This invention relates to a rotating electrical machine of the type that employs permanent magnets and cooperating coil windings wound around armature cores in confronting relationship to the permanent magnets.
A wide variety of types of electrical machines have been provided of the type mentioned in the preceding paragraph. These arrangements may be used as either motors or generators and either the magnets or the coil or both may rotate. If the device is an electrical motor, the windings are selectively energized so as to effect rotation. If the device operates as a generator, the relatively rotatable member is rotated and an electrical current is induced in the windings.
In conventional constructions of this type, the permanent magnets are disposed at circumferentially spaced even intervals with their polarity oppositely arranged. The electrical windings are formed on armature poles formed by a member that defines slots between it. The armature poles are also mounted at circumferentially spaced regular intervals.
With this type of mechanism, it is desirable to insure that the torque required to rotate the rotatable member without large power input is important. The torque necessary to achieve this rotation is referred to as “cogging torque”. If the cogging torque is large and the device is a generator, it requires large power to drive the mechanism and this increases the vibration. If the device operates as a motor and has high cogging torque, large power is consumed when idling and this also increases the vibration.
Basically, the cogging torque is related to the number of peak pulses in the coil windings per revolution of the rotor, referred to as the “cogging number”. The cogging number is generally equal to the least common multiplier of the number of slots and the number of magnetic poles. The cogging torque is basically proportional to the reciprocal of the square of the cogging number.
In addition, the multiple armature cores generally have the coils wound in coil groups or phases. In a conventional type mechanism, the coils of each phase are disposed adjacent to each other and are oppositely wound. This has the disadvantage of causing unbalanced magnetic forces, which can cause vibration and, in addition to the objectionable noise, premature wear of the bearings of the machine.
These disadvantages of the prior art structure may be best understood by reference to
In the illustrated embodiment, the machine includes a rotor, indicated generally by the reference numeral 21 which is comprised of a disk having a plurality of permanent magnets 22 fixed thereto around its periphery and which is affixed to a rotor shaft 23. The magnets 22 are formed from a ferromagnetic material, which is assembled to the disk and mounted on the shaft 23, and the magnetic material permanently magnetized. The assembly is bonded together with a resin.
A cooperating armature 24 has a plurality of armature cores that are separated by gaps or slots 25. These gaps or slots 25 are equally spaced around the circumference and around the axis of rotation of the rotor shaft 23.
Although the structure is described in conjunction with an arrangement with rotating magnets and fixed coil windings, the arrangement can obviously be reversed wherein the magnets are held against rotation and the coil windings rotate.
The armature cores that define the slots 25 are divided into groups, in this embodiment, these comprise three groups, having individual adjacent windings UUU, VVV, and WWW, respectively. Individual windings 26U, 26V and 26W are wound around the adjacent cores in opposite directions. As a result, the magnetic flux is such that it is unbalanced because of the fact that the adjacent windings of the coil phases are wound in opposite directions as to increase the magnetic flux as shown in
The example shown employs nine slots and eight magnetic poles and thus, has a cogging number of 72 i.e. 9×8. Thus, although this type of mechanism provides a low cogging torque as seen in
It is, therefore, a principal object to this invention to provide an improved rotating electrical machine that incorporates permanent magnets and in which the cogging torque is maintained at a low value while vibrations and electrical power output are significantly improved.
It is a further object to this invention to provide an arrangement wherein the power output can be increased and the driving force decreased without adversely affecting the cogging torque.
The vibrational effect may be reduced by decreasing the number of magnets to, for example 6. The cogging number then decreases to 18. Then, however, the cogging torque becomes unacceptably large. Another way in which the vibrational problem may be reduced is by providing a series of magnets which are skewed relative to each other in side-by-side fashion and which cooperate with the coil windings. This type of mechanism is very difficult to manufacture and in fact cannot be manufactured by high production volume techniques.
Therefore, it is a principal object to this invention also to provide an improved and simplified rotating electrical machine that can be manufactured on high speed assembly apparatus and which will have the desired performance.
A first feature of this invention is adapted to be embodied in a permanent magnet type rotary electrical machine having a rotor and a stator. One of the rotor and stator comprises a plurality of permanent magnets disposed such that the plurality of eight adjacent magnets are different from each other. The other of the rotor and the stator comprise a plurality of electrical coils wound around cores juxtaposed to the permanent magnets for cooperation therewith. In accordance with this feature of the invention, the coil windings are arranged in groups or phases having their windings connected to each other with common ends. No two coil windings of each group or phase are circumferentially adjacent to each other.
Another feature of the invention is also adapted to be embodied in a permanent magnet type rotary electrical machine having a rotor and a stator and permanent magnets and coil windings around cores. In accordance with this feature of the invention, one of the cores and permanent magnets are disposed in non-symmetrical relationship to the axis of rotation of the rotor.
