The field of the invention relates to direct current (DC) motors, and more particularly to asymmetric brushless DC motors.
Direct current (DC) brushless motors may be used to drive motor shafts, such as a motor shaft driving a propeller on an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV). In applications that require driving slower-moving components, such as an imager that may pan about the UAV to provide real-time video of the environment, a sensor gimbal having reduction gears may be used between the rotatable shaft of the motor and the imager. Unfortunately, the gimbal assembly may not allow the imager to move when the imager is subject to a ground strike during landing; thereby increasing the peak stresses experienced by the reduction gears and imager during some UAV sorties.
A need continues to exist for power efficient and DC motors used in combination with shock tolerant sensor gimbals.
Embodiments of the invention include a DC motor apparatus, comprising a stator having a plurality of magnets; and a rotor having a plurality of armatures, where a quantity of the plurality of armatures may be less than a quantity of the plurality of magnets, each of the armatures of the plurality of armatures experiencing a vector magnetic force in response to its proximity to respective adjacent magnets of the plurality of magnets, and each of the armatures having a planar sidewall opposing a planar sidewall of an adjacent armature; where the vector sum of magnetic forces between each armature and its respective adjacent magnets of the plurality of magnets may be zero at every angular rotation position of the rotor with respect to the stator in the motor's non-energized state. In additional exemplary apparatus embodiments each armature of the plurality of armatures may comprise a forward-tapered end and an aft-tapered end, where each of the forward-tapered ends and each of the aft-tapered ends may be configured to accept periodic near magnetic saturation as the armature rotates past the respective adjacent magnets of the plurality of magnets. In additional exemplary apparatus embodiments each armature of the plurality of armatures may have a constant-radius face. In additional exemplary apparatus embodiments each magnet of the respective adjacent magnets of the plurality of magnets may have a planar face in complementary opposition to the constant-radius face of each armature of the plurality of armatures. In additional exemplary apparatus embodiments the stator may have between thirteen and nineteen magnets and the rotor may have between twelve and eighteen armatures. In additional exemplary apparatus embodiments each armature of the plurality of armatures may have a complementary face to each magnet of the respective adjacent magnets of the plurality of magnets, each complementary face selected from the group consisting of multi-planar, concave, and convex. In additional exemplary apparatus embodiments each armature of the plurality of armatures may have a tapered root section. In additional exemplary apparatus embodiments the stator may further comprise a back iron. In additional exemplary apparatus embodiments the back iron may have inner angular sidewall portions to align each magnet of the plurality of magnets. In additional exemplary apparatus embodiments each magnet of the plurality of magnets may be an electromagnet. In additional exemplary apparatus embodiments each armature of the plurality of armatures may be comprised of alternating layers of a laminated electrical steel layer and an oxide film layer.
Other apparatus embodiments include a DC motor, comprising a stator having a plurality of armatures, each of the armatures having a planar sidewall opposing a planar sidewall of an adjacent armature, and; a rotor having a plurality of magnets, each of the magnets of the plurality of magnets experiencing a vector magnetic force in response to its proximity to respective adjacent armatures of the plurality of armatures, where a quantity of the plurality of magnets is less than a quantity of the plurality of armatures; and where the vector sum of magnetic forces between each magnet and its respective adjacent armatures of the plurality of armatures is zero at every angular rotation position of rotor the with respect to the stator in the non-energized state of the motor. In additional exemplary apparatus embodiments each armature of the plurality of armatures may comprise a forward-tapered end and an aft-tapered end, where each of the forward-tapered ends and each of the aft-tapered ends may be configured to accept periodic near magnetic saturation as the magnets rotate past the respective adjacent armature of the plurality of armatures. In additional exemplary apparatus embodiments each armature of the plurality of armatures may have a constant-radius face. In additional exemplary apparatus embodiments each magnet of the respective adjacent magnets of the plurality of magnets may have a planar face in complementary opposition to the constant-radius face of each armature of the plurality of armatures. In additional exemplary apparatus embodiments the stator may have between thirteen and nineteen armatures and the rotor may have between twelve and eighteen magnets. In additional exemplary apparatus embodiments each armature of the plurality of armatures may have a complementary face to each magnet of the respective adjacent magnets of the plurality of magnets, each complementary face selected from the group consisting of multi-planar, concave, and convex. In additional exemplary apparatus embodiments each armature of the plurality of armatures may have a tapered root section. In additional exemplary apparatus embodiments the stator may further comprise a back iron. In additional exemplary apparatus embodiments the back iron may have inner angular sidewall portions to align each magnet of the plurality of magnets. In additional exemplary apparatus embodiments each magnet of the plurality of magnets may be an electromagnet. In additional exemplary apparatus embodiments each armature of the plurality of armatures may be comprised of alternating layers of a laminated electrical steel layer and an oxide film layer. In one embodiment, a motor shaft may be driven by the rotor, and a sensor rotatably driven by the motor shaft so that the zero vector sum of magnetic forces between each magnet and its respective adjacent armatures results in a “cogless” rotation of the sensor on the motor shaft.
