The presented invention generally relates to reluctance motors and more particularly relates to a variant of the castellated variable reluctance motor.
The reluctance motor is a class of electric motor where rotor is made from ferromagnetic materials only. If the rotor comprises coils, squirrel-cage or magnets, in addition to the ferromagnetic material, the motor will belong to other motor classes like permanent magnet motors, induction motors, slip ring motors etc. It is desirable to make the rotor in reluctance motors of laminated steel, since any current in rotor will reduce motor efficiency.
The rotor in reluctance motors has teeth. The stator comprises “electromagnets” that pull on the teeth. The electromagnets are turned on and off in sequence to create pull on the rotor in the same directions at all positions. The explanation is a bit simplified, but it is useful to understand the principle. Unlike permanent magnet (PM) motors the electromagnets in a reluctance motor cannot push on the rotor. They can only pull. This means that a reluctance motor needs at least 3 phases for the stator to be able to produce torque on the rotor in all positions.
The motor according to the invention is called a multi plate reluctance motor. This is to distinguish this motor from the multidisc (or multistage) motor. The multidisc motor is well known. Aydin et. al has in research report “Axial Flux Permanent Magnet Disc Machines: A Review” from 2004 shown a classic PM multi disk motor design. Multidisc induction motors have also been investigated.
One way of increasing torque from an axial flux PM motor is to increase length of the motor. However, if the diameter is kept constant and the length of the magnets and coils is increased in such a motor the leak field will increase. At some point the leak field gives bad utilisation of the materials. Then it is better to place several motors in a line and let them share shaft, but then a back iron is still required to turn direction of the magnetic field within each motor.
In multidisc motors you take away the back iron between the motors and let the magnetic field go in the same direction through all the motors. Then the magnetic field change direction first in the end of the stack of motors. This reduces the total length considerably because several back iron between the motors are taken away.
However, the magnets and the coils still have the same thickness as in the original motor. There is no theoretical limitation to the length of a multidisc motor. Multidisc motors do not have to be PM motors. Induction motors and several other types of electric motors can also be multidisc motors.
In an axial flux multi plate variable reluctance motor there most commonly only are coils in the stators at each end of the motor. Between the end stators alternating rotor plates and stator mid plates are stacked. This amplifies the torque because the magnetic field zigzag between the rotor plates and the stator mid plates. From an electromagnetic point of view, the rotor plates and stator mid plates can be very thin. Manufacturing methods and structural integrity limit the thickness of the plates. The more plates that are stacked, the more magnetomotive force you need to drive the magnetic field through all the plates. The leak field as the stack thickness increases. These effects provide a theoretical limitation to how many plates that can be stacked in a multiplate reluctance motor. It is only reluctance motors that can be multiplate motors. For further description reference is made to the “Detailed description of the invention”.
As mentioned, a reluctance motor needs at least 3 phases for the stator to be able to produce torque on the rotor in all positions. The simplest possible reluctance motor is shown in
The magnetic field in a reluctance motor needs to go in a loop, so each phase in a reluctance motor should have at least 2 coils. 1 coil per phase is possible due to leak field, but it is very inefficient. An example of 1 coil per phase can be found in patent EP1280262A2. 3 coils per phase will give a motor where the field that goes through 2 coils must return through 1 coil. It is similar for 5 or 7 coils per phase. 1, 3, 5, 7 . . . coils per phase is therefore possible but give suboptimal motors. 4, 6, 8 etc. coils per phase is the pattern for 2 coils per phase repeated.
The design in
I0 is max current in the coils. θE is the electrical angle. In most electric motors 2*π electrical degrees is defined as the shortest mechanical angle the rotor must rotate for the positions to be identical. For the motor shown in
A weakness of the 3 phased reluctance motor is torque ripple. This has partly to do with coil configuration. Below it is explained why.
