1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to ferromagnetic constant-voltage, or CV, transformers that, when energized by an alternating voltage of a given frequency and an amplitude that is within about ±15% of a nominal value, produce a substantially undistorted, or harmonic-free, output voltage that has an amplitude within about ±3% of a selected value.
Some prior art transformers that have only two coils are capable of holding the magnitude of their output voltage to within ±3% of a nominal value, but the waveform of the output voltage, instead of being a substantially pure sine wave, has a relatively high harmonic content, typically with 3rd, 5th, 7th, and even higher harmonics of the fundamental frequency. Other prior art transformers capable of holding the magnitude of their output voltage relatively constant, require an additional coil to minimize harmonics.
Transformers constructed according to this invention achieve an output voltage of relatively constant magnitude and low harmonic content and do so without the necessity of a third coil.
By virtue of the elimination of the extra coil, the transformers described and claimed hereinafter are less expensive than prior transformers that achieve the same voltage control and relative freedom of harmonics. In addition, the structural simplification of this invention is not limited to single-phase transformers but also extends to three-phase transformers.
The advantages of being able to achieve an output voltage that is both substantially constant in magnitude and harmonic-free with only two coils, or in the case of three-phase transformers, two coils per phase, include simplification of manufacture, improvement of efficiency, reduction of the cost and size of transformers of a given capacity, and, even in the case of three-phase transformers, requirement of only a single magnetic core.
In addition to the foregoing advantages of this invention, the fact that the output voltage is sinusoidal results in a lower temperature rise in the secondary winding, in the secondary winding section of the magnetic core, and in the capacitor used with such transformers than would be the case if the voltage waveform were distorted.
In order to produce a sinusoidal, i.e., harmonic-free, output voltage of substantially fixed amplitude in prior Cv transformers having only two coils, an additional external inductor is required, but the present invention uses air gap means to form, in effect, an inductor within and in series with the secondary winding. A capacitor of the proper capacitance is connected to the secondary to tune the built-in inductor to filter out, or at least substantially reduce the amplitude of, undesired harmonics in the output voltage. Air gap means may consist of one or more complete spaces, or gaps, across the flux lines in the ferromagnetic components of a transformer core, or air gap means may be only a narrowing at a selected region, or regions, of a ferromagnetic core.
U.S. Pat. No. 2,694,177 to Sola describes the use of a tertiary coil to buck against the harmonics to provide sinusoidal alternating voltage output.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,912,553 to Mengelkoch describes the use of a tertiary coil isolated and spaced from the secondary coil to create a filter circuit that provides a sinusoidal output voltage.
There are a number of disadvantages in the use of a tertiary coil in a constant-voltage transformer. First, the production of the tertiary coil requires both additional time and materials. It also requires that the size of the core be large enough to allow space for a separate window to accommodate the tertiary coil or to allow the window for the secondary coil to be long enough to accommodate the tertiary coil as well as the primary and secondary coils. Either way, the result is a larger transformer. For example, in the Sola patent, there is additional magnetic structure between the secondary coil and the tertiary coil to form a separate window for the tertiary coil.
In the Mengelkoch patent, the secondary and tertiary coils are within the same window but are spaced apart, which requires the window to be large enough to accommodate the tertiary coil along with the primary and secondary coils.
Still another objection to the use of a tertiary coil is that a ferroresonant transformer so equipped has reduced efficiency. This shows up in Sola Patent 2,694,177 in extreme distortion of the waveform in the tertiary coil, meaning that the waveform has a high content of harmonics, along with a high core loss and temperature rise. While Sola includes components to reduce this distortion, it is preferable not to produce it in the first place.
Mengelkoch's single phase transformer has air gaps that extend the fully across all three legs of his lamination stack, thereby creating high reluctance in the magnetic circuit, which severely reduces the regulation of the transformer at low source voltage.
It is an object of this invention to provide an improved ferroresonant transformer that produces a substantially harmonic-free output voltage and has less components, in both the single-phase and three-phase forms, than prior harmonic-free constant-voltage transformers capable of producing comparable output voltage characteristics, thereby resulting in a smaller, simpler structure that is easier and less costly to manufacture and has improved efficiency.
Another object is to produce a ferroresonant constant-voltage transformer that produces a sinusoidal output voltage and has lower temperature rise in the secondary winding section and in the magnetic core on which the secondary is wound and in the capacitor associated with the magnetic structure than is true of comparable components of a prior constant-voltage transformer designed to handle the same load.
