This application claims the benefit of commonly owned GB 0819862.4 filed Oct. 29, 2008, which application is fully incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates to a connector system providing transfer of electrical power and or data communications signals between two systems. The connector has no conductive electrical connection and can operate independently of angular orientation.
Electrical connections are a challenging aspect of underwater electrical system design, electrical conductive contact being the most common method of implementing an electrical mateable connector. Electrically conductive contact connectors are commonly subject to corrosion and contamination, which can result in a resistive contact point and failure of the connector function. In under water applications water must be excluded from the conductive contacts to prevent short circuits due to the partially conductive nature of water. Wet mating connections are even more challenging since water must be expelled from the conductive contacts during mating and care must be taken to ensure the signal is not applied to the connector while the contacts are exposed to the water before the connection is made to avoid rapid electrolytic corrosion. Connectors that do not rely upon direct conductive contact avoid these issues.
Additionally, any multi-pin connector must be rotationally aligned to ensure registration of the intended cross connections. This requirement can be problematic, particularly in applications where the connection point is not readily accessible by an operator such as connection by an autonomous system deep in the ocean. Slip ring connectors have been designed to avoid this issue but typically employ conductive brush contacts which are subject to corrosion and contamination issues, suffer continuous mechanical wear in rotating applications and present the challenging requirement of an underwater sealed rotating mechanical joint to exclude water from the brush contacts. An electrically insulated data and power connection which mates independent of angular alignment would be beneficial in many underwater applications.
Slip rings may be located at the axis of rotation or with an open bore positioning the ring coupling mechanism set out a radial distance from the axis of rotation. This second class of slip ring is defined as “off axis”.
The present invention relates to an off axis connector system for the transfer of electronic signals and/or electrical power between two units without the need for direct electrically conductive contact and independent of connector rotation about the mating axis. Signals are communicated by employing magnetic coupling to remove the need for direct electrical conductive contact.
Preferably, the connector employs a circular coil structure surrounded by a flux guiding enclosure that inductively couples energy from a primary winding to a secondary coil arranged at an equal radial distance displaced along the axis of symmetry. The flux guiding enclosure is elongated in the radial plane to reduce the magnetic reluctance of the gap, which is present at the mating surface.
Multiple independent channels may be implemented by arranging multiple coupling coils at different radial distances in a common plane centred round a common axis. The design can support multiple independent power or data channels independent of connector rotation about the axis of symmetry.
The electrically insulated nature of the connector assembly lends itself to underwater applications or situations where there is a high probability of liquid contaminants. The connector provides a highly reliable underwater connector function without the limitations imposed by the need to keep a conductive contact dry. The connector can also be “wet mated” entirely submerged under water without the need to devise a complex mechanical assembly to expel water from the contact area.
Coupling efficiency is improved by minimising the gap between flux guiding enclosures at the mating surface. This connector design has two distinct classes of application. Firstly as a static connection that can be mated independent of angular orientation so simplifying automated connector mating. Here the mating faces are not required to rotate significantly once the connection has been made so the gap between faces can be minimised by using metal to metal contact or physical contact of protective painted surfaces. A second class of application is as a rotating connector and in this case, mechanical measures must be taken to reduce friction between rotor and stator at the mating surface. In this case a plastic sheet will be attached to the mating surface of each connector half preferably constructed from an oil impregnated nylon material or alternative material exhibiting low sliding kinetic friction.
According to one aspect of the present invention there is provided an electrical connector comprising a circular primary coil winding magnetically coupled to a secondary circular coil in a connected mating half through a magnetic flux guiding structure that is elongated either side of the coil in the plane of the coil to form flux coupling wings. The connector structure is rotationally symmetric with an unoccupied area about the centre of symmetry. Connector mating is independent of angular orientation about the connector's axis of symmetry
The primary and secondary coils are substantially aligned about a common axis of rotational symmetry and the cross sectional width of the rotationally symmetric connector structure is less than the inner radius dimension.
