The invention relates to a rotor body for the rotor of an electric machine and a method for the manufacture of a rotor body. The rotor body according to the invention can be used in many types of electric machines, such as DC motors and generators.
A preferred field of application for the invention is in brushless DC motors and other permanent magnet motors. In such motors, it is basically known to provide permanent magnets on the outside circumference of a rotor back yoke or to embed them in the back yoke. The invention can further be employed in electric motors and generators that can be configured as inner rotor motors or as outer rotor motors. Electric motors having an inner rotor motor configuration have a rotor back yoke that is mounted onto a shaft and one or more permanent magnets that are mounted onto the rotor back yoke or embedded in the back yoke. The motors additionally comprise a stator arrangement consisting, for example, of a number of stacked metal laminations which form an annular stator back yoke from which pole shoes protrude inwards. Phase windings are mounted on the pole shoes. The rotor arrangement is inserted coaxially into the stator arrangement. In the case of an outer rotor motor configuration, the rotor arrangement encloses the stator coaxially.
The invention can be applied in particular to an inner rotor motor with a rotor arrangement having embedded permanent magnets.
Rotors having embedded magnets are generally known in the prior art. A rotor configuration having a multi-polar, spoke-like arrangement of radially extending embedded magnets is shown, for example, in EP 0 691 727 A1. This publication shows a number of permanent magnets which are inserted into slots formed in the rotor body allowing the permanent magnets to be inserted into the rotor body from the outside.
In the prior art, a rotor body or rotor back yoke to receive the permanent magnets is frequently formed from a stack or packet of laminations, each back yoke lamination being annular and having slots or recesses to receive the permanent magnets. The rotor body is mounted onto a shaft in a pressfit, for example. It is also known to injection-mold the rotor body and the shaft in a positive fit with plastics.
The problem arising in the manufacture of this kind of rotor back yoke is that in punching out the individual back yoke laminations there is considerable waste. What is more, due to the preferred magnetic direction of the laminations, magnetic asymmetry is produced which can have a disruptive effect of the operation of the motor.
It is the object of the invention to provide a rotor body for the rotor of an electric machine which can be manufactured in a material-saving and low-cost way.
The invention provides a rotor body for the rotor of an electric machine having at least one rotor lamination which is formed in the way of a strip having a series of projections along a longitudinal edge of the strip and bent in the plane of the strip to form a ring, the projections extending inwards after the rotor lamination has been bent and the rotor lamination having a substantially unbroken or continuous outside edge. The construction according to the invention makes it possible to build up the rotor body from laminations which originally take the form of a length of strip that can be punched out from sheet metal with few off cuts. The rotor body preferably takes on the function of a rotor back yoke as well. Since, according to the invention, this back yoke is made from a length of sheet-metal strip, the rotor back yoke has a uniform preferred magnetic direction in a radial direction. To ensure that, after it is bent, the strip forms an annular rotor body having slots for the insertion of permanent magnets, the projections are arranged along the longitudinal edge of the strip with a spacing in between and given a tapered form. By correctly dimensioning the taper, the sides of two adjacent projections lie parallel to each other after the lamination has been bent and thus preferably define a slot to receive a permanent magnet. However, the projections can also be arranged and shaped in such a way that after the rotor lamination has been bent, a largely unbroken rotor body is produced, the permanent magnets then being conveniently mounted on the outer circumference of the rotor body. In this version, the projections are arranged next to each other along the longitudinal edge without a spacing in between.
In a preferred embodiment, the rotor lamination is designed in such a way that two rotor laminations can be punched out of one sheet-metal strip, the laminations lying opposite each other and the projections engaging into each other. This results in an optimized material utilization.
After the rotor laminations have been punched out, as a rule they are first formed into a lamination stack and then bent to form a rotor body and sealed at a joint by laser welding, for instance. This results in an annular rotor body having an unbroken outside circumference and open slots towards the inside for the insertion of permanent magnets. The individual rotor laminations can be arranged with respect to each other so that their joints are aligned or are aligned in groups or that the joints of all the rotor laminations are staggered with respect to each other. The rotor laminations are preferably made from a magnetically active material so that the rotor body also acts as a back yoke. However, the laminations can also be made of a non-magnetic material in order to form a magnetically non-active rotor body, provided that the magnetization of the permanent magnets allows this, for example, where Halbach magnetization is used.
The rotor body according to the invention is preferably mounted on a shaft in that it is wound directly about the shaft. The outer circumference of the shaft can be splined, the splines engaging with the projections on the rotor body. It is also possible for the shaft to be treated in some other way in order to ensure that the rotor body adheres to the shaft; for example, by roughening it, using outsert technology or knife-edges. Splining can be worked into the shaft or formed on a member which is mounted on the shaft or integrally formed with the shaft.
The invention is described in more detail below on the basis of preferred embodiments with reference to the drawings. In the embodiments described, the rotor body according to the invention forms a magnetic rotor back yoke and is built up of magnetically active metal laminations. A person skilled in the art, however, would be aware that the basic principles of the present invention can be applied to a non-magnetic rotor body made from a different material.
The figures show:
a two back yoke laminations used to fabricate the rotor back yoke according to the invention which is punched from a sheet-metal strip;
b a single punched out back yoke lamination taking the form of a strip;
a a side view of a shaft to receive the rotor back yoke according to the invention;
b a sectional view through the shaft of
a shows two back yoke laminations 12, 14 that have been punched from one sheet-metal strip.
According to the invention, the back yoke lamination 12, as shown in
Moreover, in
The rotor back yoke illustrated in
a and 6b show a side view of and a sectional view through a shaft 52 on which the rotor back yoke according to the invention can be mounted. As illustrated in the figures, grooves 54 can be formed on the shaft 52 with which the projections 16 can be made to engage. The rotor back yoke according to the invention has the advantage that it can be directly wound onto a shaft of the kind shown in
In an alternative embodiment shown in
The rotor body according to the invention has the great advantage that it can be made from rotor laminations which have the same direction of rolling with hardly any waste. The rotor laminations are first made in the form of a strip and then bent into a ring in the plane of the strip. Consequently, each annular rotor lamination has the same preferred direction of magnetization or, in other words, there is the same preferred magnetic direction of the rotor material in each rotor region. This results in the rotor body having isotropic, homogeneous material properties which means a smoother running motor. The rotor body according to the invention has the added advantage that it can be connected without any problems in a positive fit to a shaft that has splines to receive the tips of the projections when the spline bottom has a smaller diameter than the outside diameter of the shaft.
The characteristics revealed in the above description, the claims and the figures can be important for the realization of the invention in its various embodiments both individually and in any combination whatsoever.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 047 311.0 | Sep 2004 | DE | national |