The present invention concerns a device for determining the position of the rotor of a rotary electrical machine comprising a stator.
The invention finds a particularly advantageous application in the field of reversible machines, or alternator/starters, used in the automotive industry, both in alternator mode and in motor mode on starting up or as an assistance to takeoff (boosting) as from 500 revolutions/minute.
A reversible machine comprises an alternator including:
The alternator converts a rotation movement of the rotor driven by the thermal engine of the vehicle into an electric current induced in the stator windings.
The alternator may also be reversible and compose an electric motor, or rotary electrical machine, making it possible to drive in rotation, via the rotary shaft, the thermal engine of the vehicle. This reversible alternator is called an alternator/starter. It converts mechanical energy into electrical energy and vice versa.
Thus, in alternator mode, the alternator/starter charges in particular the vehicle battery and consumers whilst in starter mode the alternator/starter drives the thermal engine, also referred to as the internal combustion engine, of the motor vehicle in order to start it.
In reversible machines in the automotive industry, for example, functioning according to motor or starter modes, the stator must be controlled for current so as to at all times apply to the rotor the torque necessary both for starting it up and to impart to it the required rotation for the functioning of the motor. However, this torque to be applied to the rotor, and therefore the current to be supplied to the phases of the stator, is a sinusoidal function of the position, referenced by the angle θ, of the rotor with respect to the stator, and hence the need to determine this position precisely.
To this end, certain reversible electrical machines, in particular those used in the automotive industry, are currently equipped with a device known by the term resolver disposed at the end of the shaft of the rotor of the machine. Such a resolver is described in the patent US 2002/0063491 A1. It has itself a stator and a rotor that are respectively fixed with respect to the stator and rotor of the machine. The said resolver measurers the magnetic field issuing from its own rotor. This magnetic field, being fixed with respect to the said rotor, which is itself fixed with respect to the rotor of the machine, represents the position of the actual rotor of the machine.
However, this type of equipment has a certain number of drawbacks. Resolvers are in fact expensive and their implementation to make them operational is complex because of the coupling to be effected between such a resolver and the machine itself requiring the presence of electronic computing components to supply a correct position of the rotor of the machine from the coupling parameters.
In addition, they are sensitive to the magnetic disturbance caused by the stray magnetic field produced by the rotor, which causes a malfunctioning of the system and therefore measurement errors and poor control of the machine. To limit this drawback, it is necessary to have recourse to magnetic protection, such as a stainless-steel tube placed between the rotor and the resolver at the shaft end. In addition, the mechanical strength of this device is not perfect since it is particularly sensitive to the vibration of the machine because of the mounting on the end of the rotor shaft.
Finally, their resistance to salt spray and dust is not completely satisfactory.
Thus the technical problem to be resolved by the object of the present invention is to propose a device for determining the position of the rotor of a rotary electrical machine comprising a stator, which would make it possible to obtain the precise position sought whilst being inexpensive, simple to implement and insensitive to magnetic disturbance.
The solution to the technical problem posed consists, according to the present invention, of the said device comprising a plurality of magnetic field sensors fixed with respect to the stator and able to deliver first signals representing a rotating magnetic field detected by the said sensors, and means of processing the said first signals by an operator able to supply second signals depending on the said position.
According to a first embodiment, the first signals are three-phase electrical signals and the second signals are two-phase electrical signals.
According to the invention, the said operator is represented by a matrix for projecting a multiphase reference frame in a two-phase reference frame. According to a first embodiment, the projection matrix is a Concordia matrix. According to a second embodiment, the projection matrix is Clark's matrix.
Thus, as will be seen in detail below, the device according to the invention leads to a precise determination of the position of the rotor, because in particular of its independence vis-à-vis many parameters and its insensitivity to various disturbances and stray phenomena.
Moreover, several characteristics of the determination device that is the object of the invention contribute to reducing its cost and simplifying its implementation.
In particular, the invention makes provision for the said sensors to be Hall effect sensors. The advantage of this type of sensor is that they are inexpensive and simple to use. According to a first embodiment, the plurality of sensors is composed of three sensors electrically out of phase by 120°.
