Slip rings provide the dynamic electrical connection between stationary and rotating mechanical elements. They are present in any system where continuous rotation must coexist with power or data transfer, from industrial packaging machinery to wind turbines to CT scanner gantries.
The core design decision in slip ring power transmission is whether to use contacting or contactless technology, each with distinct electrical performance characteristics, service life profiles, and operational constraints.
Contacting Power Transmission: Brush-Ring Technology
Contacting slip rings operate by maintaining a sliding electrical contact between a stationary brush and a rotating metal ring. The contact interface is the defining parameter for both performance and service life.
Silver Braid and Silver-Graphite Brushes
For most industrial power applications, silver braid brushes or silver-graphite brushes on silver rings provide the most reliable contact interface. Key operational parameters:
- Current capacity: up to 1,000 A at high rotational speeds.
- Voltage range: up to 15,000 V (carbon/silver technology for high-power configurations).
- Continuous operation in any rotational direction.
- Long service life with periodic maintenance.
The contact resistance at the brush-ring interface is the primary electrical loss mechanism.
Low contact resistance is achieved through precious metal interfaces (gold-on-gold) for signal applications, or silver/carbon brush configurations for power.
Carbon Brush Technology
For high-power, high-current applications requiring extended maintenance intervals, carbon brushes on metal rings provide:
- No lubrication required.
- Self-cleaning contact interface.
- Tolerance of high rotational speeds.
- Long service life without scheduled brush replacement intervals comparable to precious metal brush systems.
Carbon brush-based slip rings are specified based on four parameters: operating environment, speed, current, and voltage.
Gold Wire Technology for Signal Integrity
When the slip ring must simultaneously transmit sensitive analog or digital signals alongside power (a common requirement in hybrid systems), gold wire technology — gold wire brushes on gold rings — provides:

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Reliable automation components for high-performance applications.
- Extremely low electrical noise at the contact interface.
- Low contact resistance (< 1 mΩ typical).
- Long operational life with low maintenance.
- High contact reliability under shock and vibration.
- Transmission of all common bus systems (Profibus, Profinet, EtherCAT, CANbus, Fast Ethernet up to 100 Mbit/s).
The signal quality achievable through gold-wire contacting technology enables bit error rates of < 10⁻⁹, suitable for most industrial fieldbus and Ethernet protocols.
Contactless Power Transmission: Inductive Technology
Contactless power transmission eliminates the brush-ring interface entirely by using a rotating transformer, a rotationally symmetric inductive coupler, to transfer power from stator to rotor without physical contact.
Principle of Operation
Power is transmitted inductively across an air gap by ferrite-core rotating transformers. The stator coil generates an oscillating magnetic field; the rotor coil couples to this field and delivers AC power, which is rectified on the rotating side for DC distribution.
Key performance parameters:
| Parameter | Typical Value |
|---|---|
| Power range | 10 W to 125 kW |
| Efficiency | > 95% |
| Heat development | < 5% of transmitted power |
| Voltage range | 24 V to 400 V |
| Speed | High: only limited by mechanical bearing constraints |
| Maintenance | None: no wear parts |
Operational Advantages of Contactless Power
The 95%+ efficiency of inductive power transmission means heat generation is minimal, less than 5% of transmitted power. This is particularly significant in enclosed gantry assemblies (e.g., CT scanner gantries) where thermal management within the rotating structure is constrained.
Cleanroom compatibility: Because there is no brush-ring contact, no particulate debris is generated. Contactless power transmission is the only viable solution for semiconductor fabrication equipment, pharmaceutical packaging, and laboratory automation where particle generation must be controlled.
Maintenance-free operation: At continuously high rotational speeds (conditions where brush wear accelerates and requires frequent inspection) contactless systems maintain full performance indefinitely. This is critical for high-duty-cycle printing machines, bottling lines, and packaging equipment that must maintain uptime targets.
Application Profile for Contactless Power
Classic applications where contactless inductive power is specified:
- Cleanroom and vacuum technology.
- Semiconductor wafer processing equipment.
- Printing and foil processing machines.
- Balancing machines.
- Pick-and-place assembly machines.
- Plastic processing and packaging lines.
- Bottling machines.
CT scanner gantries represent a demanding case: the gantry must rotate continuously at speeds that can exceed 300 rpm, sustaining power transmission for X-ray tubes, detectors, and control electronics. Contactless power transmission eliminates the maintenance downtime associated with brush replacement in 24/7 hospital operation.
Selecting Between Contacting and Contactless Power
| Criterion | Contacting | Contactless |
|---|---|---|
| Maximum current | > 1,000 A | 10 W – 125 kW |
| Maintenance required | Yes (brush inspection/replacement) | None |
| Particle generation | Yes (brush wear debris) | None |
| Rotational speed limit | Moderate (brush-ring contact limits) | None (bearing limit only) |
| Cost | Lower initial | Higher initial, lower lifecycle |
| Efficiency | High | > 95% |
| Cleanroom suitability | No | Yes |
| Voltage range | Up to 15,000 V | 24–400 V |
Hybrid configurations (combining contacting power for high-current transmission with contactless data links for high-bandwidth protocols) are the standard architecture for complex industrial systems where both requirements must coexist.
Before you go, you might want to dive deeper into
- Cable Shielding for Servo Encoder Systems: Grounding Practices and Ground Loop Mitigation,
- discover more about Fiber Optic Rotary Joints (FORJs): Technical Architecture and Performance Specifications,
- or check out our guide on Capacitive Data Link for Rotating Interfaces: Architecture and Performance.
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