The invention relates to a stator of a permanently excited rotating electric machine.
With a permanently excited rotating electric machine, such as for instance a permanently excited generator or a permanently excited electric motor, the detent moments are in particular a critical design variable during idling of the electric machine. The amplitude of the detent moments must be kept to a minimum here. Furthermore, the oscillating moments which occur under load must also be kept to a minimum.
Particularly with directly driven, permanently excited wind power generators, the detent moments, which occur during idling, and the oscillating moments, which occur during operation of the wind power generator, are to be kept to a minimum.
The following methods are essentially used nowadays to minimize the oscillating moments:
The afore-cited known methods are however complicated in terms of manufacture.
Particularly with large electric machines, the stator is usually equipped with so-called double layer windings, in rare cases also with single layer windings. In order in this way to be able to realize coils with the same width, the width of the teeth and grooves is usually realized, particularly in two-layer windings, such that a uniform groove pitch width results across the circumference of the stator, wherein all teeth and grooves have a uniform width. With single layer windings having three tiers or with barrel coils, a so-called double pole division is in contrast realized by the arrangement of the coils of a coil group per coil group in each instance, so that a so-called terminal pair results for each coil group. A region at the circumference of the stator, in which no coils are disposed, is located downstream of each coil group. This feature of the arrangement can be used to vary the groove pitch width across the circumference of the stator without in this way the width of the coils having to be different. This can be used to reduce developing detent and oscillating moments and to improve the shape of the field curve (winding factor).
The object of the invention is to reduce detent and/or oscillating moments which occur with a permanently excited rotating electric machine.
This object is achieved by a stator of a permanently excited rotating electric machine, wherein the stator comprises several teeth and grooves extending in the axial direction of the stator, wherein coil groups are disposed along the circumference of the stator, wherein the coil groups each have at least three coils which are disposed in grooves disposed directly consecutively to one another in the circumferential direction, wherein all grooves have a uniform groove width NB, wherein the teeth, which are not disposed in the center of a coil group and not between two coil groups disposed so that they directly follow one another in the circumferential direction of the stator have a uniform tooth width ZB, wherein a first central tooth, which has a first central tooth width MB, is disposed in the center of a first coil group, wherein the stator has a second coil group, wherein the first and the second coil group are disposed so that they directly follow one another in the circumferential direction, wherein a first boundary tooth, which has a first boundary tooth width RB, is disposed between the first and the second coil group, wherein the first boundary tooth width RB is essentially
RB=a·ZB
and the first central tooth width MB is essentially
MB=(2−a)·ZB,
wherein the factor a is greater than 0 and less than 1.
Advantageous embodiments of the invention result from the dependent claims.
It has proven advantageous if the factor a is greater than 0 and a maximum of 0.35. If the factor a is greater than zero and a maximum of 0.35, the detent and/or oscillating moments are reduced particularly significantly.
Furthermore, it has proven advantageous if the boundary tooth widths and the central tooth widths in the remaining coil groups are embodied similarly to the first coil group, wherein the factor a is identical in all coil groups or the factor a is different in at least two coil groups. If the factor a is identical in all coil groups, a very symmetrical overall arrangement results and the detent and/or oscillating moments are reduced particularly significantly. If the factor a is non-uniform, the stator can be manufactured particularly easily.
The permanently excited rotating electric machine may be embodied in this way for instance as a generator or electric motor, wherein the generator is embodied in particular as a wind power generator and in particular as a directly driven (the wind wheel is connected directly to the wind power generator without intermediate gearing) wind power generator.
An exemplary embodiment of the invention is shown in the drawing and explained in more detail below, in which:
The machine 1 has a rotor 2, which is disposed so as to be rotatable about an axis of rotation R of the machine 1. In this way the rotor 2 includes all elements of the machine 1 which are disposed so as to be rotatable about the rotor axis R. The rotor 2 has a rotor yoke 3, on which permanent magnets are disposed, wherein for the sake of clarity, only a permanent magnet 4 is provided with a reference character in
The stator 5 has several teeth and grooves running in the axial direction Z, wherein for the sake of clarity, only the teeth 7a, 8a and 9 and the groove 6a are provided with reference characters in
The teeth and grooves of the segments develop on account of a corresponding embodiment of the form of the metal sheets. The electric coils of the stator extend around the teeth in the grooves, wherein for the sake of clarity and as they are irrelevant to the understanding of the invention, the coils are not shown.
With commercially available permanently excited rotating electric machines, the widths of the individual teeth of the stator 5 are all identical here. In accordance with the invention, detent and oscillating moments developing during operation of the machine 1 are, on account of a targeted enlargement and reduction in the width of specific teeth compared with the remaining teeth of the stator, reduced.
It should be noted again at this point that
Coil groups are disposed along the circumference of the stator 5, wherein the coil groups each have at least three coils.