The flux guiding structure is constructed from a material having a relative permeability greater than 10 and comprises flux coupling wings either side of a central coil enclosure. It is composed of at least two sections divided by a linking electrically insulated material. Wing length is greater than 2 times the flux guide material thickness and less than 50 times the gap dimension separating the primary flux guide from the secondary flux guide at the mating surface. A material with low coefficient of sliding kinetic friction is located between the mating surfaces to facilitate relative rotation of the connector halves.
Multiple independent connection channels are implemented by separate concentric primary coils coupled to corresponding secondary coils
The connector components allow mating to any other connector component.
The volume enclosed by the flux guiding structure is filled with electrically insulating material in at least one position along its circumference or continuously filled with insulating material to prevent a shorted loop resulting from the enclosed partially conductive water.
An optical communications connector or conductive slip ring connector may be positioned at the centre of rotational symmetry to provide additional independent functionality.
Various aspects of the invention will now be described by way of example only and with reference to the accompanying drawings, of which:
Enclosing the primary coil is a first flux guiding structure 31 and enclosing the secondary coil is a similarly shaped second flux guiding structure 24. Each guiding structure 24, 31 is elongated parallel to the mating surface to form wings 21, 22, 25 and 26. Wing structures 21, 22, 25 and 26 increase the surface area of the coupling region so reducing the magnetic reluctance of the gap at the interface between the first and second connector halves. The effective relative permeability of the whole magnetic circuit is determined almost entirely by the gap distance and relatively little by the relative permeability of the core material.
For applications that experience regular rotational movement between the connector halves, bearing surfaces 29 and 30 are formed from a material with a low coefficient of sliding kinetic friction. Layer 30 is bonded to the top connector half while layer 29 is bonded to the lower half. Nylon impregnated with lubricating oil will be a suitable material for some applications. Layers 29 and 30 ensure a controlled separating distance between the two flux guiding enclosures and low mechanical resistance to rotational movement. This reduces the torque necessary to maintain rotational movement where desired and improves the deployed operational life of the connector due to reduced mechanical abrasion.
Flux guides, 24 and 31, of the two, mated connectors form a magnetic circuit which couples magnetic flux generated in the primary 20 to the secondary coil 23. The selected magnetic material may have a comparatively low value of relative permeability (for example 10) allowing the freedom to select a material with suitable mechanical and chemical properties for this challenging underwater application. Flux guides may be manufactured from a ferrous metal, for example 316 or 904L marine grade stainless steel.
Regions 27 and 28 represent the area within the flux guiding enclosure not fully occupied by the transformer coil materials. If water were allowed to occupy these regions it would form a shorted turn due to the partially conductive nature of impure water. A current would be induced in opposition to the transformer coils and this would impact connector efficiency. To avoid this effect areas 27 and 28 are filled with an insulating material either continually around the connector circumference or at intervals to break the parasitic conductive circuit. For ease of manufacturing these areas can preferably be filled with an insulating epoxy resin material.
Connector coupling is essentially due to a transformer action. Primary and secondary windings may be arranged with a turns ratio desired by the individual application with the resultant relationship between primary and secondary voltage following the usual transformer design principles.
Direct contact of the metallic flux guiding enclosures may be acceptable in applications where little relative rotational movement is experienced. In applications with significant angular rotation direct metallic contact is unlikely to be acceptable due to mechanical abrasion and frictional resistance to movement and in these applications a gap must be devised between flux guides. A non-magnetic material such as PTFE (Poly Tetra Fluoro Ethylene) may be used as a spacer, but the effect is similar to the introduction of an air gap into the core of a magnetic induction device. The size of the gap is critical and is related to most of the key performance measures of the device. Coupling efficiency decreases with increasing gap size and in many applications the spacer layer will several millimetres thick.
