shaft.
b. They collect contaminants on their
metal bristles, which destroys their
effectiveness.
c. The are subject to oxidation build
up, which decreases their
grounding effectiveness.
d. They require maintenance on a
regular basis, increasing their
cost.
6. Shaft grounding ring (SGR): This
innovative new approach involves the use
of a ring of specially engineered conductive
micro fibers to redirect shaft current and
provide a reliable, very low impedance
path from shaft to frame, bypassing the
motor bearings entirely. The ring’s patentpending
Electron Transport Technology™ uses the principles of ionization to boost
the electron-transfer rate and promote
extremely efficient discharge of the highfrequency
shaft currents induced by
VFDs. With hundreds of thousands of
discharge points, the SGR channels shaftcurrents around the AC motor bearings and
protects them from electrical damage. The
AEGIS SGR™ is a low- cost solution that can
be applied to virtually any size AC motor in
virtually any VFD application.
A MORE COMPLETE SOLUTION
The AEGIS SGR Conductive MicroFiber Shaft
Grounding Ring offers a unique combination
of benefits unmatched by other technologies,
including:
Scalability: AEGIS technology is scalable to all
sizes of NEMA-frame and larger motors regardless
of shaft size or application. Introduced to the
market in May 2005, the SGR was designed
for motors with shafts from 0.311” to 6.020”
including NEMA and IEC frames as well as highhorsepower
AC and DC motors. AEGIS SGRs
have been applied to power generators, gas
turbines, wind turbine generators, AC traction
and systems, and a long list of other industrial
and commercial applications. Break motors,
clean rooms and HVAC
8.
The AEGIS™ SGR™ with NEMA adaptor plate
Installation and maintenance: The SGR
is easily installed by sliding the ring over either
end of the motor shaft and locking it in
place with simple screw-on mounting
brackets. Because no machining is required,
the SGR can be installedin minutes – even in the field. Once installed,
the AEGIS SGR requires no aintenance. With
no parts to wear out, the SGR lasts as long as the
bearings. A split-ring design allows installation
around the shaft without disasembling attached
equipment.
Low cost and high return on investment:
One of the key goals in the design of the AEGIS
SGR was to create a true value for the customer.
Typically, an AC motor coupled with a VFD costs
from $2,400 to $100,000 or more and may be
part of a manufacturing process that generates
revenues from $10,000 to $1,000,000 or more
per hour. The cost of installing an AEGIS SGR
in a VFD/AC motor system is very low when
compared to the cost of the overall system,
usally less than 1% of the equipment cost.
By preventing electrical damage to bearings, the
SGR protects the VFD system from the costly
downtime of unplanned maintenance. In some
production applications, even a momentary
stoppage due to motor failure can cost more
than $2500,00, including the cost of repairing
the motor.
Motor manufacturers and process engineers in
industries where VFDs are used are keenly
aware of the problems and expense caused by
electrical damage to bearings. They have
expended significant time, effort, and money to
find a solution to this prolem. The AEGIS SGR™ Conductive MicroFiber Shaft Grounding Ring is
the most effective and universally applicable
solution to date.
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