A further object is to utilize the magnetic core structure of the transformer to eliminate the necessity of a tertiary, or neutralizing, coil while still achieving a substantially harmonic-free output voltage of substantially constant magnitude.
A similar object is to utilize the magnetic core structure of a multi-phase transformer to eliminate the necessity of providing a tertiary, or neutralizing, coil for each phase to achieve a substantially harmonic-free output voltage of substantially constant magnitude.
A still further object is to provide a ferroresonant transformer that produces, in response to alternating source voltage having a certain frequency, an output voltage substantially free of harmonics and having a substantially constant magnitude, such transformer comprising a core loop of low-reluctance transformer material having a selected length and comprising ferromagnetic winding leg means to conduct magnetic flux, and a ferromagnetic return leg means to conduct magnetic flux; primary winding means located on a first part of the winding leg means and comprising input terminals to receive the alternating source voltage to produce the magnetic flux in the winding leg means; secondary winding means on a second part of the winding leg means spaced from the first part of the winding leg means and comprising a plurality of terminals, including output terminals; air gap means comprising a region of increased reluctance in the core loop to form an inductor in series with the secondary winding; magnetic flux shunt means, including a series shunt air gap, magnetically joining a location on the winding leg means between the first and second parts thereof to the return leg means to divert from the winding leg means to the return leg means a portion of the magnetic flux produced by the primary winding so that the flux thus diverted by-passes the secondary winding; and capacitor means connected between selected terminals of the secondary winding and having a capacitance that resonates with the secondary winding means at the certain frequency, whereby the substantially harmonic-free sinusoidal output voltage of substantially constant magnitude is produced across the output terminals.
Those skilled in this art may become aware of still further objects after studying the following description.
Briefly, the constant-voltage transformer of this invention includes a primary coil, or winding, a secondary coil, or winding, a ferromagnetic core that has winding leg means and return leg means, which, together, form a core loop. The transformer also includes magnetic shunt assemblies, and air gap means. The primary coil is on a first portion of the winding leg means to be energized by the source voltage, and the secondary winding is on a second portion of the winding leg means spaced from the first portion. The secondary winding is electrically insulated from the primary winding and comprises first, second, and third terminals. The first and second terminals comprise output terminals of the transformer, and the third terminal is between the first and second terminals. In addition, the transformer has air gap means at one or more locations to reduce the cross-sectional area of the core to a lesser amount, including to zero, at that or those locations. In addition, the transformer includes magnetic flux shunt means joining a location on the winding leg means between the first and second portions thereof to shunt the return leg means some of the flux in the part of the core where the primary winding is located. In addition, a capacitor having a capacitance that resonates with the inductance produced in the secondary winding at the certain frequency is connected between the first and third terminals of the secondary winding so that the output voltage produced across the output terminals of the transformer is not only of substantially constant magnitude but is also substantially harmonic-free.
Existing transformers powered by sources in which the magnitude of the input voltage may vary as much as ±15% are considered to be constant-voltage transformers if the magnitude of their output voltage does not vary more than about ±5%. Such constant-voltage transformers may also be considered acceptable if their output waveform does not have more than about 5% harmonic distortion. The same variations from absolute constancy of magnitude and purity of waveform are permissible in transformers constructed according to this invention, but the novel transformers of this invention achieve these desired values more inexpensively than transformers constructed according to the prior art.
There is a possibility of some trade-offs between constancy of magnitude and purity of waveform. Some types of apparatus require that their power supply voltage be held to within about ±1% of the desired value but permit the waveform of that supply voltage to have, perhaps, 5% harmonic distortion. Other apparatus requires that the alternating voltage obtained from the power transformer have as little harmonic distortion as possible, say 3%, but may allow the magnitude of the supply voltage to vary as much as, say ±5% of the nominal value. Small transformers intended for use where the KVA through them is low usually need a power supply voltage that has a total harmonic distortion less than 3%. Large transformers to be used with high KVA systems usually are not as sensitive to harmonic distortion and may operate with a total harmonic distortion of 5%.
One way of building the magnetic core is to use two patterns of E-I laminations in one stack. A partial stack of E-I laminations has an air gap in the magnetic flux loop path linking the secondary coil to form a built-in inductor. The remainder of the total stack consists of E-I laminations that have no air gap.
Another way of building the magnetic core is to use butt-stacked E-I laminations with a shortened winding leg that creates an air gap in the magnetic flux loop path linking the secondary coil to form a built-in inductor electrically in series with the secondary coil.
