The present invention relates to a method for forming a frame core having a center leg for an inductive component and to an accordingly formed frame core having a center leg, wherein the frame core is formed integrally with the center leg and an air gap is molded into the center leg.
In inductance coils and transformers, magnetic cores according to an E core configuration or an E-I core configuration or a double-E core configuration are often used. The center leg of these magnetic cores has normally arranged thereon at least one winding. When a magnetic core according to an E-I core configuration is manufactured, an E core is combined with an I core. When a magnetic core according to a double-E core configuration is manufactured, two individual E cores are normally joined by gluing. Alternatively, frame cores are used together with I cores, the I core being then inserted as a center leg into the frame core and joined to two opposed sides of the frame core by gluing.
In the case of E cores, air gaps can be adjusted in grinding processes with very small manufacturing tolerances for the purpose of avoiding saturation influences, so that the AL value of a magnetic core can be adjusted by precise grinding. It is true that the winding process of these magnetic cores is not very complicated, since the coil to be wound has no core and is coupled to the core only during the assembly process, but joining two E core halves in a separate gluing process is highly disadvantageous. The disadvantage resides, on the one hand, in that the glued joint leads to a significant weak point in the finished component and, on the other hand, in that the gluing process represents a considerable cost and time factor in the production process. In addition, the two E core halves are separately molded in a molding press in the production process and are then removed from the moldings press. Subsequently, the two E core halves are sintered individually in two separate sintering processes. All this results in complicated handling for conventional production processes. Furthermore, due to the inevitable manufacturing tolerances occurring during sintering, it can no longer be guaranteed for two individually sintered core parts that the core formed by combining the two core parts is produced with the desired accuracy and, in particular, that the outer legs of two E core halves are arranged in plane-parallel opposed relationship with one another.
In addition, the manufacturing tolerances occurring in the sintered core halves result in a displacement at the transition from one core half to the next, when two E core halves that have been produced in this way are assembled. The resultant locations of displacement in the finished core represent for the magnetic field lines in the finished inductive component a constriction of the magnetically effective core cross-section. At said constriction, premature saturation of the core occurs and leads to a decrease in inductance. Furthermore, the field lines exit the ferrite area at saturation regions and saturation gaps during operation in the finished inductive component, so that additional losses will occur in the winding.
The frame core admittedly has the advantage that the core is produced from one piece and does therefore not necessitate any subsequent gluing process, a circumstance which leads to a significantly increased mechanical stability in comparison with glued core configurations and which, due to the non-existing gluing process, also leads to a simple production process, but it is here much more difficult to efficiently form air gaps in a frame core. For this reason, frame cores are excluded from many power applications.
Reference DE 10 2004 008 961 B1 describes a frame core with a center leg glued into said frame core.
Document DE 1 193 119 describes a framelike core component with a tuning pin inserted in a semi-cylindrical recess of the framelike core component.
Reference EP 004272 A2 discloses a method of manufacturing magnetic cores from molding material with soft-magnetic properties by molding a mixture of soft-magnetic material and a synthetic resin as a binder, a mixture of iron powder being here mixed with a thermosetting resin in liquid form and filled into a heated mold and then molded.
Reference DE 3909624 A1 describes an E-I core with an air gap, the air gap being formed in the I part of the core by means of molding.
Reference DE 2305958 A discloses a bipartite magnetic core with a sheared hysteresis loop, said magnetic core being sheared in an air gap-free manner by a solid non-magnetic or low-permeable body and the parts of the magnetic core being firmly interconnected, partially as directly as possible and partially via the body with a sheared hysteresis loop.
In view of the above-mentioned problems, it is an object of the present invention to manufacture a mechanically stable magnetic core in a simple manufacturing process, the manufactured magnetic core being adapted to be used in a wide range of power applications.
The above-mentioned object is achieved by a method for forming a one-piece frame core according to one embodiment and by a frame core according to another embodiment. Advantageous further developments of the method are defined in the additional embodiments. Advantageous further developments of the frame core are defined in the additional embodiments.
