The present invention relates to an electric motor, which preferably is configured as an internal rotor motor.
Such motors, preferably employing electronic commutation, are used, because of their low axial moment of inertia, for jobs where an electric motor's RPM must very quickly respond to electrical commands, e.g. for fast positioning of parts, or servo-assistance to movements. For this purpose, one desires such a motor to have a very uniform torque. One generally achieves this by a three-phase configuration of the motor, in which each of the phases has an essentially sinusoidal current applied to it, and the motor is so designed that, in the phases or strands of the multi-phase stator winding, sinusoidal voltages are induced. One also calls such a motor a “sine motor.”
In such motors, the phenomenon occurs that the boundaries between the individual rotor poles, the so-called “pole boundaries,” seek the positions of the largest air gaps. For the observer, this has the appearance as if the pole boundaries were attracted by the slots of the stator. This effect is called “cogging.” The torque created thereby is called “cogging torque” because it seeks to hold the rotor in particular rotational positions.
This effect is generated by a so-called “reluctance torque,” i.e. during the rotation of the rotor, relative to the stator, magnetic energy is stored in the magnetic circuit of the motor in certain rotation angle ranges, and, in other rotation angle ranges, this magnetic energy is released, analogous to when one alternately tensions a spring and releases it. For the storing, energy must be supplied to the rotor, i.e. the rotor is being braked thereby, and conversely, where the stored energy is being released, the rotor is being driven. If one turns the rotor of such a motor by hand, one has the impression that one “feels every slot.”
In the context of many drive applications, this reluctance torque is disruptive, so that there one is forced to use so-called “ironless” stator windings in which no reluctance torque arises. However, the power of such motors with ironless stators is generally insufficient because their air gap is very large. This leads to a high “specific weight” (weight/power ratio), i.e. the relationship of motor power to motor volume or motor power to motor weight is unfavorable with them.
Some have tried to overcome this problem by giving the pole shoes of the rotor a particular form, but that has led, thus far, to a structure in which the specific weight was unfavorable.
It is therefore an object of the invention to provide a sufficiently powerful internal rotor motor with minimized cogging torque. According to the invention, this object is achieved by careful shaping of cavities, formed in the rotor adjacent each circumferential end of the permanent magnets, and extending into undersides of the pole shoes, thereby giving each pole shoe a kind of mortarboard shape. One thereby obtains a multi-phase electric motor, in whose rotor one can use magnets whose angular span is not much smaller than a pole pitch of the rotor, and which nevertheless results in an induced voltage having a good sinusoidal form and an acceptable cogging torque. This makes it possible to improve the specific weight of such motors, i.e., for the same power, it suffices to use a motor which is smaller and lighter than before.
Further details and advantageous refinements of the invention are set forth in the following description and accompanying drawings, which are to be understood as preferred embodiments but not as any limitation of the invention.
In the cylindrical housing portion 24, there is arranged the lamination stack 27 (
In the A-side bell 26, in the usual manner, a seal 46 is provided for the shaft 40. Also there is a recess 48, into which is placed a guide element 50 for the outer race 55 of a ball bearing 54. The inner race 60 of ball bearing 54 is pressed onto shaft 40.
In the open end of cylindrical housing portion 24, a B-side bell 66 is secured. It has a recess 68 provided with an annular shoulder 67 for the outer race 70 of a ball bearing 72, whose inner race 74 is secured to shaft end 44. Shaft 40 has a collar 78, with which it rests against the left side of inner race 74. Against its right side rests a fitting 80 made of brass which is pressed by the countersunk head 31 of a countersunk screw 82 in the direction of shaft 40, and which has an essentially annular shape. Screw 82 engages in an internal thread 84 in shaft end 44, and thereby presses the fitting 80 in the direction of inner race 74.
For secure holding-in of outer race 70, there is provided a flat, annular part or washer 90, which is secured at its outer periphery to bell 66 using three evenly spaced screws 92. Part 90 rests, with its radial inner portion against outer race 70, which it presses leftwards against shoulder 67. The recess 68 is somewhat shallower than the outer race 70.
The screw 82 is a flathead screw with a hexagonal recess. After fitting 60 is secured, by means of screw 82, onto shaft end 44, a control magnet 110 is secured in a cylindrical recess of fitting 80, e.g. by gluing. Control magnet 110 is provided, on its right side as shown in
Stator lamination stack 37 has outward an armature 120, from which twelve teeth 122A through 122L project radially inward, and which are formed, in the manner shown, with widened heads 124, defining between them slots 126. The slot pitch between two adjacent slots 126 is designated τS and amounts here to:
τS=36/12=30° mech. (1)
It was found, surprisingly, that the form of the rotor poles should have a specified relationship to τS. This is further explained below, with reference to
Teeth 122 are wound with concentrated or “lumped” windings. Phase U is illustrated, as an example. This phase begins with a concentrated winding 128G on tooth 122G, continues in a concentrated winding 128G on tooth 122G, continues in a concentrated winding 126D on tooth 122D, further in a winding 128A on tooth 122A, and a winding 128J on tooth 122J. From there, phase U goes back to neutral point 0, assuming that a winding in a star or Y configuration is used. Naturally, a Δ configuration is also possible.
