The invention relates to a brushless electric motor according to claim 1.
Electronically commutated electric motors typically have a permanent magnet-excited rotor, wherein the rotor is either equipped with individual permanent magnets, or a multipole ring magnet is arranged on the rotor, and in a motor with a small diameter, the rotor itself is frequently made of a permanent magnet having multiple magnetized poles. The magnetization direction of the magnet or magnets of such rotors is mostly perpendicular to the air gap of the motor.
DE 101 24 436 A1 shows in an axial top view a diagram of a stator and a rotor of a brushless electric motor. The stator has a stator winding with winding phases connected in a star configuration, with the permanent magnets being arranged on the rotor body which is made of a sheet metal laminate. With such an arrangement of the permanent magnets on the rotor, the permanent magnets may disadvantageously detach from the rotor at high rotation speeds and due to high stress caused by temperature and other effects; in addition, there is a risk that the permanent magnets become demagnetized due to large magnetic fields at the stator.
Electric motors need to be flexibly controllable from a low to a high rotation speed under load and must be able to withstand overloads. A conventional electronically commutated permanent magnet-excited electric motor, which satisfies these requirements, is frequently difficult to install, because in many cases only a very limited space is available for the installation of such motor, which limits the outside diameter of the electric motor. For attaining high rotation speeds, the permanent magnet-excited rotor advantageously has a low field strength and a small number of poles on the stator.
Disadvantageously, a low field strength of the permanent magnets of the rotor and a small number of field poles on the stator more particularly limits the input power and hence also the torque of the electric motor due to the risk that the permanent magnet-excited rotor becomes demagnetized.
Advantageously, a high input power and a high rotation speed of the permanent magnet-excited electric motor can be attained if the magnetization direction of the permanent magnets of the rotor is not perpendicular to the air gap of the electric motor. A number of solutions are already known which implement this orientation of the permanent magnets relative to the air gap of the motor.
DE 197 23 302 A1 describes such solution. The rotor is formed with a reluctance-supported permanent magnet system, wherein the arrangement of the permanent magnets in the rotor is a collector arrangement. The rotor is made of a laminated core having rotor teeth and interposed slots. Permanent magnets, which are magnetized tangentially so that always two poles of the same polarity operate on one rotor tooth, are arranged in the slots. The magnetization direction of the permanent magnets is oriented parallel to the air gap of the motor.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,847,149 B2 describes an electric motor wherein the permanent magnets of the rotor are arranged in a collector arrangement along the rotor shaft in a slot extending perpendicular to the shaft. The slots of the rotor are formed by core members (rotor teeth), and these core members are individually non-rotatably connected with the rotor shaft. The rotor teeth have a specially formed pole face facing the air gap.
The construction of an electric motor of the described type is too complex and expensive for many applications.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,097,126 A describes a brushless DC motor with a permanent magnet-excited reluctance rotor of a particular type. A permanent magnet, which forms the poles on the rotor elements at the air gap to the stator, is arranged between the rotor elements having a cross-wise shape. The wiring pattern of the winding phases and the rotor steps are performed in a manner known from reluctance motors, so that the torque disadvantageously suffers from a corresponding ripple.
Frequently, only a small space is available for the installation of an electronically commutated electric motor. The outside the diameter of the electric motor is therefore limited, which makes it difficult to install the required field winding on the stator, if the rotor should have a sufficiently large diameter for attaining an adequate torque. This problem is in particular prevalent in special drives.
It is therefore an object of the invention to provide an inexpensive electronically commutated electric motor, which can be flexibly controlled and highly loaded and can withstand overloads, and which attains a relatively high torque and high rotation speed in relation to its size, while also exhibiting the smallest possible cogging and generating little noise as well as insignificant heat-up of the electric motor.
The object is attained with the features of the independent claim 1. Advantageous embodiments of the invention are recited in the other claims and in the specification.
Advantageously, with the special structure of the stator and the rotor of the electric motor a particularly soft transition of the rotor steps from one rotor step to the next rotor step is attained, thereby reducing torque ripple and noise generation of the electric motor, wherein the torque is approximately the same at the beginning and at the end of a rotor step, and the input power as well as the effective output power is significantly increased, and the electric motor can operate under high load. Moreover, due to the special structure of the electric motor, the commutation time of the winding phases need not be readjusted for increasing rotation speeds, because the commutation time can advance up to one quarter of a stator tooth width, without significantly affecting the efficiency of the electric motor.
The invention will now be described in more detail with reference to the drawing.
