Title: Permanent Magnets for Energy Applications Part 2
1Permanent Magnetsfor Energy ApplicationsPart 2
- Stan Trout
- August 11, 2014
2Permanent Magnets for Energy Applications Part 2
- Rare Earths
- Basic facts
- The crisis
- Mines
- Applications
- Magnet Recycling
- Permanent Magnet Selection Specification
- Case Studies
- The Future
3Rare Earths
4Rare Earths 101
- Ores contain all rare earths except Pm
- The rare earths are chemically very similar
- There is no shortage of ore for light REs
- Bastnasite Monazite are the most common
- Most ores are rich in Ce, La, Nd and Pr
- Not all rare earths are rare in the Earth
- Magnetic, optical, electronic and catalytic
properties vary widely - The lanthanide contraction
- Producers try to balance supply and demand
- And are rarely successful!
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6Dilbert, February 28, 2011
7Critical Materials Institute
- DOE Program
- 120 million, 5 years
- National Labs
- Academe
- Industry
- Reduce criticality
- CMI opened officially on Sept. 10, 2013
Source DOE Announcement May 2012
8Recent RE Metal Prices
9Source U.S. Geological Survey
10Two Confusing Points
- Analysis and Recovery, are not the same thing
- Balance
- What is it?
- Why it is important to the RE industry and to
customers
11Rare Earth Analysis
Source Castor, Resource Geology vol. 58, No. 4,
337-347 (2008)
12The Castor Analysis
- Original report 1986, almost 30 years old
- First Mass Spec-ICP
- A single sample
- Widely quoted, sometimes abridged to omit heavy
REs - Widely believed to predict recovery accurately
- At best only an upper limit
13Analysis vs. Recovery
- Goal understand composition
- Scale 10 gram
- Digestion complete as possible
- Separation no
- Goal sell into marketplace
- Scale 1010 gram
- Digestion appropriate for scale and market
- Separation appropriate for market conditions
14Balance
- The attempt by each rare earth processor to
balance the available ore with the needs of the
marketplace.
Source Kingsnorth
151 km
Bayan Obo mine , near Baotou, China Photo from
Google Earth
161 km
Mountain Pass, CA, Source Molycorp
17Rare Earth Sources
- Active mines
- China
- Baotou
- Ionic Ores
- Mines coming on stream
- USA
- Mountain Pass, CA
- Australia
- Mt. Weld
- Under Development
- Australia
- Nolans Bore
- Canada
- Hoidas Lake
- Nechalacho
- India
- Brazil
- USA
- Vietnam
- Russia
18Early Lighting Options
- Welsbach
- Candoluminescence
Source Gas Light Guys
Source Wikipedia
Source Auer Licht
19Lighting Phosphors
20Lighting Phosphors
- What we see depends on the phosphors
- Red Y2O3 Eu
- Green (La, Ce, Tb) PO4
- Blue BaMgAl10O17Eu
Compact Fluorescent Lights (CFL)
Source GE Lighting
21Fluorescent Lighting
- Advantages
- Higher output
- 58 lu/W vs. 13.5 lu/W
- Lower operating cost
- 10 W vs. 40 W
- Longer life
- 12,000 hrs vs. 1,000 hrs
- Disadvantages
- Slightly higher price
- Difficulty dimming
- Unappealing light?
- Cheap bulb cheap phosphors
- Hg in bulb, special disposal
Data source GE Lighting
22Automotive Catalysts
Source BASF
The metal oxide is cerium
23Refining Catalysts
- Fluid Cracking Catalyst (FCC)
- A traditional use of lanthanum
- Ideal for heavy crude to make gasoline
- Ion-exchanged zeolite (cat litter)
- Variable demand
- Driving season and heating season
- Available crude oil
24Current Magnet Applications
- Hard drive
- Voice Coil Motor (VCM)
- Spindle motors
- 5 x 108 per year
Source Western Digital
25Current Magnet Applications
Source Magnequench
26New Rare Earth Magnet Applications
- Automotive
- Hybrids
- Electric vehicles
Source Toyota
27Emerging Magnet Applications
28Emerging Magnet Applications
Source Vestas AS
- Wind Turbines
- Reliability
- The gearbox
- About 500 kg of magnet per MW
- Small use magnets
- 260 GW more in US by 2030
Source AWEA.org
29Recycling
- Historically unimportant
- Value
- Difficulty
- Interest rises and falls with prices
- Two areas of interest
- Eu, Tb and Y oxides from lighting phosphors
- Nd and Dy from magnets, mainly hard drives
30Material Selection Specification of Permanent
Magnets
- Motivation
- Basic Considerations
- Advanced Considerations
- Specification
- Checklist
31Motivation
- Gross oversimplification
- Errors of omission
- Lack of protocol
32Basic Considerations
33Advanced Considerations
- Physical
- Mechanical
- Corrosion
- Magnetizing
- Assembly
- Adhesives
- Testing
34Writing a Specification
- Two Approaches
- What I happen to have
- What I actually need
- Avoid Contradictions
- IEC or IMA (MMPA) standards
- Supplier Reference, or equivalent
35Checklist
- Magnetic parameters
- Flux variations
- Dimensions/Tolerances
- Testing
- Magnetizing
- Coating
- Adhesive
- Assembly
- Others
36Case Study 1
- Direct substitution of bonded NdFeB for ferrite
- Saturated return structure
- Poor performance
- Increase the thickness of the return path, more
poles
37Case Study 2
B Br ln (do/di)
- Bonded NdFeB ring for angle sensing application
- Incorrect magnetization (axial) yields poor
performance - Correct magnetization, with hairpin fixture,
yields good signal and contained flux
38Case Study 3
Window Lift Motor Toyota Prius and Toyota Harrier
Source Dr. B. Grieb Magnequench
393D Model of Benchmark 2 Pole PMDC (Brush
Motor) Skewing on the armature teeth
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41Torque-Speed and Torque-Current Characteristics
for the Benchmarked and Redesigned Motors
Torque-Efficiency Characteristics for the
Benchmarked and Redesigned Motors
42Benchmarked Motor
Redesigned Motor
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44The Future
- Niels Bohr, Prediction is very difficult,
especially about the future. - Supply and Demand are dynamic
- Overreacting and underreacting are normal
- Supply
- Demand
- Government
- Finding equilibrium is difficult takes time
- Energy conservation is a major driver
- We need to use these materials wisely
45Permanent Magnets for Energy Applications Part 2
- Rare Earths
- Basic facts
- The crisis
- Mines
- Applications
- Magnet Recycling
- Permanent Magnet Selection Specification
- Case Studies
- The Future