The magnetic core may also be arranged to have an air gap right in the middle of the stack of laminations to form a built-in inductor. In this way, all laminations may be identical and can be interleaved with each lamination oriented oppositely from its neighbors in the stack to reduce the transformer noise.
The special stack of magnetic core laminations can also be assembled with laminations of one E-I pattern that have a portion of the air gaps in the magnetic loop path linking the secondary coil to form a built-in inductor. The remainder of the magnetic core cooperates with the secondary coil connected to a resonating capacitor to generate a substantially harmonic-free output voltage of substantially constant magnitude.
Constant-voltage transformers according to this invention for use in three-phase systems are similar to those used in single-phase systems. Like the single-phase transformers, transformers intended for use in three-phase systems may have a core with three legs, but all three of the legs, including those that would serve only as flux-return paths in single-phase transformers, have primary and secondary windings and air gap means in each leg and separate capacitors connected to each secondary winding. Each leg serves as a winding leg for one phase and as a return leg for the other phases.
In addition, in both the single-phase and the three-phase embodiments, the air gap means can be located midway along the length of the winding leg, or legs, so that all of the E laminations can be identical while still allowing some, typically alternate, laminations to be reversed in the direction the legs extend from the spine.
a shows a plan view of one embodiment of a transformer according to this invention, using two patterns of E-I laminations.
b is a side view of the transformer of
c is an exploded view of the magnetic core of
a-5c show plan, side, and exploded views of another embodiment of a transformer according to this invention, using two patterns of E-I laminations.
a-6c show plan, side, and exploded views of another embodiment of a transformer according to this invention, using two patterns of E-I laminations.
a-7c show plan, side, and exploded views of another embodiment of a transformer according to this invention, using two patterns of E-I laminations.
a-8c show plan, side, and exploded views of another embodiment of a transformer according to this invention, using two patterns of E-I laminations.
a and 9b show plan and exploded views of another embodiment of a transformer according to this invention, using one pattern of E-I laminations. Only one set of air gaps are needed, either on the winding leg or on the return legs.
a and 10b show plan and exploded views of another embodiment of a transformer according to this invention, using one pattern of E-I laminations.
a and 11b show plan and exploded views of another embodiment of a transformer according to this invention, using one pattern of E-I laminations.
a and 12b show plan and exploded views of another embodiment of a transformer according to this invention, using T-O laminations. Only one set of air gaps is needed, either on the winding leg or on the return legs.
a and 13b show plan and exploded views of another embodiment of a transformer according to this invention, using T-O laminations.
a and 14b show plan and exploded views of another embodiment of a transformer according to this invention, using T-O laminations.
In addition to the leg 23, which may also be referred to as winding leg means, the core means 22 also has legs 32-35 forming return core means linked to the leg 23 to provide a relatively low-reluctance environment for magnetic flux generated by currents flowing in the windings. This does not mean that the reluctance is uniformly low at all points, and it will differ in different regions of the core, depending on the characteristics of laminations making up the core and on the existence at certain locations of interruptions forming partial air gaps in the core.
Also forming part of the ferromagnetic material that makes up the core 22 are magnetic shunt means 37 and 38 located within the two windows 39 and 40 formed by the arrangement of the core legs 23 and 32-35. The shunts 37 and 38 extend most of the way from the first leg 23 to the legs 32 and 33 and are between the primary winding 24 and the secondary winding 26. In the arrangement shown in this figure, there is a short air gap 41 between the shunt 37 and the winding leg 23 and another short air gap 42 between the shunt 37 and the return leg 33. There are corresponding air gaps 43 and 44 between ends of the shunt 38 and the legs 23 and 32, respectively. As in all cases, the air gaps 41-44 increase the reluctance of the respective parts of the core in which they are located over what it would be if these air gaps did not exist.
When the primary coil 24 is connected to a source of alternating current, this current produces magnetic flux in the vicinity of the coil, and this flux is channeled by the core members, which have a substantially lower reluctance than air. Some of the flux, indicated by the dotted loops 45 and 46, links with the secondary coil 26 by way of the winding leg 23 and the return legs 32-35. In addition, some of the magnetic flux produced by current in the primary coil 24 is channeled by the magnetic shunts 37 and 38 so that it does not link with the secondary coil.
