The invention described and claimed hereinbelow is also described in German patent Application DE 10 2004 011 940.6 filed on Mar. 9, 2004. This German Patent Application, whose subject matter is incorporated here by reference, provides the basis for a claim of priority of invention under 35 U.S.C. 119(a)-(d).
The present invention relates to a magnet pole.
Magnet poles of this type are used with magnetically levitated vehicles in various applications, e.g. as parts of carrier, guidance, or brake magnets. Up to now, these magnet poles have been made of an iron core and a winding applied on it, said winding being formed of layers of a conductor and an isolator arranged in alternating succession (PCT WO 97/30 504). The conductors and isolators are comprised of band-shaped materials, e.g. aluminum bands and thin insulating foils.
Prior art magnet poles are comprised of one disk each so that the number of layers is equal to the number of windings. If the number of windings is high, this arrangement involves a problem in cooling. If the core is to simultaneously act as a cooling element, the heat generated in each layer is also required to penetrate in radial direction through electrically desired, though thermally interfering, insulation foils, the overall thermal resistance of which steadily increases as the number of layers rises.
Now, therefore, it is the object of the present invention to propose a configuration for the magnet pole of the species outlined hereinabove that improves heat discharge without any significant adverse effect upon electromagnetic characteristics or on the space taken by said magnet pole.
In keeping with these objects and with others which will become apparent hereinafter, one feature of the present invention resides, briefly stated, in a magnetic pole for magnetic levitation vehicles, comprising: a core (301) acting as a cooling element; a winding (314) applied on said core (301), said winding (314) having at least two discs (315, 316) formed by conductor strips (306) wound in several individual layers (1 . . . 300) around said core (301); first insulation layers (310, 321) for electrically insulating said individual layers (1 . . . 300) radially against each other and against said core (301); and at least a second insulation layer (317) lying between said at least two discs (315, 316) for electrically insulating said discs (315, 316) axially against each other.
Applying a magnet pole with two disks according to the present invention, the heat flow only needs to penetrate through a correspondingly lower number of electrical insulation layers in radial direction if the same number of windings, though distributed on both sides is provided. While all the other conditions are the same in terms of the overall number of windings, maximum terminal voltage, and space taken by said magnet pole, a notably better cooling efficiency is thereby achieved.
Embodiments of the present invention will be explained hereinafter in more detail and based upon the drawings attached hereto, in which
A magnet pole of the type being of interest hereunder according to
For example, the winding 302 is formed of alternatively succeeding layers of a conductor strip 306 (e.g. made of aluminum) arranged in alternating succession and of first insulation layers 307 arranged between them in the form of an insulating foil or the like which electrically insulates these layers against each other in a radial direction. In manufacturing said magnet pole 301, the conductor strips 306 and the insulation layers 307 are reeled-off in a well-known manner from supply coils 308, 309 and wound coaxially around the center axis 305 onto said core 301. Henceforth, the winding 302 thus obtained is comprised of a disc running coaxially to the center axis 305 and having a multitude of layers in radial direction.
For example, magnet poles of the type described hereunder for magnetically levitated vehicles have up to 300 layers that are schematically designated by reference numbers 1 . . . 300 in
Conversely, in conformity with the present invention, it is proposed to distribute layers 1 . . . 300 of a winding 314 according to
Layers 1 to 150 of the first disc 315 and layers 151 to 300 of the second disc 316 can be wound around said core 301 in the same or opposite sense of winding. With an equally directed sense of winding, an electrical connection for the layers would have to be provided immediately at said core 301, and additionally it would be necessary to provide a connection between the 150th layer and 151st layer. While it is constructively expensive, it is not desired either for electrical considerations, because connections lying inside mostly involve sharp edges and tips that may entail non-desired electrical breakthroughs and damage to the innermost insulation layer and/or winding carrier 303, unless additional insulation measures are taken.
In accordance with the present invention, it is furthermore envisaged to provide for an opposite direction of winding for the conductor strips 306 (
With the embodiment example described hereinabove, the second insulation layer 317 must be capable of electrically insulating the two layers 150 and 300 against each other where terminal voltage has been applied. Therefore, the thickness of each insulation layer 317 is approx. 300 times as big as the thickness of every first insulation layer 310, for the purpose of which it is naturally also possible to provide several insulation layers 317. Since the first insulation layer 310 only needs to have a thickness of approx. 15 to 25 μm if usual insulation materials are used, the required thickness of the second insulation layer 317 increases the axial space requirement only slightly, as has already been stated before. If a different allocation of existing layers to both discs 315, 316 is chosen, the thickness of the second insulation layer 317 must be chosen in an analogous manner depending on the electric voltage maximally established in operation between the different layers. In any case, the insulation layer 317 may entirely have the same thickness that orientates itself by the maximum value occurring.
Besides, the embodiment as described with reference to
Another benefit brought by the present invention lies in that the heat generated in the central areas of discs 315, 316 must flow in radial direction through far less insulation layers 310 as it would have to with a mono-disc arrangement. The maximum number of insulation layers 310 to be flown through amounts to 75 rather than 150 as up to now for central layers 75 and 225, respectively. In axial direction, the thermal resistance remains mainly unaffected, because the heat would dissipate only axially towards the outside for reasons of symmetry, even if the second insulation layer 317 is missing, as has been schematically indicated by arrows additionally drawn in
The present invention is not limited to the embodiments described that can be varied in a multitude of ways. In particular, it would be conceivable to compose the magnet pole of three discs or more, which would then have accordingly less layers. Accordingly, in conformity with the maximum voltages thus resulting, the second insulation layers 317 lying between various layers could be thinner than those described in the embodiment of
Irrespective thereof, the variables indicated for the number of existing layers and discs, the indicated materials, and the method of production for the magnet pole explained with reference to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 011 940 | Mar 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/DE2005/000183 | 2/4/2005 | WO | 00 | 6/28/2006 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2005/087532 | 9/22/2005 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080143467 A1 | Jun 2008 | US |