Claims
- 1. A brushless DC motor having a total number of phases divisible by three for use in applications other than an information storage device, said motor comprising:
- a stator including a generally ring-shaped stator core having at least six radially extending pole shoes generally uniformly distributed about a central axis wherein a stator slot is defined between each pole shoe, said stator further including a stator winding having a number of physically non-overlapping stator coils disposed on said pole shoes in at least three evenly radially distributed sets wherein one non-overlapping stator coil is wound around each of said pole shoes;
- a rotor having a circular cylindrical surface upon which a continuous ring of generally radially oriented permanent magnetic material is mounted, said ring being magnetized to form at least four radially magnetized permanent magnets of alternating polarity wherein a circular cylindrical air gap is defined between adjacent surfaces of said pole shoes and said ring of permanent magnets, a pole gap is defined between the magnetic poles in each of said permanent magnets such that the circumferential extent of each pole gap is small compared to the circumferential extent of the magnetic poles in the pair of permanent magnets adjacent thereto, the radial magnetization of said permanent magnets varies in a substantially trapezoidal manner in a circumferential direction, and the number of said stator coils divided by the number of said permanent magnets is equal to 3/2;
- a load member other than a moveable storage medium, said load member being operatively engaged with said rotor; and
- a control circuit electrically connected to said stator winding and mounted stationary with respect to said stator, said sets of stator coils being selectively energized by said control circuit to operatively interact with said permanent magnets, rotate said stator about said central axis and move said load member, all of the coils in each of said sets of stator coils when energized being energized substantially simultaneously with substantially identical magnetic polarity.
- 2. The brushless DC motor of claim 1 wherein said stator core comprises a stack of laminated plates of magnetically conductive material.
- 3. The brushless DC motor of claim 1 wherein said stator winding is a three-phase winding with each of said stator coils being a monofilar coil.
- 4. The brushless DC motor of claim 1 wherein the permanent magnets in said ring comprise circumferentially consecutive portions of a bent strip of a permanently magnetized material.
- 5. The brushless DC motor of claim 1 wherein said permanent magnetic material comprises a material selected from the group consisting of: magnetic material in a synthetic binder, a mixture of hard ferrite and an elastomeric material, ceramic magnetic material, and a compound containing samarium and cobalt.
- 6. The brushless DC motor of claim 1 wherein the magnetic pole in each of said permanent magnets has a circumferential extent corresponding to at least 67 percent and at most 100 percent of the circumferential extent of the corresponding permanent magnet.
- 7. The brushless DC motor of claim 1 wherein said stator core has an axial length L and said cylindrical air gap has a diameter D, wherein L is at most equal to D.
- 8. The brushless DC motor of claim 1 wherein said rotor comprises an external rotor and wherein said startor core has an external diameter E and includes a central axis circular cavity having an internal diameter of I, wherein I is at least equal to 35 percent of E.
- 9. The brushless DC motor of claim 8 wherein I is equal to between 40 and 70 percent of E.
- 10. The brushless DC motor of claim 1 wherein each of said pole shoes is generally T-shaped and comprises a first radial part of relatively narrow circumferential extent and a second radial part of relatively larger circumferential extent, the second radial parts of adjacent pole shoes being circumferentially spaced from each other by an intermediate gap, the circumferential extent of each of said intermediate gaps being small compared to the circumferential extent of each of said second radial parts.
- 11. The brushless DC motor of claim 10 wherein each of said second radial parts varies proceeding in the circumferential direction to generate a reluctance torque, during operation of said brushless DC motor.
- 12. The brushless DC motor of claim 10 wherein each of said intermediate gaps has a circumferential extent corresponding to between two percent axed twenty percent of the circumferential extent of each of said second radial parts.
- 13. The brushless DC motor of claim 1 further comprising at least three magnetic field sensors mounted stationary with respect to said startor which are at least partially disposed within the magnetic field emitted by said ring of permanent magnets, said control circuit being electrically connected to said magnetic field sensors.
- 14. The brushless DC motor of claim 13 wherein each of said magnetic field sensors comprises a Hall generator.
- 15. The brushless DC motor of claim 1 wherein each of said sets of startor coils comprises at least one diametrically opposed pair of stator coils.
- 16. The brushless DC motor of claim 15 wherein the stator coils in each of said diametrically opposed pairs are electrically connected together in series.
- 17. The brushless DC motor of claim 15 wherein said stator core comprises a stack of laminated plates of magnetically conductive material.
