The present invention relates to an electrical rotating field machine according to the introductory portion of claim 1.
Rotating field machines of the type under consideration are also designated as bell-shaped rotors. They generally have a stationary inner and outer stator and a rotatably mounted rotor, whereby the latter is formed by a bell. Permanent magnet elements can be disposed in the bell for a magnetic bias.
The requirements regarding regulatability and the dynamics of electric motors constantly increase. A decisive criterion of the properties of electric motors is therefore the moment of inertia of the rotor or the quotient of generated torque and moment of inertia of the rotor. Particularly good characteristics in this regard are demonstrated by bell rotors, which, however, have a limited torque due to the unidirectional transfer of torque, since the rotor twists too greatly as the torque increases. In addition, bell-shaped rotors have problems with regard to heat dissipation, so that also for this reason the permissible power absorption is limited, which is particularly true if the bell is made of a polymeric material or a winding. In the article by W. R. Canders, H. Masebach, F. Laube “Technologies and Limits of High Torque Drives”, page 17ff, a bell-shaped rotor having a rotor provided of permanent magnets is described. The rotor is mounted on the end face bf the housing as well as on the shaft. The permanent magnets are disposed in the rotor between outer and inner stators, whereby not only the outer stator but also the inner stator each carry magnet or excitation coils. The described drives are slowly rotating drives having high torque, whereby the rotor for the most part is comprised of soft iron, resulting in a high moment of inertia. On page 19 of the article, a rotor having only one row of permanent magnets is illustrated, thus leaving to speculation how the permanent magnets are mounted in the rotor. With this embodiment, the outer and inner stators, together with the permanent magnets of the rotor, form a common magnet circuit.
No expedient nor reliable mounting of the permanent magnet elements is disclosed in the above mentioned article. In particular for rapidly rotating field machines, the mounting of the permanent magnet elements pursuant to the article by W. R. Canders is not suitable.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a bell-shaped rotor drive for high speeds having great torque, according to which the permanent magnet elements are reliably mounted.
This object is inventively realized by an electrical drive having the features of claim 1. Further advantageous embodiments of this drive result from the features of the dependent claims.
The present invention is based on the concept that a bell-shaped rotor having a small moment of inertia is required if the drive is to be designed for high speeds having high dynamics. A small moment of inertia with a simultaneously high torque and high reliability, as well as protection should the permanent magnet elements be destroyed, is advantageously achieved in that the permanent magnet elements rest at least against the inside of a cylindrical wall of a pot-shaped element. In this connection, the permanent magnet elements are advantageously disposed in only one layer, whereby the cylindrical wall is advantageously made of a magnetic material and has a thin-walled construction. In contrast to the known bell-shaped rotors, it is an essential feature of the inventive drive that the magnetic fluxes of the magnetic circuits that are formed pass radially entirely through the permanent magnet elements as well as the cylindrical wall, in other words, that the outer and inner stators, together with the rotor, form at least one common magnetic circuit. A magnetic short circuit via the rotor does not occur or is negligible.
A particularly good encasement, with a simultaneously easy assembly, can be achieved if the permanent magnet elements are disposed between two cylindrical walls that are coaxially disposed within one another. In this connection, the cylindrical walls are either parts of two pots that are coaxially disposed within one another, whereby their cylindrical walls are spaced from one another by the thickness of the permanent magnet elements. However, it is equally possible for the cylindrical walls to be formed on and/or secured to one and the same base wall. In this connection, at least one base wall is to be connected to the shaft for the transfer of force. A preferred embodiment results if the bell is formed by an outer pot having an inwardly disposed sleeve, whereby the permanent magnet elements are disposed between the sleeve and the outer pot. With this embodiment, the sleeve can be connected to the cylindrical wall or to the base wall of the outer pot, for example by welding.
The invention also provides for a plurality of pot-shaped elements or bells to be disposed axially next to one another on the shaft and to together form the rotor. In this connection, the base-shaped walls of two pots that are disposed next to one another are formed by a common base wall. It is also possible for the cylindrical wall of two adjacent pot-shaped elements to be formed by a common sleeve, whereby the transfer of force is then effected by a common base wall or by two or more base walls from the cylindrical wall to the shaft.
By dividing the magnets to a plurality of pot-shaped elements, the necessary length of the permanent magnets can advantageously be kept small.