The partial windings 126G, 128D, 128A and 128J can also be connected in parallel, e.g. in case motor 20 is driven from a DC source with a low voltage such as in a car, since then one obtains winding phases having a low inductance and a low ohmic resistance.
Winding phases V and W are only shown schematically in
In the present invention, one tries to cause sinusoidal voltages to be induced in the individual phases U, V and W as rotor 36 turns. One thus also speaks of a “sine motor.” In phases U, V, and W, sinusoidal currents are then impressed.
The structure of rotor 36 will now be explained with reference to
Rotor 36 has, in its center, a magnetic core or armature 130 which is composed, in the usual manner, of a stack of stamped laminations. This stack is preferably constructed in the same manner as the one which is thoroughly shown and described in WO 03/081748-A1,
A plurality of pole pieces 136A, 136B, 136C, etc. are connected with core 130 via radially-oriented narrow connecting parts 132 and attached circumferentially-oriented connecting parts 134a, 134b. The axis of symmetry of pole shoe 136B is designated 137.
The pole shoes 136 each have, on their core-adjacent side, a respective interfacing surface 138A, 138B, 138C, hereinafter designated as “magnet/pole shoe boundary” and which is parallel to, and spaced by a distance D from, respective opposing surfaces 140A, 140B, 140C etc. Instead of a single magnet 38, one could assemble it from multiple parts, as is known to those skilled in the art.
Between these interfacing surfaces 138, 140, the already-described permanent magnets 38A, 38B, 38C are inserted. They each have a rectangular cross-section and a magnetization which is illustrated in
As shown in
As one further recognizes from
On both sides of permanent magnet 39, referring to the circumferential direction, there is formed a respective cavity 146a, 146b, whose cross-sectional shape approximates a right triangle. The long diagonal side of the triangle has kind of a dogleg, because a radially outer corner of permanent magnet 38 juts somewhat into this cavity 146.
In
As also indicated in
Normally, such a rotor topology would be undesirable and would lead to more of a rectangular flux distribution in air gap 39, and to a high cogging torque. However, by means of the constriction 142 of pole shoes 136 having the angle βC which is smaller than βM, one obtains a flux distribution which quite closely approaches the desired sinusoidal form.
Please refer to
As one sees, e.g. at magnet 38B, on its two sides, referring to the circumferential direction, a portion of the flux passes through cavities 146 (
I have discovered that it is important, for the magnitude of the cogging torque, that the angle βC (
τS=360°/12=30° mech. (3)
and the angle βC is about 27° mech., i.e. about 90% of τS. It has been found that, for βC in a concentrated winding, approximately the following relation should hold:
βC=τS*m (4)
where m=0.8, . . . 1.0, and
all angles are measured in mechanical degrees.
In case a distributed winding is used, the equation reads;
βC=τS*m*n (5)
where m=0.8. . . 1.0 and
n=1, 2, 3, . . .
Preferably, m has a value between 0.8 and 0.98.
It has been found that, in this manner, particularly when using concentrated windings, a very good sinusoidal form of the induced voltage can be obtained, in conjunction with an acceptable cogging torque. The considerable magnetic width βMi of magnets 38 allows a corresponding size reduction for motor 20, compared with prior art versions. In one exemplary embodiment, there resulted a longitudinal size reduction in the motor from 68 mm down to 50 mm, with the same output power; in actual practice, differing values may be obtained.
As a result, although the value of angle βC remains unchanged from the
βCL>βCR (6).
Conversely, in a second version with laminations 236b, one could make βCR larger than βCL (not shown). This could be done by simply inverting the lamination 236a shown in
If one makes a rotor lamination stack by, for example, first using a symmetrical lamination 236 according to
Openings 138A, 138B for magnets 38 have all the same positions in all laminations 236, 236a, 236b, so that the symmetry lines 137 will match in all laminations.
Naturally, within the scope of the present invention, many changes and modifications are possible, so the invention is not limited to the specific embodiments shown and described. Rather, the invention is defined by the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
203 17 021.0 | Nov 2003 | DE | national |
04 020 696.3 | Sep 2004 | EP | regional |
202 04 660.5 | Mar 2002 | DE | national |
This application is a continuation-in-part of my U.S. Ser. No. 10/390,824, filed 18 Mar. 2003. This application claims priority of German application DE 203 17 021.0, filed 5 Nov. 2003 and of European application 04 020 696.3, filed 1 Sep. 2004. The parent US application claims priority of German application DE 202 04 6605, filed 22 Mar. 2002. The contents of all of these priority applications are hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 10390824 | Mar 2003 | US |
Child | 10981170 | Nov 2004 | US |