- 18. The brushless DC motor of claim 15 wherein said stator winding is a three-phase winding with each of said stator coils being a monofilar coil.
- 19. The brushless DC motor of claim 15 wherein the permanent magnets in said ring comprise circumferentially consecutive portions of a bent strip of a permanently magnetized material.
- 20. The brushless DC motor of claim 15 wherein said permanent magnetic material comprises a material selected from the group consisting of magnetic material in a synthetic binder, a mixture of hard ferrite and an elastomeric material, ceramic magnetic material, and a compound containing samarium and cobalt.
- 21. The brushless DC motor of claim 15 further comprising at least three magnetic field sensors mounted stationary with respect to said stator which are at least partially disposed within the magnetic field emitted by said ring of permanent magnets, said control circuit being electrically connected to said magnetic field sensors.
- 22. The brushless DC motor of claim 21 wherein each of said magnetic field sensors comprises a Hall generator.
- 23. The brushless DC motor of claim 15 wherein the magnetic pole in each of said permanent magnets has a circumferential extent corresponding to at least 67 percent and at most 100 percent of the circumferential extent of the corresponding permanent magnet.
- 24. The brushless DC motor of claim 15 wherein said stator core has an axial length L and said cylindrical air gap has a diameter D, wherein L is at most equal to D.
- 25. The brushless DC motor of claim 15 wherein said rotor comprises an external rotor and wherein said stator core has an external diameter E and includes a central axis circular cavity having an internal diameter of I, wherein I is at least equal to 35 percent of E.
- 26. The brushless DC motor of claim 25 wherein I is equal to between 40 and 70 percent of E.
- 27. The brushless DC motor of claim 10 wherein said stator core further comprises flux guide structures which extend out in axial direction from both axial ends of the second radial parts of said pole shoes.
- 28. The brushless DC motor of claim 27 wherein the circumferential extents of said flux guide structures substantially correspond to the circumferential extents of the second radial parts of said pole shoes.
- 29. The brushless DC motor of claim 27 wherein the axial extension of said flux guide structures substantially corresponds to that of the coil ends of said stator coils. .�.30. A brushless DC motor having a total number of phases divisible by three for use in applications other than an information storage device, said motor comprising:
- a stator including a generally ring-shaped stator core having at least six radially extending pole shoes generally uniformly distributed about a central axis wherein a stator slot is defined between each pole shoe, said stator further including a stator winding having a number of physically non-overlapping stator coils disposed on said pole shoes in at least three evenly radially distributed sets wherein one non-overlapping stator coil is wound around each of said pole shoes;
- a rotor having a circular cylindrical surface upon which a continuous ring of generally radially oriented permanent magnetic material is mounted, said ring being magnetized to form at least four radially magnetized permanent magnets of alternating polarity wherein a circular cylindrical air gap is defined between adjacent surfaces of said pole shoes and said ring of permanent magnets, a pole gap is defined between the magnetic poles in each of said permanent magnets such that the circumferential extent of each pole gap is small compared to the circumferential extent of the magnetic poles in the permanent magnets adjacent thereto, the radial magnetization of said permanent magnetic varies in a substantially trapezoidal manner in a circumferential direction, and the number of said stator coils divided by the number of said permanent magnets is equal to 3/2;
- a load member other than a moveable storage medium, said load member being operatively engaged with said rotor; and
- a control circuit electrically connected to said stator winding and including at least three magnetic field sensors mounted stationary with respect to said stator which are at least partially disposed within the magnetic field emitted by said ring of permanent magnets, said sets of stator coils being selectively energized by said control circuit to operatively interact with said ring of permanent magnets, rotate said rotor about said central axis and move said load member, all of the coils in each of said sets of stator coils when energized being energized substantially simultaneously with substantially identical magnetic polarity..!..�.31. The brushless DC motor of claim 30 wherein said stator core comprises a stack of laminated plates of magnetically conductive material..!..�.32. The brushless DC motor of claim 30 wherein said stator winding is a three-phase winding with each of said stator coils being a monofilar coil..!..�.33. The brushless DC motor of claim 30 wherein the permanent magnets in said ring comprise circumferentially consecutive portions of a bent strip of a permanently magnetized material..!..�.34. The brushless DC motor of claim 30 wherein said permanent magnetic material comprises a material selected from the group consisting of: magnetic material in a synthetic binder, a mixture of hard ferrite and an elastomeric material, ceramic magnetic material, and a compound containing samarium and cobalt..!..�.35. The brushless DC motor of claim 30 wherein the magnetic pole in each of said permanent magnets has a circumferential extent corresponding to at least 67 percent and at most 100 percent of the
