Genius Mashup: Building a Bigger Wind Turbine Using MRI Tech

September 2, 2011

GE makes a world of products using different materials and processes. But the same research innovations that make an airplane engine lighter and more fuel efficient can make a windmill blade longer and lighter – the technologies are connected, sometimes it just takes some ingenuity to make the leap.

That’s why the idea of using magnet technology from GE MRI machines to create the next generation of wind turbines is so exciting. The project, which is underway at GE Global Research as part of a two-year, $3 million project from the U.S. Department of Energy, aims to create turbines with almost twice the capacity as the largest ones today. It’s a marriage of almost 30 years of research into superconducting magnets for health care imaging with green energy technology that is making carbon-free megawatts cheaper for Americans.

Like any worthwhile project, this one started with a challenge: How do you maximize a wind turbine’s output without increasing maintenance requirements and dependence on rare earth materials?

The answer requires a reimagining of the turbine’s electrical generator, which converts the energy of the swooshing blades into electricity. In most turbines, the generators are connected to gearboxes that, just like a bike, allow the turbine to adjust to the wind and generate the right amount of torque.

The setup works well for 2.5-megawatt (MW) turbines but, as the plants push into the 10-15 MW range, the gearboxes become heavier and require maintenance, two factors that make energy more expensive. GE’s innovation is to use superconducting magnets similar to the ones in MRI machines to eliminate the gearbox altogether and improve the generator. This approach reduces the requirement for heavy iron in the generator and the need for rare earths in superconducting magnets. The machine will use cryogenic cooling technologies that bring temperatures down close to absolute zero.

The challenges of putting this technology in wind turbines that could go miles offshore are bracing, said Ruben Fair, a GE technologist who has worked for 17 years on superconducting and cryogenic magnet systems. “Since offshore wind farms are really only accessible once a year, weather permitting, such machines have to be ultra-reliable,” Fair said.

The first phase of the project involves developing and evaluating a design. The second phase will evaluate the project’s commercial viability.

Turbines that generate more electricity can effectively squeeze more energy out of a smaller wind farm and reduce the cost of energy. They also provide a great case for how innovation in fields as diverse as energy and health care can learn from each other.


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  • MARY FILIPOWICZ

    How exciting when teams are openminded enough to recognize the significant inovations they can make across all of GE. This is really a great plus for the leaders that encouraged this collaberation.

  • R McCall

    I recently read an article about a company in Japan that created a wind turbine that had a ring around the outside of the blades to reduce the effect of efficiency loss due to the blades flexing in the wind, maybe a mating of that technology along with ge’s innovation in the magnet side of the generator could help reach that 10-15MW goal

  • Daniel McNamara

    Gentlemen,

    There are thousands of Hydro-Electric dams throughout North America. General Electric would be the leader in up-dating ALL of these facilities with this new technology . Millions of Dollare and years of Backlog.

    Is GE working on this technology for Hydro Electric?

  • Chris Henthorn

    Now this is collaborative teamwork – truly leveraging our diverse portfolio to create something innovative.

  • Austin Mwangi

    The use of superconductors is really efficient and long term. Its cool that a generator of a given size can produce such a significant increase in power when using such materials. GE is actually imagining the future and building it. Good stuff!

  • Terry

    superconductors are very expensive

  • Eric Lee

    i recently saw a gearbox that uses planetary gear to make it infinitely variable transmission which can potentially allow for power generation at lower windspeeds… this can increase availability of the wind turbines.

  • http://twitter.com/treehousedaddy Philip Taylor

    Every time I’ve been in an MRI scanner it’s made a terrible noise.