According to an illustrative embodiment of the present invention, a method is provided, according to which a one-piece frame core having a center leg is formed, and an air gap is molded into the center leg during the formation of the frame core. The method according to the present invention provides a frame core having a center leg and an air gap in the center leg, without core-to-core gluing and grinding processes for producing an air gap being necessary. A mechanically stable core with small manufacturing tolerances is thus produced and core displacement is normally avoided, whereby the EMV behavior is improved. In addition, a grinding tolerance, which is required for double-E cores, need not be provided according to the present invention, whereby ferrite material is saved. The reduced amount of ferrite material also allows saving furnace capacity.
According to another more advantageous embodiment thereof, the frame core is formed in a ceramic injection molding process. Alternatively, the frame core having a center leg is formed in a compression molding process. In both cases, a simple, fast and cost-efficient production is obtained.
According to another more advantageous embodiment of the present method, a frame core is formed, the center leg interconnecting two opposed frame sides along a longitudinal direction of the frame core, and the air gap extending through the center leg in a direction transversely to the longitudinal direction.
According to a further more advantageous embodiment thereof, the frame core additionally comprises two lateral leg parts which close the frame core, the lateral leg parts extending along the longitudinal direction straight or in an at least partially curved shape.
According to another more advantageous embodiment thereof, the center leg is spaced apart from each lateral leg part in a direction transversely to the longitudinal direction through at least one winding window having the shape of a rectangular parallelepiped or of a cylinder.
According to another more advantageous embodiment thereof, the air gap is molded at an angle other than 90° relative to the longitudinal direction of the center leg. An air gap having a larger contact area with respect to the center leg is thus provided, so that a smaller length of the air gap along the longitudinal direction can be chosen.
According to advantageous embodiments thereof, the air gap is molded-in as a gap having the shape of a prism, or as a gap having the shape of a roof. Air gaps, such as air gaps molded in the form of a prism, a wedge or a roof, lead to a non-linear L-I behavior of the core. A non-linear L-I behavior means that the inductance is not constant and decreases significantly and continuously with increasing current.
According to an advantageous embodiment, the air gap is molded-in by means of a material that is easy to remove. This allows easy formation of the air gap. Due to the easily removable material acting as a placeholder, the gap is subjected to small manufacturing tolerances during the production process, and the core is protected against damage.
According to an advantageous embodiment, the frame core comprises at least one further center leg, into which a further air gap is molded during the formation of the frame core. In this way, integral, one-piece frame cores comprising more than one center leg, which each have an air gap molded therein, are provided, without the necessity of gluing in core parts during the production process.
According to a further illustrative embodiment of the present invention, a frame core having a center leg and an air gap in the center leg is provided, wherein the frame core is integrally formed in one piece with the center leg and the air gap in the center leg.
According to an advantageous embodiment thereof, the frame core comprises two frame areas and two lateral leg parts interconnecting the frame areas along a longitudinal direction so as to form a closed core, wherein the center leg is spaced apart from each lateral leg part in a direction transversely to the longitudinal direction through at least one winding window having the shape of a rectangular parallelepiped or of a cylinder.
According to a further advantageous embodiment, the frame core comprises at least one further center leg which is formed integrally with the frame core.
Further advantages can be seen from the description of illustrative embodiments, which is carried out in accordance with the figures enclosed, in which:
The present invention provides generally a one-piece frame core comprising a middle bleb and an air gap formed in the middle bleb. According to the present invention, the frame core is formed in one piece in a compression mold, the air gap being incorporated in the middle bleb directly in the compression mold. On the one hand, this has the effect that gluing processes are avoided, such gluing processes being, according to the above statements, normally used in known closed core configurations defined by two E cores (so-called double-E core configurations) or by an E core with an I core (so-called E-I core configurations). Due to the fact that additional gluing processes are avoided, the expenditure of time in production is reduced and the costs for the production of such frame cores are kept low. On the other hand, frame cores according to the present invention exhibit, due to their one-piece structural design, a higher mechanical stability in comparison with composite core configurations, since the glued joints represent significant mechanically weak points at the finished core component. In addition, the grinding process can be dispensed with. Face grinding of the core back and of the lateral legs is normally a prerequisite for grinding the air gap precisely into the middle bleb and for precise field guidance. This process is expensive and it often leads to cores that are mechanically damaged in advance through splintering and cracks. The fact that the grinding process is no longer necessary leads to a substantial reduction of costs and to an improvement of the quality of the component. In addition, due to the production of frame cores having a center leg and an air gap molded therein in accordance with the present invention, tolerances in the magnetic characteristics are kept small, since e.g. glued joints, which represent in known cores magnetic resistances that are difficult to control, are no longer necessary. It follows that the present invention allows providing frame cores which observe predetermined magnetic characteristics within very close limits.