- circumferential extent of the corresponding permanent magnet..!..�.36. The brushless DC motor of claim 30 wherein said stator core has an axial length L and said cylindrical air gap has a diameter D, wherein L is at most equal to D..!..�.37. The brushless DC motor of claim 30 wherein said rotor comprises an external rotor and wherein said stator core has an external diameter E and includes a central axis circular cavity having an internal diameter of I, wherein I is at least equal to 35 percent of E..!..�.38. The brushless DC motor of claim 37 wherein is equal to between 40 and 70 percent of E..!..�.39. The brushless DC motor of claim 30 wherein each of said pole shoes is generally T-shaped and comprises a first radial part of relatively narrow circumferential extent and a second radial part of relatively larger circumferential extent, the second radial parts of adjacent pole shoes being circumferentially spaced from each other by an intermediate gap, the circumferential extent of each of said intermediate gaps being small compared to the circumferential extent of each of said second radial parts..!..�.40. The brushless DC motor of claim 39 wherein each of said second radial parts varies proceeding in the circumferential direction to generate a reluctance torque during operation of said brushless DC motor..!..�.41. The brushless DC motor of claim 39 wherein each of said intermediate gaps has a circumferential extent corresponding to between two percent and twenty percent of the circumferential extent of each of said second radial parts..!..�.42. The brushless DC motor of claim 30 wherein each of said magnetic field sensors comprises a Hall generator..!..�.43. The brushless DC motor of claim 30 wherein each of said sets of stator coils comprises at least one diametrically opposed pair of stator coils..!..�.44. The brushless DC motor of claim 43 wherein the stator coils in each of said diametrically opposed pairs are electrically connected together in series..!..�.45. The brushless DC motor of claim 43 wherein said stator core comprises a stack of laminated plates of magnetically conductive material..!..�.46. The brushless DC motor of claim 43 wherein said stator winding is a three-phase winding with each of said stator coils being a monofilar
- coil..!..�.47. The brushless DC motor of claim 43 wherein the permanent magnets in said ring comprise circumferentially consecutive portions of a bent strip of a permanently magnetized material..!..�.48. The brushless DC motor of claim 43 wherein said permanent magnetic material comprises a material selected from the group consisting of: magnetic material in a synthetic binder, a mixture of hard ferrite and an elastomeric material, ceramic magnetic material, and a compound containing samarium and cobalt..!..�.49. The brushless DC motor of claim 43 wherein the magnetic pole in each of said permanent magnets has a circumferential extent corresponding to at least 67 percent and at most 100 percent of the circumferential extent of the corresponding permanent magnet..!..�.50. The brushless DC motor of claim 43 wherein said stator core has an axial length L and said cylindrical air gap has a diameter D, wherein L is at most equal to D..!..�.51. The brushless DC motor of claim 43 wherein said rotor comprises an external rotor and wherein said stator core has an external diameter E and includes a central axis circular cavity having an internal diameter of I, wherein I is at least equal to 35 percent of E..!..�.52. The brushless DC motor of claim 51 wherein I is equal to between 40 and 70 percent of E..!..�.53. The brushless DC motor of claim 39 wherein said stator core further comprises flux guide structures which extend out in axial direction from both axial end of the second radial parts of said pole shoes..!..�.54. The brushless DC motor of claim 53 wherein the circumferential extents of said flux guide structures substantially correspond to the circumferential extents of the second radial parts of said pole shoes..!..�.55. The brushless DC motor of claim 53 wherein the axial extension of said flux guide structures substantially
- corresponds to that of the coil ends of said stator coils..!..Iadd.56. A brushless DC motor having a total number of phases divisible by three in combination with a load member, the combination comprising:
- a stator including a generally ring-shaped stator core having at least six radially extending pole shoes generally uniformly distributed about a central axis wherein a stator slot is defined between each pole shoe, said stator further including a stator winding having a number of physically non-overlapping stator coils disposed on said pole shoes in at least three evenly radially distributed sets wherein one non-overlapping stator coil is wound around each of said pole shoes:
- a rotor having a circular cylindrical surface upon which a continuous ring of generally radially oriented permanent magnetic material is mounted, said ring being magnetized to form at least four radially magnetized permanent magnets of alternating polarity wherein a circular cylindrical air gap is defined between adjacent surfaces of said pole shoes and said ring of permanent magnets, a pole gap is defined between the magnetic poles in each of said permanent magnets such that the circumferential extent of each pole gap is small compared to the circumferential extent of the magnetic poles in the pair of permanent magnets adjacent thereto, the radial magnetization of said permanent magnets varies in a substantially trapezoidal manner in a circumferential direction, and the number of said stator coils divided by the number of said permanent magnets is equal to 3/2;
- a load member other than a rigid magnetic storage disk, said load member being operatively engaged with said rotor; and
- a control circuit electrically connected to said stator winding and mounted stationary with respect to said stator, said sets of stator coils being selectively energized by said control circuit to operatively interact with said permanent magnets, rotate said rotor about said central axis and move said load member, all of the coils in each of said sets of stator coils when energized being energized substantially simultaneously with substantially identical magnetic polarity. .Iaddend..Iadd.57. The brushless DC motor of claim 56 wherein said stator core comprises a stack of laminated plates of magnetically conductive material. .Iaddend..Iadd.58. The brushless DC motor of claim 56 wherein said stator winding is a three-phase winding with each of said stator coils being a monofilar coil. .Iaddend..Iadd.59. The brushless DC motor of claim 56 wherein the permanent magnets in said ring comprise circumferentially consecutive portions of a bent strip of a permanently magnetized material. .Iaddend..Iadd.60. The brushless DC motor of claim 56 wherein said permanent magnetic material comprises a material selected from the group consisting of: magnetic material in a synthetic binder, a mixture of hard ferrite and an elastomeric material, ceramic magnetic material, and a compound containing samarium and cobalt. .Iaddend..Iadd.61. The brushless DC motor of claim 56 wherein the magnetic pole in each of said permanent magnets has a circumferential extent corresponding to at least 67 percent and at most 100 percent of the circumferential extent of the corresponding permanent magnet. .Iaddend..Iadd.62. The brushless DC motor of claim 56 wherein said stator core has an axial length L and said cylindrical air gap has a diameter D, wherein L is at most equal to D. .Iaddend..Iadd.63. The brushless DC motor of claim 56 wherein said rotor comprises an external rotor and wherein said stator core has an external diameter E and includes a central axis circular cavity having an internal diameter of I, wherein I is at least equal to 35 percent of E. .Iaddend..Iadd.64. The brushless DC motor of claim 63 wherein I is equal to between 40 and 70 percent of E. .Iaddend..Iadd.65. The brushless DC motor of claim 56 wherein each of said pole shoes is generally T-shaped and comprises a first radial part of relatively narrow circumferential extent and a second radial part of relatively larger circumferential extent, the second radial parts of adjacent pole shoes being circumferentially spaced from each other by an intermediate gap, the circumferential extent of each of said intermediate gaps being small compared to the circumferential extent of each of said second radial parts. .Iaddend..Iadd.66. The brushless DC motor of claim 65 wherein each of said second radial parts varies proceeding in the circumferential direction to generate a reluctance torque during operation of said brushless DC motor. .Iaddend..Iadd.67. The brushless DC motor of claim 65 wherein each of said intermediate gaps has a circumferential extent corresponding to between two percent and twenty percent of the circumferential extent of each of said second radial parts. .Iaddend..Iadd.68. The brushless DC motor of claim 56 further comprising at least three magnetic field sensors mounted stationary with respect to said stator which are at least partially disposed within the magnetic field emitted by said ring of permanent magnets, said control circuit being electrically connected to said magnetic field sensors. .Iaddend..Iadd.69. The brushless DC motor of claim 68 wherein each of said magnetic field sensors comprises a Hall generator. .Iaddend..Iadd.70. The brushless DC motor of claim 56 wherein each of said sets of