According to a second embodiment the plurality of sensors is composed of two sensors electrically out of phase by 90°.
The rotary magnetic field necessary for the functioning of the device according to the invention can be obtained according to two different production methods.
In a first production method the said magnetic field is the magnetic field created by the rotor, while in a second production method the said magnetic field is created by a magnetised target connected to the rotor shaft.
It is found that, in each case, the device according to the invention does not involve any expensive equipment since in the first case the magnetic field is directly supplied by the rotor itself and in the second case the magnetic field is supplied by a target, since a direct calculation is made of the position of the rotor with respect to a magnetic field of the rotor or of the target, the latter being less expensive than a resolver.
The description that follows with regard to the accompanying drawings, given by way of non-limiting examples, will give a clear understanding of what the invention consists and how it can be implemented.
In the description that follows, the example is taken of a claw-type rotary electrical machine.
In a second non-limiting embodiment, the rotary electrical machine is equivalent to that described in
A rotor comprising eight pairs of poles will be taken as an example.
The device for determining the position θ(t) of the rotor 4 comprises:
According to the first embodiment, the magnetic field sensors 52 are located facing the target 50, and the sensor holder 53 is fixed to the face of the rear bearing 14 turned in the opposite direction to the target 50, as illustrated in
In a first variant embodiment, the sensors 52 are located radially opposite the target 50, perpendicular with respect to the shaft 3 of the rotor 4, with the definition of an air gap between the sensors and the target so that the reading is radial, as illustrated in
A second variant embodiment, the sensors 52 are located axially opposite the target 50, in the axis of the shaft 3 of the rotor 4, with the definition of an air gap between the sensors and the target so that the reading is axial.
According to the second embodiment, the magnet field sensors 52 are located facing the rotor 4 and the sensor holder 53 is fixed to the face of the front bearing 13.
In a first variant embodiment, the sensors 52 are located radially on the side of the rotor 50, perpendicular with respect to the shaft 3 of the rotor 4 so that the reading is radial.
In a second variant embodiment, the sensors 52 are located axially on the top of the rotor 4, in the axis of the shaft 3 of the rotor 4, so that the reading is axial.
Preferentially, the sensors are moulded onto the sensor holder 53, the latter preferably being made from plastics material. This enables the assembly consisting of sensor and sensor holder to be impervious and thus to be less sensitive to salt spray and dust.
It should be noted that, for more information on the said sensor holder 53, reference should be made to the description of the patent WO 01/69762 A1, in particular pages 21 and 22.
It is thus possible to see the three phases 10u, 10v and 10w of the stator 8, the rotor 4 and the three sensors 52u, 52v, 52w, the latter being connected to the means MC of processing the first signals issuing from the said sensors.
Advantageously, the set of sensors is composed of three Hall effect sensors 52u, 52v, 52w out of phase with one another by 120° electrical. Another arrangement of sensors can however be provided, for example 2 haul effect sensors out of phase with each other by 90° electrical or more than three sensors, for example five sensors out of phase with one another by 72° electrical. The advantage of Hall effect sensors is to measure a magnetic field and to transpose this measurement into a signal representing the said magnetic field with a quantity equivalent to a voltage, frequency, current, numerical, etc.
The sensors 52u, 52v, 52w are intended to supply first signals su, sv and sw representing a magnetic field detected at each sensor and created by the movement of the rotor in the stator. The three sensors measure the said magnetic field at the same time at different points. This magnetic field is a sum of the various magnetic fields issuing from various sources.
Thus, in the first embodiment, the case of the target 50, the magnetic field is created by the said target 50 with in addition, where applicable, a stray field created by the magnet wheels 41, 42 of the rotor 4 itself.
In the second embodiment, the case of the rotor 4 without a target, the magnet field is created by the rotor 4 itself.
Preferentially, the first signals are three-phase electrical signals. The first signals can also be numerical signals representing the magnetic field.
It should be noted that the continuous offset component soffset therefore depends in particular on:
Moreover, the sinusoidal component depends in particular on the position of the sensor with respect to the rotor 4 (the case of the second embodiment) or to the target 50 (the case of the first embodiment), this position being determined by the distance are illustrated in
Thus, the closer a sensor 52 is to the rotor 4 (the case of the second embodiment) or to the target 50 (the case of the first embodiment), the greater are the variations in amplitude of the sinusoidal component.
