It is used to control a motor for a trickling filter. I don't know the exact size or speed of motor. Is there a slip ring rated for vfd ?
Again, it depends on what the slip rings are for. If it is a Wound Rotor or Synchronous motor, you would not put the motor power through the slip rings at all.
The slip rings on a Wound Rotor motor are there to simply add resistance to the rotor circuit. There are some specialized WR motor systems that PULL power from the rotor and put it into a VFD-like system to recover energy from the rotating load, but technically, the PWM of the VFD is not going through the slip rings.
In a Synchronous motor, the slip rings are there to feed DC excitation power to the rotor. The device that is providing that excitation power is often something essentially the same as a DC drive, so maybe you are
THINKING it is a VFD, but it is not. That is low power DC being fed, and it is not a problem for the slip rings; they are made for that.
If it is because the motor is attached to something in the trickling filter that is rotating and the motor is fed from a stationary point through the slip rings, then that is a different matter. In general, an application such as this is not a good candidate for powering that motor with a VFD going through slip rings. The output of the VFD is high power pulsed DC in a PWM pattern, very similar to a welder when you start putting it through gaps, such as slip rings and brushes. It tends to deteriorate the connections very fast. You would be better off trying to mount the VFD on the rotating part of the machine along with the motor and putting the
Line power
TO the VFD through the slip rings.