The present invention relates to a magnetic core comprising a stack of electrical steel sheets with a known preferential direction of permeability. Furthermore a building technique for a magnetic core comprising grain oriented sheets in order to increase the energy efficiency of alternating current electrical machines whose magnetic core is submitted to a variable magnetic field is disclosed.
A wide variety of electrical machines often comprise magnetic cores (cited as “MC” hereinafter) substantially made of electrical steel. Naturally the properties of the electrical steel substantially making up the magnetic core influence various properties of the electrical machine. In particular for magnetic cores grain oriented electrical steel may be used.
The microstructure of the Grain Oriented electrical steel (cited as “GO” hereinafter) shown in
An angle α1 may be defined as the difference between the RD and the orientation <001> of each grain of the sheet. This angle is schematically represented in the
If GO sheets and strips industrially manufactured behave as single crystals, one can find the easy axis close to the RD. The hard axis corresponding to the <111> crystallographic axis, which forms an angle of 54.74° with the <001> axis for cubic crystals (see
GO grade has already been used for high power rotating electrical machines (diameter of stator more than 1 m) by using cut sheets in different sectors. The
In order to present the problem of this assembly, a torus shaped MC made with GO is considered. This torus, presented in
In first approximation it is possible, taking into account the RD, to characterize the magnetic core in 6 areas which can be associated in pairs of two as shown in
With increased energy dissipation due to losses, the energy efficiency of the machine as a whole will be diminished.
So one can notice that in case of unidirectional field and with a torus type MC many problems arise.
It is the same trend for rotating magnetizing fields of alternating current rotating electrical machines as previously evoked.
The problem to be solved is to design a magnetic core with better energetic performance. Furthermore an advantageous use of such a magnetic core shall be given.
The problem is solved according to the invention with a described magnetic core with the features of claim 1 and with a described use of a magnetic core comprising the features of claim 8.
In accordance with the invention a magnetic core is disclosed comprising a stack of electrical steel sheets with a known preferential direction of permeability. In the stack the preferential direction of permeability of successive single sheets differs by a predetermined shift angle. In addition or alternatively, the preferential direction of permeability of successive groups of sheets in the stack differs by a predetermined shift angle.
Further, in accordance with the invention a magnetic core comprising a stack of electrical steel sheets with a known preferential direction of permeability as a stator and additionally or alternatively as a rotor of an electrical rotating machine is described, wherein in the stack the preferential direction of permeability of successive single sheets differs by a predetermined shift angle and in addition or alternatively, the preferential direction of permeability of successive groups of sheets differs by a predetermined shift angle.
In addition an assembling method of a magnetic core for an electrical rotating machine is described comprising stacking electrical steel sheets with a known preferential direction of permeability. The preferential direction of permeability of successive single sheets in the stack differs by a predetermined shift angle. In addition or alternatively, the preferential direction of permeability of successive groups of sheets in the stack differs by a predetermined shift angle.
The steel sheets may be stacked in any direction. The stacked steel sheets may or may not be overlapping. A preferential direction of permeability may be the direction in which the permeability is at a relative maximum. The preferential direction of permeability may be at a spatial angle relative to the rolling direction of the steel sheet. Each group of sheets may comprise the same number of single sheets. Each group of sheets may also comprise a varying number of single shifts.
The difference in the preferential direction of permeability by a predetermined shift angle between successive single sheets and in addition or alternatively between successive groups of sheets allows the flux to “jump” from sheet to sheet according to the principle of least magnetic reluctance to achieve a higher magnetization along the flux path.
Advantageous embodiments of this core are given in the following.
According to an exemplary embodiment of the invention, the stack of electrical steel sheets of the magnetic core is made of grain oriented electrical steel sheets. This has the technical effect of readily allowing the manufacture of electrical steel sheets having a preferential direction of permeability.