Referring first to the embodiment of
These permanent magnets 53 cooperate with an armature, indicated generally by the reference numeral 54, which is provided with a plurality of armature poles 55 that define slots 56 there between. There are nine armature poles 55 and slots 56 and these are equally spaced.
As may be seen in
In this embodiment, the permanent magnets 53 are arranged in two groups of three. The spacing between adjacent magnets of each group is, in this embodiment, equal to 8.33° indicated at the dimension “A” in
Thus, as may be seen in
The improvement of the embodiment over the prior art type of constructions is further emphasized by
For example,
As may be seen, the cogging torque, illustrated in
These particulars angles were determined by utilizing computer software named “Maxwell 2D Field Simulator”, which is available from Ansoft-Japan Co., Ltd, whose main office is located at 3-18-20 Shin Yokahama, Kitaku, Yokahama-shi, Kanigawa-ken, Japan. This software permits calculation of the torque exerted on a part at its specific location. Optimum pitch angles are computed for the angles Θ1 and Θ° 2 by determining repeated calculations with varying pitch angles.
The pitch angle θ1=26.7 is a pitch angle θ0=30°, for regularly disposed magnets, offset by 3.3° (mechanical angle), therefore this angle 3.3° is referred to as an offset angle θD. The value of the pitch angle θ2 is necessarily 33.6° when the pitch angle θ1=26.7°.
The torques exerted on permanent magnets 102 when the offset angle θD=3.3° and the rotor 101 is rotated without currents in coils, are shown in
As is clear from
This cogging torque has three peaks in the length of time the rotor 101 rotates through an angle of 10°. In other words, 108 peaks will appear for one rotation (360°) of the rotor 101, so that the cogging number amounts to 108. This machine has eighteen slots (S=18) and twelve poles (P=12), so that the least common multiple of these numbers is 36. Therefore, it can be seen that the cogging number is three times the least common multiple 36, that is, 3×36=108.
The advantages of this construction will become apparent when compared with a prior art type machine in which the permanent magnets 22 of the rotor 21 are disposed at regular intervals as shown in
Using the same computer software previously referred to
As is clear from
On the circumferentially disposed magnetic pole teeth are wound U, V and W phase coils in the same order as in
The rotor 101 has twelve permanent magnets 102. As in
The circumferential pitch angle of the permanent magnets N1, S6, N6, N4, S3 and N3 within two sets are at a symmetrical positions relative to each other. For example, the first and the third set, spacing is 26.7°. That is, since the pitch angle (reference pitch angle) of regularly disposed permanent magnets 102 is 360°/12=30°, with N1 and N4 as reference magnets, the angle between N1 and the adjacent S6, and the angle between N4 and the adjacent S3, are each made smaller than the reference pitch angle of 30° by 3.33° to 30.00°−3.33°=26.67°. Likewise, offset angles of S6 and S3 from their reference positions are each 6.66°.
The pitch angle of the permanent magnets S5, N5, S4, S2, N2 and S1 within the other sets (the second and the fourth set) at a symmetrical position is 33.3°. The pitch angle of adjacent two permanent magnets between adjacent different sets is 30° That is, the pitch angle between the permanent magnets N6 and S5, the pitch angle between S4 and N4, the pitch angle between N3 and S2, and the pitch angle between S1 and N1, are each 30°.
As a result of a computer numerical analysis in this embodiment like that in the foregoing embodiment, it was found that the cogging number is 108. That is, the cogging number proved to be three times the least common multiple (36) of the number S=18 of slots and the number P=12 of poles.
Its rotor 101 has twelve permanent magnets 102. As in
In this embodiment, the circumferential pitch angle of the three magnets in each set is constant 28.3°. However, pitch angles between sets are different. The angle between the first and the second set (angle between magnets N6 and S5) is 33.3°, the angle between the second and the third set (angle between magnets S4 and N4) is 28.3°, the angle between the third and the fourth set (angle between magnets N3 and S2) is 33.3°, and the angle between the fourth and the first set (angle between magnets S1 and N1) is 38.3°.
As a result of the aforenoted computer analysis for this embodiment, the torque exerted on each magnet and the resultant cogging torque are calculated and shown in
Since the permanent magnets 102 are disposed irregularly in this embodiment, balancing weights are preferably attached for compensation to the rotor 101 in the circumferential direction. In addition, angles between permanent magnets suggested in the foregoing embodiments need not be exact, and the intended effect can be produced with angles slightly different from the angles herein suggested, therefore the slightly different angles are also included in this invention. Various other changes and modifications are possible without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2000-387361 | Dec 2000 | JP | national |
2001-344656 | Nov 2001 | JP | national |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20020074887 A1 | Jun 2002 | US |