Not Applicable
Not Applicable
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to electrical transformers, particularly to electrical coils used in the transformers, and more particularly to cast coil assemblies.
2. Description of the Related Art
Transformers are conventional electrical devices for converting alternating electricity at a first voltage level to a second voltage level. The second voltage level may be greater or lesser than the first voltage level. A transformer has a primary coil of wire that is inductively coupled to a secondary coil of wire. To enhance the inductive coupling, the primary and secondary coils are often wound around a core of very high magnetic permeability, for example iron cores are usually used. The alternating input voltage is applied to the primary coil which generates an electromagnetic field that is coupled through the core to the secondary coil. That coupling induces alternating voltage in the secondary coil, thereby producing the output current from the transformer when a load is connected.
A common transformer design has circular primary and secondary coils coaxial arranged with one coil inside the other coil. A leg of the core, having a circular cross section, extends through the bore of the inner coil. A three-phase transformer has three of these coaxial coil arrangements located side by side around three legs of an E-shaped core section. A drawback of this design is that the circular coils result is a relatively wide transformer, especially when three such coil assemblies are placed side by side for a three-phase transformer.
It has been proposed to use a core that has core legs with a rectangular cross section. Conventional coaxial coils are separately wound on an arbor and then slid onto the leg of the core. However, when a large gauge wire of the inner coil is wound around a rectangular cross section arbor, the wire cannot make sharp bends at the corners of the arbor. As a result the inner coil bulges outward along the short sides of the arbor. The amount and size of the bulging varies from coil to coil. Thus the shape and size of the inner coil for the transformer cannot have dimensions with small tolerances, which means that the outer coil must be over sized so that can be slide over the inner coil with worst case dimensions. This also increases the outer dimensions of the transformer.
Another issue relates to electricity flowing through the transformer coils generating heat that needs to be dissipated. Cooling is commonly accomplished by creating an annular gap between inner and outer coils and sometimes between layers of the winding of each coil so that air is able to flow through the transformer. It is desirable to optimize the cooling of the air flow with minimal size gaps to keep the transformer relatively compact.
The low voltage and high voltage windings are separated by a dielectric medium, typically air or a resin material. Air is a relatively weaker dielectric medium than resin materials and large air gap is typically provided to withstand the voltage differentials between low and high voltage windings. Reducing the space between the low and high voltage winding is desirable.
Therefore, there still is a desire to further improve the transformer design.
A transformer includes a core of magnetic permeable material around which both a first coil assembly and a second coil assembly extend. The first coil assembly includes an electrical conductive first coil embedded in a first body of electrically insulating material. The second coil assembly extends around the first coil assembly and includes an electrical conductive second coil embedded in a second body of electrically insulating material. A first shield of electrically conductive, non-magnetic material is located between the second coil assembly and the first coil assembly and is embedded in either the first body or the second body.
The first shield inhibits capacitive coupling of the first and second coils, thereby inhibiting electrical noise from traveling from one of the coils to the other coil.
Another aspect of the present invention includes a second shield embedded in the second body and extending around and outside the second coil. The second shield can be made of electrically conductive, magnetic material to inhibit the transformer from electromagnetically interfering with other nearby equipment.
Referring initially to
In each phase assembly 14-16, the inner first coil assembly 18 that is closest to the core 12 and may serve as a low voltage coil. In which case, the outer second coil assembly 20, extending coaxially around the first coil assembly 18, functions as a high voltage coil. The first coil assembly 18 has start and finish leads connected to a set of low voltage terminals 21. The second coil assembly 20 in each assembly 14-16 is electrically connected to a set of high voltage terminals 22.
The details of the first phase assembly 14 are shown in
The outer, second coil assembly 20 comprises a second electrical conductor 30, such as a wire or foil strip, wound around the inner, first coil assembly 18, and thus also around the core 12, to form a second coil 31 with another plurality of winding layers encapsulated in a second body 32 of the resin material. The second coil assembly 20 includes an inner third reinforcing sheet 34 and an outer fourth reinforcing sheet 36 both of a mesh of non-electrically conductive material extending in loops around the second coil assembly. Here also, one of the third and fourth reinforcing sheets 34 or 36 may be eliminated in certain transformer designs and other reinforcing sheets can be placed between the winding layers of the second coil 31.
Each of the first and second coil assemblies 18 and 20 is fabricated by winding the respective electrical conductor around an arbor that has an outer dimension and shape corresponding to the desired internal surface of the first or second coil 24 or 31. The completed coil is then removed from the arbor and placed in a mold along with the inner and outer reinforcing sheets 27 and 29 or 34 and 36. The reinforcing sheets are spaced from the walls of the mold. The mold is sealed, the air is evacuated, and then filled with the resin material that is allowed to cure thereby forming the completed first or second coil assembly 18 or 20.
The core 12 is fabricated in two sub-assemblies each a lamination of multiple sheets of magnetically permeable material. A first sub-assembly is shaped like the letter E and the second sub-assembly is a straight member. The inner first coil assembly 18 for each of the phase assemblies 14, 15, and 16 is then inserted onto the respective leg of the core 12. As shown in
The straight second core sub-assembly is then secured to the ends of the legs of the first core sub-assembly in a conventional manner to complete a magnetic circuit. Then, the core 12 and the three phase assemblies 14-16 can be secured to core clamps 35 and a base 38.
With reference to
With reference to
An alternative when the voltage applied to the first coil assembly 18 exceeds 2400 volts, a first shield 56 can be embedded in the first coil assembly extending around the outside of the first coil 24 as shown in
The basic principle is that a grounded electrically conductive, non-magnetic first shield is located between the first and second coils 24 and 31 in each constructed phase assembly 14-16. By using such a first shield 44 or 56, the dielectric requirement between the first and second coil assemblies 18 and 20 is replaced by the dielectric requirement between the first coil assembly 18 and the grounded first shield. The withstand capability of that latter dielectric requirement is provided by resin with much smaller space as resin has much higher dielectric withstand capability than air. The first shield 44 also mitigates any arcs from occurring between the two coils 24 and 31. As a result, the annular gap 42 between the first and second coil assemblies 18 and 20 can be reduced from the distance necessary in the absence of the grounded first shield 44 or 56 which was significantly larger than needed for air cooling alone. Thus, the transformer 10 with three phase assemblies 14-16 according to this novel design has significantly smaller length and width. As an alternative, the thickness of the resin near the surfaces of the coil bodies 26 and 32 can be increased to provide greater electrical isolation further allowing the annular gap 42 between the coil assemblies to be reduced more.
With reference again to
An outer second shield 48 of a magnetic material also reduces electromagnetic field emission from the transformer 10 and diminishes electromagnetic interference with other nearby electrical equipment. Such a coil assembly also protects the coil assemblies for the other phases during the single phase fault condition.
All the various shields 44, 48, and 56 can be formed either as a wire mesh or a solid sheet of material and can form a loop with spaced apart ends configured as shown in
The foregoing description was primarily directed to one or more embodiments of the invention. Although some attention has been given to various alternatives within the scope of the invention, it is anticipated that one skilled in the art will likely realize additional alternatives that are now apparent from disclosure of embodiments of the invention. Accordingly, the scope of the invention should be determined from the following claims and not limited by the above disclosure.