In the following, illustrative embodiments will be described exemplarily with reference to the figures enclosed. A few illustrative embodiments of the present invention will be described in more detail hereinafter making reference to
According to a few illustrative embodiments of the present invention, the frame core 1 shown in
In the case of the frame core 1 shown in
With respect to
An air gap 4c according to a third embodiment of the present invention is shown in
A fourth embodiment is schematically shown in a side view on the basis of an air gap 4d, the air gap 4b being molded into the center leg such that an upper center leg 3d′ has the shape of a wedge or a pyramid or a cone. A lower center leg part 3d″ is additionally configured such that, when the upper center leg part 3d′ and the lower center leg part 3d″ are combined, a gapless center leg is obtained, which has the shape of a rectangular parallelepiped or of a cylinder. In other words, the center leg part 3d″ is provided with an indentation which is the negative of the center leg part 3d′ that has the shape of a wedge or of a pyramid or of a cone.
A fifth embodiment of an air gap 4e is shown in
The schematic cross-sectional view shown in
Through the different embodiments of the air gap molded into the center leg, which are shown in
Frame cores according to the present invention are formed in one piece in a compression mold, the air gap in the middle bleb being formed in the core directly within the compression mold. Production methods according to the present invention comprise in the case of a few illustrative embodiments a compression molding method, according to which the core material is filled into a cavity of a compression mold in powder form. The female die, the upper male die and the lower male die are here suitably configured for integrally forming the frame core with the center leg and the air gap provided in the center leg during a compression molding process. It is explicitly pointed out that the upper male die and the lower male die of the compression mold may consist of a plurality of individual dies, which are movable independently of one another. During or subsequent to the compression molding process, sintering may be effected by the action of heat. Alternatively, frame cores according to the present invention are produced in a ceramic injection molding process. According to a few special illustrative embodiments, an air gap is molded-in by means of a suitably configured partition, which, while the material is being filled into the cavity or after the material has been filled into the cavity, is arranged in the cavity between two areas of material forming the center leg.
Alternatively, the air gap is formed by a material which is easily removable in comparison with the material of the magnetic core and which is introduced between two areas of material while the cavity is being filled. A gap-forming material may e.g. be provided in the form of a plastic material, which, after the compression molding process, is removed from the molding, e.g. during a bake-out step or an etching step. For this purpose, the cavity is e.g. filled with the material of the magnetic core, so that a first area of material is formed in the cavity. Subsequently, the gap-forming material is filled onto the first area of material. This may comprise pre-molding processing steps so as to impart a desired shape to the gap-forming material, said shape corresponding to the shape of the air gap to be formed. Subsequently, a second area of material is formed on the gap-forming material by filling in the material of the magnetic core. In a subsequent compression molding process, a molding is produced, in which the gap-forming material is disposed between the first and the second area of material. The air gap is formed by removing the gap-forming material through the action of heat and/or the action of a suitable etchant.
