Pentadyne Flywheel Keeps Hospital's Labs Running Smoothly
As one of the top 100 hospitals in
the nation, Scripps Green Hospital,
located nort
h of scenic La
Jolla, California, offers a wide range of
clinical and surgical services including intensive
care, cancer/oncology, cardiothoracic
and orthopedic surgeries. Among the
specialty services located on the campus
are interventional cardiology, orthopedics,
blood and bone marrow transplants, solid
organ transplants and clinical research.
Overseeing the hospital’s
engineering services
and operations, manager
Alan Beyea has the distinction
of making sure
the hospital’s infrastructure
is up to the task of
handling the center’s
myriad of medical services.
Making sure power
to critical load equipment
is conditioned and steady
is of paramount concern.
Under California Title 22,
in the event of one of
California’s all-too-frequent
power outages,
hospitals are required to
have generator power online
in less than 10 seconds.
With California’s
history of rolling blackouts
and the devastating effects power disruptions
can have on a hospital, Beyea
takes electricity issues very seriously. “In
the cath lab, if the power is interrupted
during a procedure, the doctors have to
start the procedure all over again. This diagnostic
process involves threading a
small tube (or catheter) through an artery
in the arm or leg to the heart. Physicians
view the procedure via X-ray to determine
if a serious heart problem exists and how
to treat it,” said Beyea.
Challenges
When the hospital expanded its cardiac
catheterization labs, the power protection
system required expansion as well. The
existing 250kVA Uninterruptible Power
Supply (UPS) combined with gel-cell batteries
did not have the capacity to handle
the increased power needs of the new lab.
The challenges were twofold: First, at a
million dollars per added bed, the hospital
must maximize every square foot of space – and the existing UPS room was a mere
300 square feet. Second, installing more
batteries would only multiply the current
battery maintenance time, costs and
headaches to which Beyea had become
very familiar. “Dealing with batteries is
especially problematic and expensive.
Even in the first year, several cells in our
battery bank went bad so we’d replace the
batteries at very short intervals – way before
their stated end of life. In our circumstances,
we just can’t take any risks,” reflected Beyea.
Power System Maintenance and
Footprint Significantly Reduced
Working with GE and Scripps architectural
consultant Rodriguez Park and
electrical consultant, Randall Lamb,
Beyea learned that advanced composite
flywheel power systems manufactured by
Pentadyne Power could provide the required
power bridge to the generator and
eliminate dependence on batteries.
GE recommended paralleling two Pentadyne
VSS DC flywheel systems to
serve as the energy storage system in lieu
of the battery bank. The VSS DC is an
advanced DC flywheel power system that
is fully compatible with UPS systems
from leading manufacturers.
Acting as a mechanical
battery, the
VSS DC stores kinetic
energy in a high-speed
rotating group - the
only moving assembly
in the system. When incoming
utility power
sags or blacks out, the
VSS DC instantly responds
to support critical
loads by releasing
that stored energy. To
the load, the event
never occurs.
Providing ridethrough
time to bridge
power to the backup
generator, the flywheel
system is a safe, extremely
low maintenance,
environmentally friendly
alternative to UPS battery banks that improves
UPS system reliability while dramatically
reducing operating cost. Since
Scripps required high power – but for only
a short duration to assure transfer to the
backup generator – Pentadyne’s flywheel
systems were the ideal solution. Pentadyne’s
latest model, the VSS+DC, can
provide 190 kW for 12.5 seconds, or
longer for lower demands. This provides
ample time to ride through 98 percent of
voltage sags and outages (which are typically
10 seconds or less) and then seamlessly
transfer to the generator in the event
of a prolonged outage. Once the generator takes the load, the VSS+DC recharges
rapidly, ready to immediately respond to
any further disturbances. The simple,
modular design of the VSS DC enables
easy paralleling for higher power, longer
runtime or redundancy, all without troublesome
communication links. This
clearly provides quick and easy expansion
capabilities. In this case, two flywheel systems
in parallel easily support the customer’s
load and provide more than 30
seconds of ride-through before transferring
to the diesel generator.
“I was very impressed with the flywheel
technology. Not only did it clearly
demonstrate that it can reliably provide
power to the load and bridge the power to
the generator, but the two flywheel systems
didn’t take up more room. In fact,
the previous gel-cell batteries were twice
the size of the old UPS system,” said
Beyea. “We now have 500kVA of capacity
taking up less room than our previous
250kVA UPS with batteries – that’s significant.”
Future Expansion
The GE UPS, automatic transfer
switch, diesel generator and Pentadyne’s
VSSDC flywheel systems complete the
power components for protecting the cath
labs. Each of the two flywheel systems
work independently and seamlessly with
the UPS and diesel generator, while the
flywheels occupy a total of less than 12
square feet of floorspace. The Pentadyne
VSSDC clean energy storage systems exceeded
the project’s objectives, proving
themselves a superior, far more reliable
alternative to batteries. Aside from providing
uninterrupted power in a very compact
space, the VSS+DC delivers
energy-saving current adjustment, rapid
recharge and an extended lifecycle a
standby energy consumption 1/10th that
of competing systems.
Presenting solid reliability with rapid
investment return, Scripps intends to deploy
additional flywheel systems in their
planned expansion of two more cath labs.
“When we considered the various costs of
batteries, including replacement, service
and real-estate compared to the costs of
the flywheels, the financial equation was
clear. With virtually no maintenance of
the flywheels for 20 years, it makes total
economic sense,” emphasized Beyea. ■
FRANK DELATTRE is senior vice
president of sales for Pentadyne Power
Corp. (www.pentadyne.com). He
joined Pentadyne in 2005 with over 17
years of domestic and international
sales management experience in the
power quality industry. DeLattre was
previously vice president of sales for
Cherokee International, a leading
manufacturer of custom AC-DC
power supplies in the datacom,
telecom, and medical markets.
DeLattre was instrumental in
expanding and managing a network
of manufacturers’ representative and
closing major design wins at various
tier one OEM accounts.


