In addition to the flux 45 and 46, the source current flowing in the coil 24 produces additional flux that follows the paths indicated by reference numerals 47 and 48. Although in the drawing, this flux appears to split off from the flux 45 and 46, it does not really do so but, like all magnetic flux, is really in the form of closed loops. The reason for showing additional flux loops is to illustrate that some of this flux is entirely within the low-reluctance path formed by ferromagnetic material in of the leg 23 but some of it is in a somewhat higher reluctance region resulting from a partial air gap 49 created by shaping the leg 23 so that this part of it has a smaller cross-sectional area than other parts of this leg. Subsequent figures show various embodiments for producing the smaller cross-sectional area that is an important part of this invention.
A capacitor 51 is connected across the entire secondary winding 26 to resonate with the inductance of that winding due to saturation of the winding leg 23 in the secondary coil area when the output voltage reaches the desired value. Any excess flux produced in the core 22 by a higher primary voltage than is necessary to produce the desired output voltage will by-pass the part of the winding leg 23 on which the secondary coil is located and, instead, will follow the paths 52 and 53 through the magnetic shunts 37 and 38. As a result, the voltage across the secondary coil 26 will not increase.
The output voltage of the transformer 21 is not necessarily the voltage across the whole secondary coil 26 but only the voltage across the part of the coil between the terminals 29 and 30. It may also be convenient to provide one or more other taps, such as the tap 54, on the winding 26 to which the output terminal 29 can be connected to set the value of the controlled voltage to exactly the desired, controlled value.
If there were no air gap, such as the one indicated in this embodiment by reference numeral 49, the waveform of the output voltage between the terminals 29 and 30 would not be sinusoidal but relatively square, indicating that it has a high harmonic content. With the partial air gap, there are two parallel magnetic flux paths, one through the air gap, as indicated by the lines 47 and 48, and the other through the ferromagnetic material that bridges the partial air gap 49, as indicated by the flux paths 45 and 46. The flux paths 47 and 48 through the air gap have a higher reluctance than the flux paths 45 and 46 through the ferromagnetic material that bridges the air gap. The flux through the air gap forms a built-in inductor within the secondary winding 26 in series with the secondary winding and the capacitor 51 to eliminate harmonics of the fundamental sinusoidal frequency. The remainder of the stack of laminations without an air gap forms a low-reluctance magnetic path to carry out output power with maximum efficiency.
One way of building the special magnetic core 22 of this invention is to assemble a stack of laminations made up of two E-I patterns, one of which has an air gap and the other of which does not. The laminations in one part of the stack have an air gap in the magnetic flux loop paths 47 and 48 that link with the secondary coil to form a built-in inductor. The laminations in the rest of the stack, have no air gap and work with the secondary coil 26 connected to the resonating capacitor 51 to generate a constant-voltage output.
Another way of building the special stack of magnetic core laminations is to use a single-pattern set of E-I laminations or a single-pattern set of T-O laminations with reductions in the cross-sectional area of all of the laminations in one location of the magnetic flux loop path linking the secondary coil to form a built-in inductor. The remainder of the magnetic core works with the secondary coil 26 connected to the resonating capacitor 51 to generate a constant-voltage output.
In each case, the built-in inductor within the secondary coil 26 also works with the capacitor 51 as a filter to eliminate harmonics and produce an output voltage that has a substantially constant amplitude and is substantially harmonic-free.
A specific embodiment of a constant-voltage, harmonic-free transformer, such as the transformer 60 with the partial air gap 49 in
The results are stated in the following Table II:
a-4c show a transformer 60 that has a partial air gap 61 formed by using a stack of laminations having two basically similar E-I patterns, except that, as is most easily seen in
a-5c show a transformer 70 that differs from the transformer 60 in
In the embodiment in
a-7c show a transformer 90 with a core formed of two sub-stacks 91 and 92 of E-I configuration. The sub-stack 91 includes I laminations 93a and E laminations having three legs: a winding leg 94a and two return legs 95a and 96a, all of which are long enough to meet the I laminations 93a. The sub-stack 92 has a winding leg 94b and two return legs 95b and 96b aligned with the legs 94a-96a, respectively, but somewhat shorter so that they do not extend to the I laminations 93b of the sub-stack 92, thereby forming partial air gap means divided into three parts 97a-97c. Shunts 98 and 99 are located between the winding legs 94a and 94b and the return legs 95a, 95b and 96a, 96b. The net effect of the three-part air gap in the transformer 90 is the same as having the single, partial air gap 49 in
In the embodiment in
a and 9b show a transformer 110 formed of a single stack of special E-I laminations 111 oppositely interleaved with each other in the manner of the laminations 101 and 102 in
A primary winding 117 is located on the winding leg 113a between the partial air gaps 115a and 115b and the spine 112, and a secondary winding 118 is located between the partial air gaps and the other end of the winding leg. All of these partial air gaps reduce the cross-sectional area of their respective legs to increase the reluctance of the paths through those regions. Although two sets of partial air gaps 115a, 115b and 116a, 116b are shown, it is not necessary to have all four partial air gaps. Either set can be eliminated and the depth and width of the partial air gaps of the other set modified to achieve the required reduction in cross-sectional area. As in the previous embodiments, the transformer 110 includes magnetic shunts 119a and 119b on opposite sides of the central leg 113a between the partial air gaps and the primary winding.