stator coils comprises at least one diametrically opposed pair of stator coils. .Iaddend..Iadd.71. The brushless DC motor of claim 70 wherein the stator coils in each of said diametrically opposed pairs are electrically connected together in series. .Iaddend..Iadd.72. The brushless DC motor of claim 70 wherein said stator core comprises a stack of laminated plates of magnetically conductive material. .Iaddend..Iadd.73. The brushless DC motor of claim 70 wherein said stator winding is a three-phase winding with each of said stator coils being a monofilar coil. .Iaddend..Iadd.74. The brushless DC motor of claim 70 wherein the permanent magnets in said ring comprise circumferentially consecutive portions of a bent strip of a permanently magnetized material. .Iaddend..Iadd.75. The brushless DC motor of claim 70 wherein said permanent magnetic material comprises a material selected from the group consisting of: magnetic material in a synthetic binder, a mixture of hard ferrite and an elastomeric material, ceramic magnetic material, and a compound containing samarium and cobalt. .Iaddend..Iadd.76. The brushless DC motor of claim 70 further comprising at least three magnetic field sensors mounted stationary with respect to said stator which are at least partially disposed within the magnetic field emitted by said ring of permanent magnets, said control circuit being electrically connected to said magnetic field sensors. .Iaddend..Iadd.77. The brushless DC motor of claim 76 wherein each of said magnetic field sensors comprises a Hall generator. .Iaddend..Iadd.78. The brushless DC motor of claim 70 wherein the magnetic pole in each of said permanent magnets has a circumferential extent corresponding to at least 67 percent and at most 100 percent of the circumferential extent of the corresponding permanent magnet. .Iaddend..Iadd.79. The brushless DC motor of claim 70 wherein said stator core has an axial length L and said cylindrical air gap has a diameter D, wherein L is at most equal to D. .Iaddend..Iadd.80. The brushless DC motor of claim 70 wherein said rotor comprises an external rotor and wherein said stator core has an external diameter E and includes a central axis circular cavity having an internal diameter of I, wherein I is at least equal to 35 percent of E. .Iaddend..Iadd.81. The brushless DC motor of claim 80 wherein I is equal to between 40 and 70 percent of E. .Iaddend..Iadd.82. The brushless DC motor of claim 65 wherein said stator core further comprises flux guide structures which extend out in axial direction from both axial ends of the second radial parts of said pole shoes. .Iaddend..Iadd.83. The brushless DC motor of claim 82 wherein the circumferential extents of said flux guide structures substantially correspond to the circumferential extents of the second radial parts of said pole shoes. .Iaddend..Iadd.84. The brushless DC motor of claim 82 wherein the axial extension of said flux guide structures substantially corresponds to that of the coil ends of said stator coils. .Iaddend.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
30 21 328.6 |
Jun 1980 |
DEX |
|
CROSS-REFERENCES TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 08/372,294, filed Jan. 13, 1995, which is a continuation of Ser. No. 07/594,274, filed Oct. 3, 1990, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,382,853, which is a continuation of Ser. No. 07/319,996, filed Mar. 7, 1989, abandoned, which is a continuation of Ser. No. 07/072,901, filed Jul. 14, 1987, abandoned, which is a continuation of Ser. No. 06/635,468, filed Jul. 27, 1984, now abandoned, which is a continuation of Ser. No. 06/461,972, filed Jan. 26, 1983, abandoned, which is a continuation of Ser. No. 06/210,768, filed Nov. 26, 1980, now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (9)
Foreign Referenced Citations (18)
Number |
Date |
Country |
1244283 |
Jul 1967 |
DEX |
1954409 |
Jun 1970 |
DEX |
2225442 |
Dec 1973 |
DEX |
2346380 |
Nov 1974 |
DEX |
2639055 |
Mar 1977 |
DEX |
2612464 |
Aug 1977 |
DEX |
2804787 |
Sep 1978 |
DEX |
2840057 |
Mar 1979 |
DEX |
2647675 |
Apr 1979 |
DEX |
41-015606 |
Sep 1966 |
JPX |
41-021084 |
Sep 1966 |
JPX |
52-004002 |
Jan 1977 |
JPX |
52-048009 |
Apr 1977 |
JPX |
53-055724 |
May 1978 |
JPX |
54-099908 |
Aug 1979 |
JPX |
54-121914 |
Sep 1979 |
JPX |
54-156106 |
Dec 1979 |
JPX |
2005482 |
Apr 1979 |
GBX |
Non-Patent Literature Citations (3)
Entry |
Kobayashi et al. "Direct Drive system for Isolated Loop Drive", National Technical Report, vol. 22 No. 4, Aug. 1976. |
Brushless DC Disc Drive Spindle. "Sextant", Rotron, Inc., Woodstock, NY, Nov. 1980. |
Zweipulsige Kollectorlose Gleichstrommotoren, Papst-Motoren KG; St Goergen/Swarzwald; Germany, Jan. 1977. |
Continuations (7)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
372294 |
Jan 1995 |
|
Parent |
594274 |
Oct 1990 |
|
Parent |
319996 |
Mar 1989 |
|
Parent |
72901 |
Jul 1987 |
|
Parent |
635468 |
Jul 1984 |
|
Parent |
461972 |
Jan 1983 |
|
Parent |
210768 |
Nov 1980 |
|
Reissues (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
460128 |
Jun 1995 |
|