1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates, generally, to linear electric motors and electric propulsion of steel-wheeled railroad vehicles.
2. Background of the Disclosure
Air pollution resulting from diesel railroad operations in or near urban areas has become a critical problem, with a huge impact on the health of the surrounding population. Health care costs resulting from low air quality exceed $10 billion per year in California alone. Recent efforts to clean up diesel engines used in ships, locomotives, trucks and off-road equipment have produced significant improvements, but in some areas with dense populations the rapidly growing volume of international trade shipments threatens to overwhelm these efforts and drive air quality even lower. Clearly, achieving acceptable levels of air quality will require more than just cleaner diesels. Powering vehicles with electricity from the grid could remove local sources of air pollution entirely, but if this is to be commercially viable it cannot adversely impact freight throughput. In many regions where diesel locomotives are the primary motive power for railroads, electric line-haul locomotives are not viewed as an acceptable option due to the difficulty, expense and safety impact of installing catenary lines or live rails.
The situation is not without hope, however. A relatively short separation between the source of pollution (diesel engines) and populated areas makes a large difference in concentration of pollutants in the air, and the resulting health effects. This distance could be achieved through the use of hybrid diesel/electric locomotives if they could provide purely electric (engine off) propulsion in nonattainment areas. This would allow a large fraction of the freight arriving through ports, such as Los Angeles and Long Beach in California, or passing through urban areas to proceed without the production of air pollution. Two problems prevent this: (1) energy storage is currently not adequate to power line-haul locomotives for any significant length of time; and (2) diesel locomotives have an operational lifetime of 30-40 years, so even if an adequate electricity storage technology were discovered today, it would take 30+ years to replace all the locomotives in use in the United States. We cannot afford to wait that long.
A potential alternative to hybrid locomotives is electric propulsion provided by a linear electric motor, such as a Linear Induction Motor (LIM), installed in the track. In this approach, motor windings in the track create a moving magnetic field that interacts with a conductive reaction plate in the vehicle to provide thrust. The reaction plate is problematic, however. In order for this system to work, a large aluminum or copper plate must be installed in the undercarriage of every railroad vehicle passing through the “electric-only” zone. There are over 23,000 locomotives and over a million freight cars in service in the U.S., and it is clearly not feasible to retrofit them all. On the other hand, it would be impossible to mount reaction plates on the thousands of vehicles per day that enter some potential electric zones, and remove the plates as they leave those zones, without radically reducing the traffic capacity of the railroad system. With the system now operating at near its maximum capacity, such a slowdown is not feasible.
It would be far more useful if a system could be created that would electrically propel standard, unmodified diesel railroad trains through critical zones with their locomotive engines shut down. This would permit the vast inventory of existing railroad equipment to remain in service for its full useful lifetime, while eliminating diesel emissions from sensitive areas.
The invention is at least one linear variable reluctance motor arranged along a pathway and a rotating ferromagnetic element constrained to roll down the pathway about an axle. The array of controlled electromagnetic elements is sequentially actuated to impart a force at least partially tangential to the rotating element in such a way as to induce rotation about the axle. In a specific example described in detail, a railway, a variable reluctance electric motor employs motor coils installed adjacent to or integral with railroad rails which constitute the pathway, and uses the steel wheels of railroad vehicles, such as locomotives and cars as its rotating ferromagnetic elements. This “rail motor” electrically propels unmodified conventional railroad trains or individual railroad cars, without the use of diesel engines and with no mechanical connection to the vehicles, and is electronically controlled. Electric operation eliminates the production of air pollution by any locomotive traveling through rail motor-equipped zones, improves system capacity by providing boost power on ascending grades, and can be used to brake trains, recovering and storing the energy. Various embodiments directed to the railway example are disclosed herein.