a and 10b show yet another modification of the invention in which a transformer 120 has a central, winding leg 121 with a primary winding 122 toward one end and a secondary winding 123 toward the other end. Partial air gaps 124 and 125 are arranged on opposite sides of the secondary-winding end of the winding leg, which results in a reduction in the cross-sectional area of the winding leg and produces the built-in inductor similar to that discussed in
Similarly,
a and 12b show a transformer 140 very similar to the transformer 110 in
The O laminations form the return legs 145a and 145b in this embodiment. Partial air gaps 146a and 146b are formed in inwardly facing surfaces of the return legs 145a and 145b opposite partial air gaps 147a and 147b formed in outwardly facing surfaces of the winding leg 141 between a primary winding 148 and a secondary winding 149, similar to the arrangement of the partial air gaps 115a, 115b and 116a, 116b in
a and 13b show a transformer 150 that is similar to the transformer 120 in
a and 14b show a transformer 160 that is essentially like the transformer 130 in
A specific embodiment of the transformer 170 with its full air gap 175 in
The results are stated in the following Table II:
Some of the characteristics of those of the foregoing transformers that have a partial air gap as compared with those that have a whole air gap may be summarized as follows:
In addition to transformers operating on single-phase alternating current, transformers incorporating the novel features of this invention can also operate on multi-phase alternating current.
Secondary windings 204-206 are wound on opposite ends of the legs 200-202 from the primary windings 197-199, respectively. Capacitors 207-209 are connected to the secondary windings in the same way the capacitor 51 is connected to the secondary winding 26 in
Only two magnetic shunts 211 and 212 are provided, one between the legs 200 and 201 and the other between the legs 201 and 202, and there is an air gap between each end of each of these shunts and the proximal leg. The shunts serve the same purpose as the shunts in the single-phase transformers described above.
The I laminations 213 of the transformer 196 are spaced from the free ends of the legs 200-202 to form air gaps 215-217 that serve the same purpose for each phase as the partial air gap 49 in
In operation, the leg 200 serves as the winding leg for the voltage applied to the primary winding 197 on that leg, and the legs 201 and 202 will then serve as the return legs for that phase voltage. At the same time, the legs 201 and 202 serve as the winding legs for the other two voltage phases applied to the primary windings 198 and 199, respectively.
The fact that the I laminations are separated from the E laminations is important in providing the inductance to be tuned by the capacitors 207-209, but that spacing between the E and I laminations allows some vibrations to take place between them, so that the transformer 196 is somewhat noisy.
To minimize or eliminate this noise,
Primary windings 228-230 are wound on the winding legs 221-223, respectively, to be connected to a three-phase power source by three pairs of input terminals 231, 232, 233, 234, and 237, 238, respectively. Secondary windings 239-241 are also wound on the same legs 221-223 as the primary windings 228-230, respectively. Three capacitors 242-244 are connected across the windings 239-241, respectively, and each of the windings 239-241 has an output terminal 246-248 connected to one end, and to one terminal of the respective capacitor 242-244. Each of these secondary windings also has a second output terminal 250-252 connected to an intermediate point 253-255 to allow each of these primary and secondary winding sets on the legs 221-223 to operate with respect to one of the three phases as the single primary and secondary winding set 24 and 26 did in
The transformer 219 has two magnetic shunts 256 and 257 located on opposite sides of the center leg 222 between that leg and the two side legs 221 and 223 as does the transformer 196 in
In the wye-connected circuit in
While the invention has been illustrated by specific embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the transformer art that modifications may be made in them that still fall within the scope of the invention as claimed.