In a 3 phased permanent magnet (PM) motor torque from one phase is proportional with sin(θE)2. Sinus squared, because:
It turns out that sin(θE)2+sin(θE+2π/3)2+sin(θE+4π/3)2=constant (=1,5). This means that a properly designed 3 phased PM motor can have zero torque ripple if fed with 3 phased sinusoidal current that is 2π/3 radians (120°) shifted. This makes such a motor well suited as generator on the electric grid.
For a two phased PM motor the current between the phases is shifted π. Again, torque from one phase is proportional with sin(θE)2 and again it tourns out that sin(θE)2+sin(θE+π)2=constant (=1). This means that a properly designed 2 phased PM-motor also can have zero torque ripple if fed with 2 phased sinusoidal current that is π radians (180°) shifted.
However, for a 3 phased reluctance motor you skip the negative part of the current. This means that the torque from each phase is proportional to:
The sum of this is not constant. (It is almost proportional to 0.75-0.25*sin(3*θE).) Therefore a 3 phased reluctance motor will have serious torque ripple if fed with the positive part of a sinusoidal current. Torque ripple means noise, which is why the reluctance motor is not very popular.
Advanced current control can reduce the torque ripple, but the current will then consist of high frequency components that also creates problems.
In the 4 phased reluctance motor the torque from each phase are:
The sum of this is constant (=1). If you add phase A+C and phase B+D you see it is the same as a two phased PM-motor. This means it is possible to make a 4 phased reluctance motor with zero torque ripple if fed with sinusoidal current.
It can be shown by similar reasoning that a 6 phased reluctance motor also can have zero torque ripple if fed with sinusoidal current. 8 phases are two 4 phased motors. 10 phases are a 4 phased and a 6 phased motor. It can therefore be shown that any reluctance motor with pair number of phases larger than 4 can have zero torque ripple.
Another issue when it comes to torque ripple is magnetic saturation of the iron. Once the iron in the motor starts to become saturated the maximum current (e.g., when θE=π/2 in phase A) produce torque less effective. The torque as function of θE is therefore not proportional with the current. Therefore, a motor that has zero torque ripple at a given sinusoidal current can be designed. However, if you decrease the current below the design current you get torque ripple again. Variable reluctance motors will therefore make more noise than other motors at idle. The same effect makes it impossible to design motors with zero torque ripple when the saturation becomes high enough.
In this patent application castellated variable reluctance motors (CVRM) is of particular interest, but it also applies to all reluctance motors, since a CVRM with 1 tooth per coil technically is a normal reluctance motor shown in
CVRM is described in the patent applications EP2671309A1 and EP2885855A1. Sargos et. al. has published a paper named “Generalized theory of the structure of reluctance stepper motors” in 1993.
For a reluctance motor to be castellated there must be at least two teeth under each coil. The teeth under each coil are evenly distributed with the same distance between the teeth as in the rotor. The gap between adjacent teeth under different coils must be larger or smaller than the gap between the rotor teeth. For the motor to be symmetrical all gaps between adjacent teeth under different coils must be equal.
For 3 phased reluctance motors with two coils per phase the number of teeth in stator is 6n in symmetrical designs. Possible number of teeth in the rotor is 6n±2+6m. n is a positive integer. m is a positive integer or zero. In general, 6n−2 teeth in rotor gives the best motor designs, but if number of teeth is large you might choose 6n+2 or 6n−2+6 to get sufficient space for using a needle winder to wind the coils. As mentioned, 3 phases do not give constant torque if the current is sinusoidal. A 3 phased reluctance motor will therefore make a lot of noise.
For 4 phased reluctance motors with two coils per phase number of teeth in the stator is 8n in symmetrical designs. Possible number of teeth in rotor is 8n−2+4m. Again 8n−2 teeth in rotor gives the best motor designs, but if the number of teeth is large you might choose 8n+2 or 8n+6 to get sufficient space for using a needle winder to wind the coils.