As regards
The center leg 13a is spaced apart from the lateral leg parts 12c on either side in direction B by a respective winding window 15. At least one of the winding windows 15 may have provided therein a winding (not shown), which is arranged on the center leg 13a and/or on at least one of the lateral leg parts 12c. According to the example shown in
Other than the frame core 1 shown in
The center leg 23a is spaced apart from the lateral leg parts 22c on either side in direction B by a respective winding window 25. At least one of the winding windows 25 may have provided therein a winding (not shown), which is arranged on the center leg 23a and/or on at least one of the lateral leg parts 22c. According to the example shown in
Other than the frame core 1 shown in
The center leg 33a is spaced apart from the lateral leg parts 32c on either side in direction B by a respective winding window 35. At least one of the winding windows 35 may have provided therein a winding (not shown), which is arranged on the center leg 33a and/or on at least one of the lateral leg parts 32c. According to the example shown in
Other than the frame core 1 shown in
Each center leg 43a, 43b is spaced apart from the lateral leg parts 42c on either side in direction B by one or a plurality of winding windows 45. At least one of the winding windows 45 may have provided therein a winding (not shown), which is arranged on at least one of the center legs 43a, 43b and/or on at least one of the lateral leg parts 42c. According to the example shown in
Other than the frame core 1 shown in
Each center leg 53a, 53b is spaced apart from the lateral leg parts 52c on either side in direction B by one or a plurality of winding windows 55. At least one of the winding windows 55 may have provided therein a winding (not shown), which is arranged on at least one of the center legs 53a, 53b and/or on at least one of the lateral leg parts 52c. According to the example shown in
Other than the frame core 1 shown in
According to further illustrative embodiments of the present invention, each of the air gaps in
Summarizing, the present invention provides a method of forming a frame core having a center leg for an inductive component, and an accordingly formed frame core having a center leg and an air gap in the center leg. The frame core is formed integrally with the center leg, the air gap being molded into the center leg during the formation of the frame core.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2014 211 116 | Jun 2014 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2015/062893 | 6/10/2015 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2015/189245 | 12/17/2015 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3548492 | Weber | Dec 1970 | A |
4320080 | Esper et al. | Mar 1982 | A |
4853668 | Bloom | Aug 1989 | A |
5319343 | Jeffries | Jun 1994 | A |
9620277 | Grubl | Apr 2017 | B2 |
20060238288 | Watanabe | Oct 2006 | A1 |
20080074230 | Chen et al. | Mar 2008 | A1 |
20140266535 | Willis | Sep 2014 | A1 |
20150123402 | Wagoner | May 2015 | A1 |
20170040097 | Wee | Feb 2017 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1866420 | Nov 2006 | CN |
101183604 | May 2008 | CN |
201311811 | Sep 2009 | CN |
102360863 | Feb 2012 | CN |
202473480 | Oct 2012 | CN |
2 305 958 | Aug 1974 | DE |
81 32 269 | Nov 1985 | DE |
1193119 | May 1965 | EP |
0 004 272 | Oct 1979 | EP |
0 388 930 | Sep 1990 | EP |
0472151 | Feb 1992 | EP |
102004008961 | Sep 2005 | EP |
960045 | Jun 1964 | GB |
S57132308 | Aug 1982 | JP |
S57193015 | Nov 1982 | JP |
S60-132309 | Jul 1985 | JP |
S60254716 | Dec 1985 | JP |
H04-10308 | Jan 1992 | JP |
H04-296009 | Oct 1992 | JP |
H06246724 | Sep 1994 | JP |
H 10-199741 | Jul 1998 | JP |
H10199741 | Jul 1998 | JP |
2013216501 | Oct 2013 | JP |
Entry |
---|
Action dated Aug. 18, 2017 in corresponding Chinese application 2015800313403, with English translation, 18 pages. |
Action dated Feb. 6, 2018 in corresponding Japanese application 2016-572486, with English translation, 9 pages. |
Examination report dated Feb. 24, 2015 in the corresponding German Application No. 10 2014 211 116.1. |
Chinese Office Action dated Jul. 24, 2018 in corresponding Chinese patent application No. 2015800313403 and English Translation, 14 pages. |
Action believed dated Sep. 25, 2018 in corresponding Japanese application 2016-572486, 5 pages. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20170110245 A1 | Apr 2017 | US |