The rotor 2 is implemented as a permanent magnet-excited reluctance rotor. The rotor teeth 3 of rotor 2 form the pole faces 7 of the PM-excited rotor facing the stator. The permanent magnets 4 are arranged along the rotor shaft in a slot 8 oriented perpendicular to the shaft in a collector arrangement, with the corresponding pole faces of the permanent magnets facing the rotor tooth 3 forming poles of the same polarity, which at the air gap form the pole fields towards the stator. The width of the slots 8 of rotor 2 corresponds to the height of the permanent magnets 4, wherein the slot opening 9 of slots 8 can be smaller than the height of the permanent magnets. The rotor teeth 3 have projections 10 facing the slot opening to prevent the permanent magnets from a being ejected from the slots. The ratio of stator teeth to rotor teeth is 3:2.
For attaining a high efficiency of the motor, the width of the slot opening 9 of slots 8 of the rotor is preferably at least approximately half the width of a stator tooth 5, and at most plus approximately the width of a stator slot opening. The width of the permanent magnets in the direction towards the shaft is determined by the desired field strength towards the air gap; the smaller the mutual gap between the permanent magnets in the region of the shaft, the higher the field strength at the rotor teeth facing the air gap. The rotor teeth 3 are arranged contiguously on the shaft 11 of rotor 2 and are preferably formed of laminated metal plates, i.e., the rotor body is made of a sheet-metal laminate.
The rotor steps are terminated by reversing the polarity of the winding phases.
With this arrangement of the switching processes of the rotor steps, the torque at the beginning and at the end of a rotor step is approximately identical, so that the commutation time of the winding phases needs no longer be readjusted with increasing rotation speed, because the commutation time can advance by a quarter of a stator tooth width, without significantly affecting the efficiency of the electric motor.
A complete revolution of the rotor can occur with twelve rotor steps as well as with six rotor steps, with the distance of a rotor step corresponding to the width of half a stator tooth, or the distance corresponding to the width of half a stator tooth plus the respective width of a slot opening.
Frequently, only a limited space is available for an electric motor. Such electric motor must be properly designed in order to attain an adequate torque during startup and at low rotation speeds with the rotor of an electronically commutated electric motor.
The sheet metal laminate 14 of the stator is designed so that the rotor 15 has a relatively large diameter. The stator teeth are constructed so that the stator teeth have long narrow pole horns 16, and the flux return 17 on the sheet metal laminate 14 of the stator is also designed to be very narrow, so that enough space remains for receiving the coil on the stator tooth. The flux of the magnetic fields, which cannot be taken up by the flux return 17 of the sheet metal laminate 14, is taken up by the iron cylinder 18 of the stator. This iron cylinder 18 includes bearing shields if the electric motor is flanged to a gear.
Such design of the sheet metal laminate of the stator is made possible because each coil of the winding phases surround only a single stator tooth, and these coils are preferably mechanically wound.
To attain a high rotation speed with only slight cogging, the volume of the permanent magnets is reduced accordingly. The spacing between the permanent magnets 22 and the stator teeth 5 is increased so that the slot openings 19 of the rotor 15 facing the air gap have from one pole face to the adjacent pole face, i.e., the pole face 20 of the rotor teeth 21 facing the air gap, at least approximately half the width of a stator tooth 5. The rotor teeth 21 are beveled with a projection 23 formed toward the permanent magnets 22, whereby the width of the slot opening 19 at the air gap is increased to at least approximately half the width of a stator tooth, and at most plus approximately the width of a stator slot opening, thereby preventing a decrease in the efficiency of the electric motor with the arrangement of permanent magnets having a small height. The bevel 24 of the rotor teeth 21 forming a projection toward the permanent magnets is depicted in
As illustrated in
For reducing the weight of the rotor, the rotor teeth 3, 21, 27 can be provided with openings 30; these openings also reduce heat-up of the rotor.
By combining the special construction of the rotor and the special arrangement of the coils of the winding phases on the stator and through cooperation of this combination by controlling the rotating field on the stator with an electronic controller and by suitably orienting the rotor poles relative to the stator field, an approximately identical torque is attained at each rotor position. The effective output power is significantly increased in comparison, whereby the electric motor can be highly loaded, without running the risk that the permanent magnets are demagnetized.
The electric motor includes control electronics for connecting the winding phases to a current source.
The rotor position can be identified with conventional means, or the switching time of the winding phases is determined electronically, i.e., without using separate sensors.
For rapidly braking the motor, a winding phase is short-circuited via a switching element to the star-point or to another winding phase.
In the illustrated exemplary embodiment, the electric motor can also have a different number of pole pairs, and therefore a different number of stator teeth and rotor teeth, and the permanent magnets may also have different dimensions.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 020 962.1 | May 2006 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE07/00811 | 5/5/2007 | WO | 00 | 10/30/2008 |