The present invention relates to electric motors (dynamo-electric machines) with particular attention to details of the stator structure and its windings, formed by laying conductors into and around core parts, such as slotted stators, to facilitate automated manufacturing with ever larger numbers of stator slots.
Recently, the manufacturing of 3-phase brushless DC motors with a high number of stator slots is a challenge to automation in the fractional-horsepower (<746 W output) electric motor industry.
The number of stator slots and rotor poles used is a fundamental design decision influencing the size of the motor. For any motor design, configurations with a higher number of slots allows for designs with thin back iron sections, leading to highly desirable designs with large inner diameters and minimized overall mass. However, as the number of slots increases for a given motor diameter, the minimum spacing between slots decreases, preventing winding needles from passing through for machine winding.
Common stator slot/rotor pole combinations used in this industry are:
6 stator slots with 8 rotor poles;
9 stator slots with 6 rotor poles;
9 stator slots with 12 rotor poles;
12 stator slots with 8 rotor poles;
12 stator slots with 10 rotor poles;
12 stator slots with 14 rotor poles;
24 stator slots with 20 rotor poles; and
36 stator slots with 30 rotor poles,
where there are windings present on every stator slot, having two coils sides per slot. This winding configuration is commonly referred to as a double-layer winding.
In three-phase motors, windings associated with each drive phase A, B, and C are wound in the successive stator slots according to some specified pattern, such as ABC ABC ABC, or Aa bB Cc aA Bb cC (where the lowercase indicates a reverse winding direction), and then are connected together in an overall circuit in either a delta (parallel) or wye (series) connection to receive the energizing drive current pulses in a specified sequence. A delta connection tends to achieve higher top speeds but with lower torque than the wye connection, whereas the wye connection tends to provide higher torque at low speeds.
Alternate winding configurations are available, such as a double-layer winding (
U.S. Pat. No. 4,234,808 to Geppert et al. illustrates several configurations in embodiments of homopolar stepping motors having field windings about the stator poles. One embodiment has monofilar windings and shows a typical circuit connection and energization sequence for that monofilar winding configuration. Two other embodiments employ bifilar windings with each pair of partial windings connected either in parallel or in series with each other. That patent also shows that insulation can be fitted into the spaces between the stator poles and axially split at their radially inward portions to define respective wire winding gaps, each not less than 2 mm wide. In all of these cases, whether monofilar or bifilar, all of the stator poles are wound, leading to double-layer winding for all of the slots.
A motor according to the present invention provides novel slot geometry modifications to the stator to allow for winding automation where previously it was not possible with single-layer winding configurations. The invention covers any motor type using a combination of the required pole winding configuration and stator shoe geometry. Specifically, in the present invention there is at least one empty stator pole on each side adjacent to stator poles with a winding. Each stator pole with a winding terminates in a stator shoe, while stator shoes are absent from each of the empty stator poles. Removing the shoes from the empty stator poles increases the gap size for the slots to allow for automated winding capability in cases where it was previously not possible.
Thus, an electric motor is provided that comprises a stator and rotor, wherein the rotor has a specified number of rotor poles that magnetically interact with the stator to rotate in relation to the stator. The stator is a slotted stator with a specified number of stator poles with slots therebetween. The stator is provided with a set of conductive windings that are fitted into the slots and wound around the stator poles according to a specified pattern. There is at least one empty stator pole adjacent to each stator pole with a winding.
Each stator pole with a winding terminates in a stator shoe, while stator shoes are absent from each empty stator pole. The stator shoes that terminate each wound stator pole extend radially into a corresponding winding gap between the stator poles, thereby narrowing such gaps over the slots. Thus, having shoeless empty stator poles presents a larger gap. Conductive windings have a maximum wire gauge size or diameter for the available winding gap, so the larger gap presented by invention permits a larger wire gauge for the windings than conventional motors that have shoes on every stator pole.
The stator construction of the present invention can be employed for both outrunner and inrunner motor configurations. The present invention removes certain manufacturing limitations to allow stators with single-layer windings in slots to be used.
For 3-phase brushless DC (BLDC) motors, there are several rotor pole and stator slot combinations that can be used with the present invention:
Number (N) of stator slots/number (P) of rotor poles=0.857,0.937,1.07, or 1.2
Automated machine winding is restricted by the maximum allowable gap for a winding needle to pass through. Too small of a gap will eliminate the possibility of machine winding altogether. Additionally, the larger the available gap, the larger the needle can be used, allowing for larger wire sizes for winding. Table 1 shows typical machine winding capabilities (“AWG” refers to American Wire Gauge, ASTM B258):
Using a single-layer winding configuration or layout in conjunction with the present invention's stator shoe width optimization, i.e. the removal or absence of shoes from empty stator poles, allows minimum gaps of slots between the poles to increase by a factor of approximately 1.5× over a standard slot gap. As always, slot gap sizes scale with the overall motor diameter; so, the present invention also allows smaller motors to be constructed that were previously unachievable. Table 2 shows slot gap metrics for various stator slot and rotor pole configurations.
The invention can be applied to any motor type and configuration, including both outrunner and inrunner configurations (see
Using an outrunner style BLDC with 36 stator slots and 30 rotor poles as an example:
As noted for the single-layer BLDC motor of
The stator shoe optimization of the present invention requires removal of stator shoes altogether on the empty slots. This is seen in
Empty stator slots (i.e. slots that lack winding) are part of the requirement for this invention's single-layer winding configuration, and those empty slots are where the shoes must be removed. To summarize the requirement:
The invention achieves improved winding manufacturability with minimal performance difference compared to a conventional design:
The present invention claims priority under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) from prior U.S. provisional application 62/842,719, filed May 3, 2019.
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 62842719 | May 2019 | US |