By way of example, the maximum of the signals is reached when the sensor is situated opposite a North pole of the rotor 4 (the case of the second embodiment) or the target 50 (the case of the first embodiment). The signals are on the other hand at a minimum whenever a sensor is situated opposite a South pole of the rotor 4 (the case of the second embodiment) or of the target 50 (the case of the first embodiment).
Finally, all the signals su, sv and sw depend directly on the position θ(t) of the rotor sought since the frequency of the said signals depends on the rotation frequency of the rotor 4 (the case of the second embodiment) and on its number of poles or on the number of poles on the target 50 (the case of the first embodiment). Thus the frequency of the first signals issuing from the sensors 52 is equal to that of the rotation of the rotor 4 multiplied by the number of pairs of poles of the rotor 4 (the case of the second embodiment) or of the target 50 (the case of the first embodiment).
In a first step, there is applied to the first signal su, sv and sw issuing from the sensors 52 an operator represented by a projection matrix M able to supply second signals sin θ(t) and cos θ(t) dependent on the position θ(t) of the rotor 4.
In a first non-limiting embodiment, the matrix M is a matrix of projection of a multiphase reference frame to a two-phase reference frame, thus converting multiphase signals into two-phase signals. In our case, the multiphase reference frame is a three-phase reference frame.
Thus:
The third output component h, referred to as the homopolar component, is not used in the context of the invention. It is composed of an average of the offset components soffset and a signal whose amplitude is a function of a phase-shift error between the signals supplied by the Hall effect sensors in the case where the sensors are not properly mounted so that the first signals are not exactly out of phase by 120° for example.
According to a first variant of this first embodiment, the projection matrix M is a matrix that is the inverse of a matrix known by the name Concordia matrix C.
The matrix
is an example of an applicable Concordia matrix, that is to say
According to a second variant of this first embodiment, the projection matrix M is a matrix that is the inverse of a matrix of a matrix known by the name Clark's matrix C.
The matrix
is an example of a Clark's matrix applicable, that is to say
It should be noted that the coefficients of these projection matrices are constant but are a function of conventions such as the direction of rotation taken of the three-phase currents, the intensity of its currents etc. Thus it is possible to have a different standardisation factor.
In a second step, the argument of an angle θ(t) is calculated from the second two signals sin θ(t) and cos θ(t), the angle θ(t) representing the position of the rotor 4.
Thus this calculation makes it possible to determine the position θ(t) of the rotor 4 unequivocally to within 360° electrical, that is to say 360°/8 equals 45° mechanical for eight pairs of poles of the rotor 4 in the example taken. It will be recalled that a number of electrical turns is equal to the number of pairs of poles times the number of mechanical turns, one mechanical turn corresponding to 360° physical of the rotor.
It should be noted that use is preferentially made of the argument instead of the tangent arc, which makes it possible to be dissociated from the amplitude of the first signals su, sv, and sw, the argument being the same whatever the amplitude of the said signals.
In addition, as described previously, this makes it possible to have the position of the rotor over 360° instead of 180° in the case of the tangent arc.
It should be noted that the processing that has just been described is carried out by the microcontroller MC whenever the position of the rotor 4 is necessary for controlling the machine.
Thus, even before starting up, it is possible to have the position θ(t) of the rotor 4, the Hall effect sensors continuously detecting the magnetic field.
Thus one of the advantages of the processing illustrated in
It should also be noted that the device according to the invention that has just been described with regard to
Finally, it should be noted that the device for determining the position according to the invention can also be implemented in all the electrical machines where the position of the rotor with respect to the stator must be known with precision. The invention is thus applicable to any type of electrical machine and for different functionings. The invention can in fact apply to machines functioning as an alternator alone, as a motor alone or as an alternator/starter, and of the asynchronous machine type, synchronous machines with claws and with or without inter-pole magnets, or machines with rotor with permanent magnets.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0407262 | Jun 2004 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR2005/001663 | 6/30/2005 | WO | 00 | 8/13/2008 |