In general, the number of teeth in rotor in symmetric designs are:
nTeeth=Phases*Coils per Phase*Teeth per coil±(±1+Phases*m)*Coils per Phase
An aspect of the invention is a reluctance motor comprising a rotor and a stator, the stator comprising two end stators. The stator comprises further at least one stator mid plate with stator mid plate teeth, and the rotor comprises at least two rotor plates with rotor plate teeth. The at least one stator mid plate and the at least two rotor plates are arranged between the two end stators providing for zigzagging of magnetic field between the at least two rotor plates and the at least one stator mid plate, thus amplifying torque of the reluctance motor.
Optionally, the reluctance motor comprises needle bearings for axial thrust arranged as spacers between at least two adjacent parts of the reluctance motor, where the parts comprise the end stators, the stator mid plates, and the rotor plates, ensuring spacing between the adjacent parts.
Optionally, the reluctance motor comprises fluid bearings for axial thrust arranged as spacers between at least two adjacent parts of the reluctance motor, where the parts comprises the end stators, the stator mid plates and the rotor plates, ensuring spacing between the adjacent parts.
Optionally, the reluctance motor comprises bearing balls, where the rotor plates, the end stators and the stator mid plates are arranged with tracks for the bearing balls so the bearing balls can ensure distance between end stators, stator mid plates, and the rotor plates, preventing them from touching each other.
Optionally, the number of phases of the reluctance motor is an even number equal to or greater than 4, and where the number of phases is halved by diodes arranged to steer the current into different phases depending on the direction of the current.
Optionally, the end stator teeth, stator mid plate teeth and/or rotor plate teeth have one of the following shapes: chamfered, filleted and sinusoidal.
Embodiments of the present invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the following figures, wherein:
The following reference numbers refer to the drawings:
This invention relates to reluctance motors including linear reluctance motors, radial reluctance motors and axial flux reluctance motors. First a description of an embodiment of the invention as a linear reluctance motor is shown in
The cross section presented in
The purpose of the stator mid plates [4] is shown in
The angle of the chamfer can vary. In an alternative embodiment the chamfers are curved. In alternative embodiments the chamfers are replaced by fillets, or the entire teeth structure is given a sinusoidal shape. A lot of different embodiments are possible. Whether or not they are beneficial must be determined through numerical simulations or experiments.
The chamfering together with slot depth between the teeth and sloth width relative to the tooth width are parameters that control the torque ripple.
Bending a linear motor is probably not the best manufacturing method.
It is critical for the torque that the air gap (the distance between rotor and stator disks) is as little as possible. Needle bearings [27] are therefore used as spacers between stator and rotor disks. Another solution to keep the air gap small, is to fill the gaps between the teeth with epoxy or other insulation material that is not ferromagnetic. A fluid bearing can then be incorporated to keep the rotor disks apart. It is also possible to make one or more tracks for bearing balls in the rotor plates and stator mid plates. Both the fluid bearing and the tracks for bearing balls will prevent the relative thin rotor plates and stator mid plates from vibrating or bending do to electromagnetic forces.
This way it can be ensured that the tolerances do not add up the way it would do if spacers were used between the rotor disks. The shaft [25] must have a shape so the rotor plates [22] transfer torque to the shaft and keep their position relative to the other rotor plates [22].
[26] is a bearing to take up radial forces on the shaft. [28] is a pathway for the first and last needle bearing. This part is inserted into the stator after the coils are winded.
As mentioned in the introduction, reluctance motors with 4, 6 or higher pair number of phases can be designed with low torque ripple. It turns out that the 6 phased reluctance motor can be modified so it can run on a 3 phased electrical grid. Both the 4 and 6 phased reluctance motor can be modified so it can be controlled with respectively 2 phased and 3 phased inverters.
The variable reluctance motor is a synchronous motor, meaning the motor must be spun up to synchronous speed before the motor is connected to the grid, if it shall run as a motor or generator without inverter.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20210788 | Jun 2021 | NO | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/NO2022/050139 | 6/17/2022 | WO |