It is, of course, also possible to dispose a plurality of permanent magnets next to one another in the axial direction in a pot-shaped element. The same also applies for the arrangement of a plurality of pot-shaped elements that are arranged axially next to one another and that also can respectively have a plurality of permanent magnets that are arranged axially next to one another. The axial length of the pot-shaped elements that are arranged axially next to one another can also differ from one another.
In the circumferential direction, it is particularly advantageous to support two magnets on an appropriate configuration of the pot, for example corrugations, and to fill the intermediate space with a material having a large temperature expansion coefficient (for example casting resin), so that upon transfer of the peripheral forces a temperature compensation is taken into account. This is necessary since the permanent magnets have a very small expansion coefficient.
The previously described pot-shaped elements have a configuration similar to the bells of known bell-shaped rotors. The cylindrical wall is, however, radially supported on the shaft only via the base wall. The cylindrical wall of the bell is preferably made of magnetic conductive material.
The electrical drive can be designed not only as an internal rotor but also as an external rotor, whereby the internal rotor is characterized in that the magnet or excitation coils are disposed on the outer stator. The external rotor is characterized in that the magnet or excitation coils are disposed exclusively on the inner stator. However, it is also possible to provide excitation coils not only on the outer stator but also on the inner stator.
The drive is used either as a continuously rotating motor, a stepping motor or a segmented motor. Similarly, it is also possible to use the drive as a linear drive, in which case the rotor does not rotate about its axis, but rather is displaced back and forth in the axial direction by the magnetic field.
It is also possible for the coils of the outer stator and the permanent magnets of the rotor to be disposed as they are with a transversal flux or flow motor. Such a transversal flux motor is described, for example, in the “Handbook for Electrical Small Drives”, Carl Hanser publisher. The inner stator is in this connection to be appropriately designed.
Various embodiments of the inventive drive will be explained in greater detail subsequently with the aid of the drawings, in which:
a is a detailed illustration of the construction of the bells;
b is a cross-sectional illustration through a bell;
c is a cross-sectional illustration through a bell having permanent magnet elements with a quadrilateral profile;
Each pot-shaped element 8 has a cylindrical wall 8a that is formed radially outwardly on the base wall 8b and that, together with the sleeve 9 that is disposed toward the inside, forms a chamber for the permanent magnets 14. As can be seen from
The inventive drive illustrated in
Due to the magnetic conductance, the magnetic resistance is predominantly formed by the air gaps.
a shows only portions of the rotor, whereby the inner stator 11 carries magnet or excitation coils 15. The outer stator is not illustrated in
A thin-walled component as a bell is prone, in particular with additional deformations, as are described in conjunction with
b shows a cross-section through a segment of the rotor. The cylindrical wall 8a of the outer pot is provided with corrugations or indentations 8d that extend in the axial direction and between which are mounted the permanent magnet elements 14. The spacing of the indentations 8d relative to one another is somewhat greater than the widths of the permanent magnets 14, whereby the remaining intermediate space is filled with a material, for example casting resin, that compensates for the expansion differences of the individual components relative to one another when temperature fluctuations occur. As is known, transverse to the direction of magnetization the magnets have very small or negative expansion coefficients. As an additional security, the inwardly disposed cylinder 9 can rest against the inside of the permanent magnets, as illustrated in the longitudinal cross-section of
The arrangement of magnet yoke and rotor pursuant to
The rotor of the inventive drive of
The pot 8 is preferably magnetically conductive, and the sleeve 9 is preferably non-magnetic, although it can also be conductive with a non-magnetic pot. This is necessary to avoid a magnetic short circuit in the rotor.
c shows an outer contour of the bell 8a, and also of the inner cylinder 9, that is adapted to conform to the quadrilateral cross-section of the magnets. The corrugations 8f in the central portion can be smaller, so that the magnets have a small spacing relative to the inner radius of the corrugations; this spacing must be as small as possible. The magnets that rest fully against the corrugations 8d at this location have a small, not-illustrated chamfer in order not to rest against the inner radius of the corrugation.
The embodiment of
The embodiment of
The bell 28 has an outer cylindrical wall 28a on the inner side of which the permanent magnets 14 rest. On the inside, the permanent magnets are held by a sleeve 29 that is secured to the outer cylindrical wall 28a via its collar 29a. In addition, the side of the sleeve that is disposed in the region of the base of the pot can be connected with the cylindrical wall 28a or the base wall 28b. By means of a non-illustrated bearing position for the shaft in the housing 24a, the housing portion 25 can be closed on this side.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 030 063.1 | Jun 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2005/002441 | 3/8/2005 | WO | 00 | 11/30/2007 |