Energy Efficiency, the buzzword for 2021

22nd January 2021

Energy Efficiency, the buzzword for 2021

Energy consumption patterns need to be addressed in earnest, in a bid to ensure that all industries decarbonise towards a greener and sustainable future. With an ever-increasing demand to increase energy supply in a globally carbon-constrained environment, the mining trade needs to improve its energy-efficient technologies, such as electrical variable speed drives (VSDs), which could reduce energy consumption drastically.

The recently concluded series of Danfoss Energy Efficiency in mining webinars demonstrated that the fundamentals of AC variable frequency speed drive technology persist, but many elements are rapidly changing [to] aid [the] move toward a more sustainable and environmentally-friendly mining future. Increasingly, software is embedded in today’s processing components, offering new functionalities and enabling the AC drive to play a larger role in the processing plant.

The content of the webinars clearly demonstrated that conventional motors run at a fixed speed, regardless of actual output requirement, wasting a tremendous amount of energy, but that energy output use can be reduced by 60% by controlling motors with electrical VSDs.

New motor types [appear] all the time, placing additional demands on motor-drive control. This in turn means that the AC drive needs to be able to control an expanding variety of motor types, without burdening the end user with more complexity. In addition, new energy efficiency requirements lead to more variable speed applications.

Certain AC Drives are designed exactly for the needs of mining and mineral processing plants, coping with extreme conditions, heavy loading and controlling equipment, [and are] sometimes installed a long distance away.

No matter how well the plant design is optimised, there is always a way to drive down costs. AC Drives are used extensively for this purpose, robust to extend durability, optimising processes, reducing maintenance and saving energy costs. The mining and minerals industry present some of the most challenging environments for production. Mine sites, mineral processing facilities, associated stockyards and ports facilities, are large scale and often in remote locations.

All Danfoss Drives larger than 90kW, incorporate a back-channel cooling design, with separate cooling paths for the power components, control electronics and an IP54 seal, between these two paths. This back-channel cooling removes [about] 85% to 90% of the power loss directly through the heatsink, leaving only 10% to 15% of the total loss dissipated in the switch room.

Consideration has to be given to the outside air quality, but if it is suitable, using the heatsink cooling fans and appropriate mounting and ducting, filtered external air at temperatures of up to 50 °Celsius, can be used to exhaust [about] 85% to 90% of the heat loss from these VSDs directly outside the switch room; without affecting the switch room pressurisation.

The switch room air conditioning system only needs to be sized for the remaining 10% to 15% losses.

[Using] this feature can dramatically reduce the air conditioning requirements of the switch rooms and provide significant project cost savings, along with operational ongoing cost savings, compared to VSDs without such a design feature.  

This article was provided by Danfoss Drives Turkey, Middle East & Africa regional director Emre Goren