In an exemplary embodiment of the invention, the shift angle is the same for each pair of successive single sheets or successive group of sheets. The shift angle for each pair of successive single sheets or successive group of sheets may be a shift angle between 0 degrees and 180 degrees. Having the shift angle be the same for each pair of successive single sheets or successive group of sheets has the technical effect of providing a symmetric distribution of the magnetization and thus of local efficiency along the path of the magnetic flux.
According to an exemplary embodiment of the invention, the preferential direction of permeability in the electrical steel sheets is essentially parallel to the rolling direction of the respective steel sheet. This has the technical effect of allowing the easy determination of the preferential direction of permeability based on the parameters of the manufacturing process.
In an exemplary embodiment of the invention the shift angle is between 50° and 70°, in particular between 55° and 65°, especially close to 60°. This has the technical effect of having a relative minimum of relative permeability of a single sheet or of a group of sheets next to a relative maximum of relative permeability of a successive single sheet or group of sheets, thus allowing the flux to continuously flow through regions with high relative permeability. A shift angle of 60° is especially adapted for 3-phase electrical machines.
According to an exemplary embodiment of the invention, the individual steel sheets have a thickness in the range from 500 micrometers to 230 micrometers. This has the technical effect of reducing energy dissipation due to eddy currents and for making it easier for the flux to “jump” from one electrical steel sheet to a successive electrical steel sheet.
In an exemplary embodiment of the invention, the single sheets have a magnetic flux density B800A/m, greater than 1.85 Tesla when exposed to a magnetic field strength of 800 Ampere per meter. This has the technical effect of ensuring a high saturation flux density and thus reducing dissipation losses in the magnetic core.
According to an exemplary embodiment of the invention, the use of a magnetic core is described wherein the angle between two successive teeth of the stator is an integer divisor of the shift angle. This has the technical effect of ensuring optimal magnetic flux for each tooth and thus improved energy efficiency of the stator as a whole.
In an exemplary embodiment of the invention, the use of a magnetic core for the construction of a transformer is described. This has the technical effect of improving the efficiency of the transformer.
According to an exemplary embodiment of the invention an assembling method of a magnetic core for an electrical rotating machine is described comprising marking the rolling direction of the electrical steel sheets, stamping or laser cutting the electrical steel sheets. The predetermined shift angle between the preferential direction of permeability of successive single sheets or of successive groups of sheets is close to the angle between the rolling direction and the direction corresponding to the <111> Miller index of the crystallographic axis, which angle is at an angle of 54.74 degrees from the <001> axis for cubic crystals. This has the technical effect of enabling an easier orientation of the electrical steel sheets during assembly of the magnetic core.
In order to check if the real GO sheets and strips are representative of the single crystal magnetic behavior, experiments have been performed on Epstein strips cut at various angles α3 from RD as shown in
In the
Results for the angles α3 between the direction of the magnetic field and the rolling direction of 0°, 55° and 90° show similar shapes as the ones presented in
So the magneto crystalline anisotropy of the GO material is similar to the single crystal of steel containing 3% silicon.
For α3=0°, corresponding to the direction of the magnetic field and the RD being parallel, these performances result from:
The relative permeability μr is deduced from the maximum magnetic flux density Bmax (Hmax) plot and μrmax is the highest value of the plot relative permeability μr versus maximum magnetic field strength Hmax.
All these performances are downgraded as α3 deviates from zero as it can be seen in
The reduced iron power dissipation losses obtained for α3=0 result from a very thin hysteresis loop.
The most critical case corresponds to α3=55°. This angle fits rather well with 54.74° the angle between the hard axis <111>, corresponding to the direction of least relative permeability, and the <001> axis in a single crystal, corresponding to the RD. Therefore one can use these performances to build a MC made of a stack of GO sheets taking into account the magneto crystalline anisotropy.
A torus is constituted of circular sheets piled up to create a MC dedicated to receive a coil made of n=5 turns (wire section equal to 1.5 mm2). These sheets, electrically insulated, are 10 cm in diameter D and are drilled parallel to their axis 1.6 cm in diameter d.