These and other aspects and advantages of embodiments of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description and the accompanying drawings in which various embodiments of the present invention are shown by way of illustrative example. Although the specific examples of railway implementations of the invention are preferred embodiments, it should be understood that the scope of the invention is meant to include any application of the novel use of a linear variable reluctance motor coupled to ferromagnetic rotating elements.
a is a top view of the basic structure of the first embodiment of a rail motor according to the present invention.
b is a side view of the basic structure of the first embodiment of a rail motor according to the present invention.
c is a side view an “E”-core embodiment of a rail motor.
d is a perspective view of an E-core for use in a rail motor.
a is an end view of railroad wheels on a modified track with integral rail motors according to another embodiment of the present invention.
b is a side view of the track with integral rail motor as shown in
c is a close-up side view of part of the modified track of
a shows a cross section of a modified track with integral rail motor according to another embodiment of the present invention.
b is a top view of the track and rail motor of
The following detailed description is not to be taken in a limiting sense, but is made merely for the purpose of illustrating the general principles and various embodiments of the invention. The specific example of the invention applied to a railway is used since solving that particular problem was an impetus for the invention, but the railway implementation is exemplary. Designs for causing rotation in an element in the manner according to the invention will suggest themselves to those skilled in the art in a variety of applications.
Variable Reluctance (VR) motors, also known as Switched Reluctance motors, operate on the principle that a magnetically salient rotor will move to a position of minimum reluctance to the flow of flux in a magnetic circuit.
VR motors may also be built in linear configurations, as shown in
a is a top view of the basic structure of a variable reluctance rail motor 100, according to an embodiment of the present invention. Motor stator 102, typically fabricated of laminated iron, is mounted next to railroad rail 112, of conventional design. Motor coils 104a and b are wrapped around stator poles 106a and b. Stator 102 is shown with only two poles for clarity, but typically would have many sequential poles, each wrapped with a motor coil. As steel railroad wheel 110 reaches a position adjacent to pole 106a, as shown, current is activated in coils 104a and b, creating a magnetic field that acts to pull wheel 110 forward (to the right) to minimize reluctance in the magnetic circuit. In other words, the rail motor produces thrust and the wheel rolls forward. In this and other embodiments, the driving tangential force on the wheel is substantially in the forward (or backward direction) of the track
b shows a side view of the rail motor of
c shows a side view of a rail motor embodiment in which the motor cores are “E” shaped. One such core is shown in perspective view in
To confirm operational effectiveness, Finite Element Analysis was performed on the basic rail motor design of
When operated out of phase with wheel position, the rail motor can provide braking force rather than acceleration. For example, in
Multiple rail motors can be mounted on a single track, according to another embodiment of the present invention as shown in
a is an end view of railroad wheel set 122 on modified rails 150a and b with rail motors according to an additional embodiment of the present invention. In this design, motor coils 152a and b are incorporated into rails 150a and b.
c is a close-up side view of part of the modified track of
Because of the small gap between wheel 110 and the active motor poles, rail motors of the type shown in
a shows a cross section of a track with wheel 110 riding on a rail that consist of nonmagnetic rail base 200, motor poles 204 and motor coils 202 according to a further embodiment of the present invention.
The rail motor drawings in the figures show simple, monolithic coils and magnetic poles for purposes of clarity, but other configurations are possible. Each electrical pole could be several iron segments long, with each gap then called a “slot”, and several slots per phase and per pole. “Fully pitched” windings would extend over several poles, and various lapped winding configurations are possible where the coils are distributed across several separate slots. Two, three and polyphase versions are all possible, as well as versions with overlapped or complex phasing such as turning on the coil directly under the wheel in the opposite polarity of the other coil(s) attracting the wheel.
Saturable iron bridges rather than non-magnetic steel spacers can be used in the gaps between motor cores. In this configuration some of the flux will short across the bridge, but the bridge can be thin enough to carry only a small percentage of the flux. The remainder of the flux will travel through the wheel to complete the motor circuit, as described above. Pole shoes could also be used to widen the motor cores where the flux exits the iron to cross the gap, and angled or shaped to modify operational characteristics.
Control of the rail motor, in any configuration, cannot rely upon the position of the train, or even individual vehicles, since the spacing of wheels will vary too much for precise control. To provide optimal timing of coil activation, the relative position of each wheel with respect to each coil must be determined. This can be accomplished using sensors of various types to detect wheel position, or by using the motor coils themselves as the sensing element. A low-level electrical current can be applied to each coil and used to measure inductance, which will change as the wheel passes. This can be used to precisely measure wheel position and determine the timing of current activation to each motor coil.
Embodiments of the present invention relate to U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/895,370 filed Mar. 16, 2007, entitled “The Rail Motor”, the contents of which are incorporated by reference herein and which is a basis for a claim of priority in the current application.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60895370 | Mar 2007 | US |