Embodiments may also include a motor method comprising communicating a plurality of magnetic fields between a respective plurality of armatures on a rotor and respective pairs of magnets on a stator for each armature; and balancing the plurality of magnetic fields about the rotor as the rotor is rotated so that the vector sum of magnetic forces on the plurality of armatures may be approximately zero as the rotor is rotated a complete revolution in its non-energized state; where the motor may be substantially “cogless” as the rotor turns in its non-energized state.
Embodiments may also include an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) sensor apparatus, comprising a UAV, a brushless direct current (DC) motor coupled to the UAV, the DC motor further comprising a stator having a plurality of magnets, and a rotor having a plurality of armatures, where a quantity of the plurality of armatures is less than a quantity of the plurality of magnets, each of the armatures of the plurality of armatures experiencing a vector magnetic force in response to its proximity to respective adjacent magnets of the plurality of magnets, and each of the armatures having a planar sidewall opposing a planar sidewall of an adjacent armature, where the vector sum of magnetic forces between each armature and its respective adjacent magnets of the plurality of magnets is zero at every angular rotation position of the rotor with respect to the stator in the motor's non-energized state, and a sensor coupled to the motor in a direct-drive configuration, where the sensor is driven directly by the motor so that an angular rotation of the rotatable shaft, Δφ, results in the same angular rotation Δφ of the sensor. In additional exemplary apparatus embodiments, each armature of the plurality of armatures may comprise a forward-tapered end and an aft-tapered end, where each of the forward-tapered ends and each of the aft-tapered ends are configured to accept periodic near magnetic saturation as the armature rotates past the respective adjacent magnets of the plurality of magnets. In additional exemplary apparatus embodiments, each armature of the plurality of armatures may have a face shape selected from the group consisting of multi-planar, concave, and convex.
Embodiments may also include an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) sensor apparatus, comprising a UAV, a direct-drive motor coupled to the UAV, and a sensor coupled to the direct-drive motor, the direct-drive motor configured to angularly drive the sensor. In such an embodiment, the direct-drive motor may be coupled to the UAV through a support.
Embodiments are illustrated by way of example and not limitation in the figures of the accompanying drawing, and in which:
A DC motor is disclosed that has an improved rotor and stator design, with rotor armatures that collectively provide a vector sum magnetic force (FV)SUM of zero at every angular rotation position of the rotor with respect to the stator during the rotor's non-energized state to reduce magnetic “cogging.” In applications that require reduced system vibration, such as in UAVs that use image sensors operable to pan about the UAV, such “cogless” motors ease vibration design constraints and may produce better image data. Such “cogless” and gearless designs also result in a more robust and shock-tolerant design when used to directly drive such image sensors, as the lack of gears allows the image sensors to rotate in response to shocks to reduce peak stresses experienced by the sensors.
As illustrated in
In one embodiment illustrated in
In one implementation of a motor designed for a rotor having fifteen armatures and sixteen magnets, the various components may have the dimensions listed in the exemplary Table 1.
During operation, and in the motor's non-energized state, each armature 204 experiences a vector magnetic force (FV) in response to its proximity to respective adjacent magnets 208. As a result of the dimensions and location of every armature face 304 in relation to complementary adjacent magnet faces 315, the vector sum of all armature magnetic forces (FV)SUM is zero at every angular rotation position of the rotor with respect to the stator to substantially reduce magnetic “cogging” as the rotor experiences non-energized rotation.
The illustrations and examples provided herein are for explanatory purposes and are not intended to limit the scope of the appended claims. This disclosure is to be considered an exemplification of the principles of the invention and is not intended to limit the spirit and scope of the invention and/or claims of the embodiment illustrated. It is contemplated that various combinations and/or sub-combinations of the specific features, systems, methods, and aspects of the above embodiments may be made and still fall within the scope of the invention. Accordingly, it should be understood that various features and aspects of the disclosed embodiments may be combined with or substituted for one another in order to form varying modes of the disclosed invention. Further it is intended that the scope of the present invention herein disclosed by way of examples should not be limited by the particular disclosed embodiments described above.
This application is a continuation of International Patent Application No. PCT/US12/50445, filed Aug. 10, 2012, which claims priority to and the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/523,207, filed Aug. 12, 2011, both of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein for all purposes.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61523207 | Aug 2011 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/US12/50445 | Aug 2012 | US |
Child | 14179428 | US |