Within the scope of the exemplary embodiment, as already mentioned, the first coil group 10a has the coils R1, T1 and S1 and the second coil group 10b the coils R2, T2 and S2. The coil R1 extends here, as indicated by the symbol of coil R1, in the grooves 6a and 6d and therefore surrounds the teeth 7a, 7b and 8a. Accordingly, the remaining coils extend in the grooves assigned to the respective coils, such as shown by the symbols of the coils. The phase current R flows through the coils R1 and R2, the phase current T flows through the coils T1 and T2 and the phase current S flows through the coils S1 and S2. The coil groups are disposed here along the circumference of the stator. As already mentioned, within the scope of the exemplary embodiment, the coils groups in this way comprise three coils respectively. This need not necessarily be so, instead a coil group can also comprise more than three coils. The coil groups can also comprise six coils respectively for instance, wherein in this case the phase current R flows through the first two coils that directly follow one another in the circumferential direction U, the phase current T flows through the next two coils that directly follow one another in the circumferential direction U and the phase current S flows through the next two coils that directly follow one another in the circumferential direction U so that a three-phase system results again overall.
The teeth 7a, 7b, 8a, 7c, 7d and the tooth 9 are assigned to the first coil group 10a. The teeth 7e, 7f, 8b, 7g, 7b and 11 are assigned to the second coil group 10b. The teeth which are disposed in the center of the coil groups are subsequently referred to as central teeth and the teeth which are disposed between two coil groups which directly follow one another in the circumferential direction U are subsequently referred to as boundary teeth. The first central tooth 8a is disposed in the center of the first coil group 10a and the second central tooth 8b is disposed in the center of the second coil group 10b. The first boundary tooth 9 is disposed between the first coil group 10a and the second coil group 10b. The second coil group 10b is disposed in the circumferential direction U of the stator directly consecutively downstream of the first coil group 10.
The second boundary tooth 11 is disposed between the second coil group 10b and a third coil group which is not further shown in
Within the scope of the exemplary embodiment, the respective central tooth in this case has the same central tooth width MB in all coil groups, i.e. a uniform central tooth width MB. Furthermore, all boundary teeth have the same boundary tooth width RB, i.e. a uniform boundary tooth width RB.
With a commercially available stator of a permanently excited rotating electric machine, all teeth and all grooves have a uniform width. In other words, the so-called groove pitch width NTB, which is the total of the width of the tooth and the width of the groove directly following the tooth, results in the following with a commercially available stator:
wherein N is the number of grooves, U is the circumference of the stator and r is the radius of the stator.
In accordance with the invention, the groove pitch width is changed in order to reduce the detent and/or oscillating moments, by the width of the tooth, which is disposed between two coil groups disposed so as to directly follow one another in the circumferential direction, being reduced by a factor a and the width of the tooth, which is disposed in the center of the coil group to which the boundary tooth, being enlarged according to the factor a. The first boundary tooth width RB of the first boundary tooth 9 is therefore reduced compared with the tooth width ZB and according to the reduction in size, the first central tooth width MB of the first central tooth 8a is enlarged. The following thus applies to the first boundary tooth width RB
RB=a·ZB (2)
and to the first central tooth width MB:
MB=(2−a)·ZB (3)
wherein the factor a is greater than 0 and less than 1. The tooth width ZB corresponds here to the length of the arc across the angle α1, the groove width NB corresponds to the length of the arc across the angle α2, the first central tooth width MB corresponds to the length of the arc across the angle α3 and the first boundary tooth width RB corresponds to the length of the arc across the angle α4 (see
Therefore
applies, wherein r is the radius of the stator. The radius r of the stator here goes from the axis of rotation R to the side of the teeth facing the rotor 2 (see
The inventive reduction in the width of the boundary tooth and corresponding enlargement of the width of the central tooth does not change the width of the coils. The distance between the coils within a coil group is likewise identical. A symmetrical three-phase current system therefore also results as in the case of a commercially available stator.
The groove width NB is selected here such that the coils fit into the grooves.
If the factor a is greater than zero and a maximum of 0.35, detent and/or oscillating moments are particularly significantly reduced.
Within the scope of the exemplary embodiment and according to the first coil group 10a, the boundary tooth widths and the central tooth widths are embodied in the remaining coil groups, wherein the factor a is identical in all coil groups. The central tooth width of the second central tooth 8b is therefore just as large as the central tooth width of the first central tooth 8a and the boundary tooth width of the second boundary tooth 11 is just as large as the boundary tooth width of the first boundary tooth 9.
Alternatively, the value of factor a can however also be different in the coil groups. Therefore factor a may amount to 0.1 in the first coil group 10a for instance and to 0.2 in the second coil group 10b so that different values result for the widths of the central teeth 8a and 8b and the widths of the boundary teeth 9 and 11.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2010 001 619.5 | Feb 2010 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2010/070929 | 12/30/2010 | WO | 00 | 8/2/2012 |