Disclosed herein are coolant orifice plates for electric machine cooling.
Electric machines, including electric generators, motors, sirens, etc., may include a stator surrounding a rotor. The stator may be attached to a case and energy may flow through the stator to or from the rotor. The stator may include an iron core and copper windings. During operation, the copper windings may carry current, which in turn may generate heat.
A cooling system for an electric vehicle motor may include a stator having a plurality of coils forming end windings at each of an end of the stator; and at least one orifice plate arranged at the end windings of at least one end of the stator, the orifice plate including a plurality of nozzles configured to supply coolant at the end windings.
A cooling system for an electric vehicle motor may include a stator having a plurality of coils forming end windings at each of an end of the stator; at least one orifice plate arranged at the end windings of at least one end of the stator, the orifice plate configured to supply coolant at the end windings and a housing surrounding the stator and defining an opening at the end windings to maintain the at least one orifice plate therein.
A cooling system for an electric vehicle motor may include a housing configured to surround a stator having a plurality of coils forming end windings at each of an end of the stator, the housing configured to define at least one orifice plate arranged at the end windings of at least one end of the stator, the housing further defining a plurality of nozzles at the orifice plate to supply coolant between the end windings.
The embodiments of the present disclosure are pointed out with particularity in the appended claims. However, other features of the various embodiments will become more apparent and will be best understood by referring to the following detailed description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
As required, detailed embodiments of the present invention are disclosed herein; however, it is to be understood that the disclosed embodiments are merely exemplary of the invention that may be embodied in various and alternative forms. The figures are not necessarily to scale; some features may be exaggerated or minimized to show details of particular components. Therefore, specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to variously employ the present invention.
Electric machines, including electric generators, motors, sirens, etc., may include a stator surrounding a rotor. The stator may be attached to a case and energy may flow through the stator to or from the rotor. The stator may include an iron core and copper windings. A portion of the copper windings may protrude from the iron core, known as end windings. During operation, the copper windings may carry current, which in turn may generate heat. The iron core may also generate heat. However, this heat may cause inefficiencies in the motor. In order to decrease such inefficiencies, the stator may be cooled by a cooling medium, such as transmission oil, lubricant, coolant, other liquid, etc. This cooling medium may reduce the temperature of the winding and therefore increase the winding's ability to carry current. The end windings may be cooled by the cooling medium.
Typically, electric machines are cooled by dripping automotive transmission oil (ATF) onto the end windings through orifices in a transmission housing. Spay configurations or centrifugal impingement cooling from the rotor end plates may also be used. However, such cooling schemes may lead to sparse or spotty coverage of the cooling medium over the end windings. This non-uniformity of the coolant flow may lead to localized hot spots or areas with extremely high temperatures in the end windings.
Disclosed herein is a cooling system having at least one orifice plate arranged at the end-windings to provide for more uniform coolant coverage at the end windings. The at least one orifice plate may include a pair of plates on each side of the iron core. The plates may be arranged next to or above each end winding o provide better coolant flow control. The plates may form a round circular-type or disc-like shape configured to align or cover the end windings. In some examples, the plates' diameter may be larger than that of the end windings to allow for coolant injection at the top of the end windings and to take into consideration the circumferential direction of the coolant.
The more uniform coverage will significantly reduce the maximum average operating temperatures of the end windings, which in turn can reduce the required electric machine size. The more uniform coverage may also increase electric machine torque densities.
The stator 105 may be configured to act as a magnet to allow energy to form and flow therethrough in an electric motor. The stator 105 may be made of iron, aluminum, steel, copper, etc. The stator 105 may be made of a plurality of laminations (not individually labeled) that are placed side-by-side and stacked to form the disk-like circular form of the stator 105. The laminations may form an iron core 120, or back iron, of the stator 105. The iron core 120 may be a solid portion around the outer periphery of the stator 105. Each lamination may also form teeth 125 extending radially inward from the back iron into the center of the stator 105. When aligned and stacked, the teeth 125 extend axially along a length of the stator 105. The stator teeth 125 may be configured to maintain coils 130 therebetween.
The coils 130 may include a plurality of wires and may extend outward from the axial ends of the stator 105. These end portions are referred to as end windings 135 and include the exposed portion of the coils 130. These end windings 135 may receive a cooling medium, or coolant, such as transmission oil or other liquid to dissipate or extract heat from the iron core 120.
At least one orifice plate 140 may be arranged at or next to at least one of the end windings 135. In the example shown in
The housing 110 may define at least one opening 160 configured to receive at least a portion of the orifice plate 140. The opening 160 may mimic the general shape and size of the orifice plate 140 and aid in maintaining the orifice plate within the housing 110 during operation. The opening 160 may maintain the orifice plate 140 in a fixed position relative to the end windings 135.
The examples in
Thus, disclosed herein are coolant orifice plates enabling uniform coolant coverage at the end windings. This allows for higher cooling performance than traditional oil dripping, leading to significant reduction of the maximum and average operating temperatures. This improved coolant approach reduces the electric machine size requirements for a given torque output, increases electric machine torque densities, and increases efficiencies.
While exemplary embodiments are described above, it is not intended that these embodiments describe all possible forms of the invention. Rather, the words used in the specification are words of description rather than limitation, and it is understood that various changes may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Additionally, the features of various implementing embodiments may be combined to form further embodiments of the invention.