The flux guide design features extended “wings” to each side of the winding. These are intended to reduce the reluctance of the magnetic circuit that is much higher than normal in a transformer due to the gap at the mating surface. The larger the wings, the lower the reluctance of the magnetic circuit, minimising the impact of the gap on performance. However, because most of the flux is concentrated near the windings, there are diminishing returns as the wings are extended.
where R=Magnetic reluctance 1/H
Without the proposed wing structure, the total magnetic reluctance is dominated by the gap since relative permeability is close to unity while the ferrous core material of the flux guide may have a relative permeability of over 1000. By including the wing structure the cross sectional area of the air gap, or plastic spacer, can be increased by many times hence lowering the reluctance of this circuit element. The gap path length can also be minimised and the small gap length to area ratio can compensate for the low permeability of this section. Wing length 90 will beneficially be greater than twice the guide material thickness 91 and typically sees little benefit from further extension once the gap reluctance is small compared to the flux guide reluctance.
The magnetic circuit formed by the flux guide enclosures must provide enough space to accommodate the primary winding that provides the magneto-motive force in the system. The secondary flux guide must also accommodate a secondary winding of similar or slightly larger size. The winding cavity must also provide space for insulating material and protective encapsulation for safe and reliable operation at the required voltage and temperature in a conductive seawater environment. The flux guide design dimensions are represented by; 93 the horizontal covering section; 94 the side wall height; 91 the flux guide thickness; 90 the wing width.
The number of turns in the windings is partly determined by the need to control the magnetising current and more turns are needed in this case because of the high reluctance in the magnetic circuit due to the gap. The copper loss under no-load conditions will be high as a result and a large winding aperture is required to accommodate large cross section wire to reduce electrical resistance. In
Transformer core losses due to eddy currents are proportional to core volume and in the present design the flux guide enclosure acts as a transformer core. However, the volume of the core must be sufficient to avoid magnetic saturation. For mild steel, the saturation flux density is about 1.5 Tesla.
Communications modulator 103 takes a data input and generates an analogue or digital modulated carrier signal. A high pass filter 102 can be used to isolate the modulator 103 from high power AC (Alternating Current) source 101. Subsea connector system 100 couples the AC power signal and communications signal to the connected system 108. The communications signal can be separated from the AC power in the secondary coil by a high pass filter arrangement 105. Data is extracted from the modulated carrier at the communications de-modulator 106. The larger coupled waveform delivers AC power 104 to the connected system.
By way of example an inductive connector system of the type described here with an internal diameter of 1.8 m and external diameter of 2 m is supplied with a 240 V, 4.2 A r.m.s. alternating current, 1 kW power. Primary to secondary coil turns ratio is 1:1 delivering a 240 V r.m.s. supply to the secondary coupled system. An oil impregnated nylon spacer fills the 2 mm gap between the connector halves to provide low friction rotational movement. The primary and secondary coils are constructed from 100 turns of 12 AWG enamelled copper wire occupying a cross sectional area 30 mm wide by 20 mm deep. The flux guide is manufactured from 5 mm thick 316 grade stainless steel.
No-load losses in this design are large and result from two features; the gap and the solid core. The main contributions to loss are eddy currents in the solid core and primary winding loss due to the magnetising current. Eddy current loss depends on frequency, flux density, core resistance and core shape. To reduce eddy current loss for a given material and magnetic field it is necessary to make the current path long while making the flux path short and in this design the core material must be as thin as possible, while avoiding core saturation. Winding loss depends on the resistance and inductance of the primary winding. Inductance achieved per unit length of winding is low, due to the presence of the gap, therefore a high magnetising current flows and power is dissipated in the resistance of the winding. This leads to a selection of a large cross section wire for the primary winding limited by the practical volume, mass and cost of the assembled coil.
Those familiar with transformer and communications techniques will understand that the foregoing is but one possible example of the principle according to this invention. In particular, to achieve some or most of the advantages of this invention, practical implementations may not necessarily be exactly as exemplified and can include variations within the scope of the invention. For example, a similar system description could apply where a higher permeability ferrite material is selected for the flux guiding enclosure other than that specified in the foregoing examples.
The above description of the specific embodiment is made by way of example only and not for the purposes of limitation. It will be clear to the skilled person that minor modifications may be made without significant changes to the operation described.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0819862.4 | Oct 2008 | GB | national |