This application is a sec. 371 of PCT/EP2006/002785, filed 27 Mar. 2006, claiming priority from DE 10 2005 024 770, filed 20 May 2005.
The invention relates to an electronically commutated electric motor, in particular to a subminiature motor, and to a method for the manufacture thereof.
Subminiature motors serve, inter alia, to drive mini-fans. The latter serve, for example, to cool processors in computers, for equipment cooling in small equipment, etc., and they have very small dimensions. For example:
The power consumption of such fans is 0.2-0.6 W for the 250 series, 0.6 to 0.9 W for the 400F series, and 0.4-3.0 W for the 400 and 600 series. Their weight is, for example, approximately 5 (five) g for the 250 series, between 17 g and 27 g for the 400/400F series, and approximately 85 g for the 600 series.
In motors of this miniature size, which must be very inexpensive, it is important to make assembly as simple as possible, so that the highest possible degree of automation becomes possible during manufacture. Only extensive production automation makes possible the uniform quality that is a prerequisite for a long average service life.
A further complicating factor with such subminiature motors is that their components, entirely analogously to those of a mechanical clock mechanism, are very delicate and therefore not very robust. The rotor shaft, for example, is often only as thick as a knitting needle and can therefore easily be bent if handled carelessly, rendering the motor unusable. This danger exists in particular during assembly.
With such very small motors, automated production is difficult and often requires additional manual work. This applies especially to the connection of elements of the winding arrangement arranged on the stator lamination stack to the associated circuit board. As shown by
A metal pin of this kind has one wire end of the winding arrangement of the motor wound around it, and is introduced, through an opening, into the circuit board and then soldered thereto. This method reaches its limits, however, at a maximum wire diameter of approximately 0.24 mm, since with thicker wires a pin of this kind bends, or the orifice in the insulating material of the injection-embedded lamination stack becomes enlarged and destroyed.
In such cases, it is then possible, for example, to solder the enameled copper wire manually onto solder pads of the circuit board. In another method, so-called insulation displacement contacts are used, but, for this, the wire diameter must be greater than approximately 0.17 mm.
It is therefore an object of the invention to make available a novel electric motor and a novel method for the manufacture thereof.
According to the invention, this object is achieved by a method comprising forming an insulating layer of thermally stable plastic on the lamination stack, forming plastic projections integrally with the plastic layer, wrapping a segment of the winding around the plastic projections, introducing the wire-wrapped projection through a hole in a circuit board and soldering the wire segment to the circuit board. There is no need here for metal pins that must first be pushed into the insulating layer; instead, a securing part manufactured from plastic during the injection-molding operation is used, on which part a wire segment of the winding is secured in suitable fashion, and the combination of plastic securing part and wire segment is then inserted through an associated opening of the circuit board and then soldered to it.
Another manner of achieving the stated object is to arrange a circuit board, formed with openings, on the internal stator, to form plastic projections on an insulating layer covering the lamination stack, to wrap segments of the winding on the plastic projections, to arrange the wrapped projections in the holes in the circuit board and to there solder the wire segments to the circuit board. The fact that the Autosplice pins are omitted from a motor of this kind results in substantially simplified and thus less expensive manufacturing, together with less waste.
A wire segment can be connected to the associated plastic securing part, for example, by being wound onto it. Alternatively, particularly with thicker wires, the wire segment can be at least temporarily mechanically secured in the associated plastic securing part, for example by being pressed into a groove that is provided in said plastic securing part, by adhesive bonding, or in another manner.
Further details and advantageous refinements of the invention are evident from the exemplifying embodiments, in no way to be understood as a limitation of the invention, that are described below and depicted in the drawings.
To illustrate approximate size, a length of 1 cm is indicated in the usual fashion in
The shape of lamination stack 22 depicted by way of example is evident from
Because lamination stack 22 has four salient poles, rotor ring magnet 24 is also magnetized in four-pole fashion in the variant depicted. Different numbers of poles can, of course, also be used for stator 22 and rotor 24, for example a version having two stator poles and two rotor poles. Similarly, a winding having only one strand, or a three-strand winding, would also be possible instead of the two-strand winding depicted in
Lamination stack 22 has on its inner side an opening 42 that serves for securing on, for example, a bearing tube (not depicted). Lamination stack 22 is constructed in the usual way from individual laminations 44, and it is injection-embedded in plastic layer 20 on its upper side 46, on its outer periphery 48, and on its lower side 50.
Plastic layer 20 transitions on its upper side into a collar 52, on its lower side into a collar 54, and is equipped on its lower side with plastic securing parts 56 that project downward in
The plastic used for layer 20, for the two collars 52, 54, and for plastic securing parts 56 is preferably a high-strength and high-temperature-resistant plastic, for example a liquid crystal polymer into which glass fibers are mixed in order to increase strength and reduce anisotropy. One such polymer is offered under the TICONA brand, e.g. VECTRA T 135 grade. A plastic of this kind has a bending moment of approx. 16,000 MPa and a heat deflection temperature under load (HDT (A) per ISO 75-1,2 at 1.8 MPa) of approx. 300° C. This temperature can be briefly exceeded, e.g. up to 370°, without causing this plastic to melt.
This type of plastic is also referred to as LCP. These are thermotropic (i.e. melt-processable) liquid crystal polymers (LCP) with very high temperature resistance. Their molecular structure is characteristic. These polymers are made up of rigid, rod-shaped macromolecules that, in the melt, become parallel and form liquid crystal structures. When this polymer melt is subjected to a shear flow or elongation flow, for example in the context of injection molding, the rigid molecules then arrange themselves into fibers and fibrils, which are “frozen in” upon cooling. This produces the specific morphology of the liquid crystal polymers in their solid state, which is not dissimilar to the morphology of wood. The LCP matrix has fibers of the same polymer embedded in it.
Such polymers are therefore also referred to as “self-reinforcing polymers.” In contrast to the known amorphous structure of conventional thermoplastic polymers, the rigid, rod-shaped polymer structure leads to a considerable improvement in mechanical properties and results in some other unusual properties, namely a continuous service temperature of up to 300° C., a melting temperature of up to 370° C., very high tensile strength and a high modulus of elasticity in the flow direction, and high impact toughness.
The more greatly the melt is oriented in one direction, the higher the values obtained for tensile strength, rigidity, and toughness in the flow direction. Thin parts therefore have a particularly pronounced anisotropy. This can be reduced to a certain extent, for example by 50%, by mixing glass fibers into the polymer. The positive material properties are nevertheless largely retained in this context, for example low viscosity in the molten state that enables particularly easy processing.
It is very advantageous that very thin plastic layers (e.g. 0.2 mm) can be generated with such a plastic, since it flows very readily in the molten state and has a low viscosity similar to that of water. This makes possible a very thin slot insulation 20N (see
Winding 60 has a terminal wire 62, and the latter is wound around plastic securing part 56 in the form of a small winding 64. This small winding 64 can in many cases be tinned by immersion into a tin bath, which simultaneously burns off the enameling of wire 62.
According to
Located in the region of each plastic securing part 58, 70, 72 is a respective protective partition 94 (
a) supporting and spacing members during installation onto circuit board 68;
b) mechanical protection to prevent damage to securing parts 58, 70, 72.
Numerous variants and modifications are of course possible, within the scope of the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2005 024 770 | May 2005 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2006/002785 | 3/27/2006 | WO | 00 | 9/11/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2006/122604 | 11/23/2006 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090096330 A1 | Apr 2009 | US |