The MC is clamped between two jaws at each end. Its length L is equal to 6.7 cm for each tested set. Therefore one can assume that the stress compressing the assembly is the same for each prototype.
Two different assembling cases have been tested and compared: a not shifted stack of GO sheets (Assembly GO 00°) as shown in
Experiments were performed using the prototype presented in
These elementary considerations show well that the magnetic flux goes across or jumps, in a manner of speaking, from one sheet to the next following the path of the least magnetic reluctance. This peculiarity leads to, for a configuration GO 60° compared to the aligned configuration (GO 00°), less iron power dissipation losses and lower magnetizing current under the same supply voltage, which indirectly leads to less copper losses in the coil resistance.
In these conditions, it also seems that the peak magnetic flux density for a given V, is higher for the GO 60° than for the GO 00°. From an economic point of view, labor costs are higher because of the care needed to assemble the GO 60° shifted sheets. However the gains on the power dissipation losses (iron+copper) for given B render this technology profitable when taking into consideration the increase of the energy efficiency in electrical devices. Having shown good performances of GO 60° configuration compared to aligned configuration GO 00°, a comparison will be made using non oriented sheets (cited as “NO” hereinfafter).
The GO are those quoted of the previous paragraph. Concerning the NO, there are 2 grades:
The NO will be superposed without any special precaution (loose assembling). The devices assembled in that way will be marked with references NO 400-50 and NO 600-50.
Let us point out that, in order to have the same volume of iron, the MC using NO will be made of 140 sheets.
Curves of
In order to make a suitable comparison, it is advisable to switch theoretically from curves of 0.5 mm NO to the power dissipation losses in sheets of the same metallurgical constitution but of 0.35 mm thickness keeping the same iron volume. To make this switch one only has to refer to literature where it is mentioned that for the NO, at 50 Hz, eddy current losses represent only ⅛th of total iron losses. So it is simple to correct the curves obtained from NO with 0.5 mm thickness. If we consider a less favorable case (eddy current losses equal to ⅕th of total losses) we obtain corrected curves giving the variations of the power dissipation losses P′μ with V identified NO 400-35 and NO 600-35 (see
Considering the remark made about the contribution of eddy current losses, the resulting curves are very close to the original curves.
It is noted that, for sheets of the same thickness, the GO present iron power dissipation losses much lower than NO (ratio close to 2 for the NO 400-35), whatever the assembling technique.
The iron power dissipation losses for GO 60° are not much lower than for GO 00° at the scale of the iron power dissipation losses of NO.
In fact, the advantage brought by the shift appears much more clearly on the magnetizing currents (curves in
Diagrams in
Diagram in
In conclusion it is interesting to use GO to make MC because the iron losses and the magnetizing currents are significantly decreased.
A GO 60° assembly leads to lower iron power dissipation losses compared to the aligned assembly GO 00° by significantly reducing the magnetizing current. This reduction acts mainly on the component Iμr, which can be translated as: μr GO 60°>>μr GO 00°. This notable reduction of Iμr leads to a significant improvement of the power factor even in the case of high magnetic flux densities in the MC. The double effect of current reduction and power factor increase has a very beneficial effect on grid supply voltage drops, which represents a significant economical stake. It is advisable to notice that the proposed assembly, which does not need specific cuttings, does not require an excessive additional cost due to labor; therefore it is perfectly appropriate for the making of low power alternating current rotating electrical machines which cover a very large application domain.
Let us note that since this assembly GO 60° leads to interesting performances for the torus-type device, other alignments (all kind of shifting angles different from zero) are also worthwhile for certain electrical devices, notably when the intention is to respond to a given effect.
NO: Non Grain Oriented
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2007 042 619.6 | Sep 2007 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP08/61884 | 9/8/2008 | WO | 00 | 8/23/2010 |