The present application is a National Stage of International Application No. PCT/N02012/050013 filed on Feb. 2, 2012, which claims the benefit of Norwegian Patent Application No. 20110191 filed on Feb. 3, 2011. The entire disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates to a three phased reluctance motor, comprising a rotor arranged to rotate on a shaft and a stator in the form of an annulus, the stator being provided with a plurality of coils, and where both the exterior surface of the rotor and the interior surface of the coils are provided with a number of teeth. Both a balanced and unbalanced variant of the motor are presented. For the balanced variant there is no net electromagnetic force which must be absorbed by the bearings, while for the unbalanced variant there is a considerable net electromagnetic force which must be absorbed by the bearings. The unbalanced variant can, however, produce more torque.
In many applications there are a need for an electric motor which most of the time is turned off. A typical example is a motor for opening and closing a valve. For such a motors low price and descent torque density are important. Efficiency is generally of little importance because the motor is seldom in operation and the energy cost is therefore low anyway.
The expensive parts in a motor are permanent magnets and copper coils. Electric steel has in comparison a low price. When optimizing on price it is therefore preferable to increase torque by increasing amount of electric steel. Moreover, to reduce the amount of copper in a motor, it is important to keep in mind that the amount of flux through a coil is dependent on the area inside the coil. The coil should therefore be as close to circular and have as long circumference as possible to utilize the current to the max. The parts for motor must be easy to manufacture with a minimum of strict tolerances and the motor most be easy to assemble. Here the reluctance motor has the advantage since there is no forces between rotor and stator unless there go current through the coils.
In the power supply the power transistors are a relative expensive part, so it is preferably to have as few bridges as possible. In a reluctance motor it generally makes no difference which way the current goes in the coil. This is interesting because the bridge which supplies the phase with current then can consist of one transistor instead of four.
From Wikipedia™ (Enclosure 1), a four-phase stepper motor is disclosed, the motor being a brushless, synchronous electric motor that can divide a full rotation into a large number of steps. Stepper motors operate differently from DC brush motors, which rotate when voltage is applied to their terminals. Stepper motors, on the other hand, effectively have multiple “toothed” electromagnets arranged around a central gear-shaped piece of iron. The electromagnets are energized by an external control circuit, such as a microcontroller. To make the motor shaft turn, first one electromagnet is given power, which makes the gear's teeth magnetically attracted to the electromagnet's teeth. When the gear's teeth are thus aligned to the first electromagnet, they are slightly offset from the next electromagnet. When the next electromagnet is turned on and the first is turned off, the gear rotates slightly to align with the next one, and from there the process is repeated for then four phases. Each of those slight rotations is called a “step”, with an integer number of steps making a full rotation. In such way, the motor can be turned by a precise angle.
The step motor disclosed may either be a unipolar or a bipolar motor. Stepper motors operate differently from DC brush motors, which rotate when voltage is applied to their terminals.
Enclosure 2 discloses a hybrid stepper motor where permanent magnets are used.
The invention is motivated by the need of an electric motor which has low price, descent torque and low rotation speed, preferable with characteristics of a stepper motor.
The present invention relates to a reluctance motor where torque is created between a relative large number of teeth in stator and rotor. Because of the high number of teeth the rotor will rotate at low speed compared to the electric frequency. Since the teeth in the motors stator are shifted in an asymmetric pattern, it is only necessary with six coils to create positive torque at all rotor positions. The coils are connected in pairs so the motor are three-phased. The design is so that the current in each of the three wires, one for each phase, only need to vary between zero and positive. Three wire ends can therefore be grounded inside the machine, reducing the number of wires out of the machine to four.
An object of the invention is to provide an electric motor which has low price, produces a decent torque and has the characteristics of a stepper motor, which can compete with the two phased hybrid stepper motors which has most of this marked segment today.
Another object of the invention is to achieve a more compact shape of the rotor and the stator teeth in order to achieve a more effective use of a three-phase reluctance motor.
The objects of the present invention are achieved by means of an asymmetrical reluctance motor as further defined by the independent claims, while embodiments or alternatives of such motor are defined by the dependent claims. According to the present invention, the slot between of at least two consecutive coils may be different from the neighbouring slot between two consecutive coils.
According to one main embodiment of the invention, the three-phase balanced reluctance motor has a stator provided with six slots for three pairs of coils in stator and that there is a number of teeth in rotor, denoted nTeeth, such number being equal to n*6 where n is a positive integer equal to or larger than three, and that the angle from centre of first slot for coil 1 and 2 in stator to centre of first tooth is 360°/nTeeth and that then there is ((nTeeth/6)−1) teeth with an angle of 360°/nTeeth between each tooth before there is a second slot for coil 1 and 3 where the angle between the teeth on each side of the slot is (7/3)*360°/nTeeth, and that then there is (nTeeth/6−1) teeth with an angle of 360°/nTeeth between each tooth before there is a third slot for coil 2 and 3 where the angle between the teeth on each side of the slot is (4/3)*360°/nTeeth, and that there is ((nTeeth/6)−1) teeth with an angle of 360°/nTeeth between each tooth before there is a forth slot for coil 1 and 2 where the angle between the last tooth and the centre of the slot is (4/3)*360°/nTeeth, and that then the pattern from centre of first slot to centre of forth slot is repeated once to complete the full circle.
According to another main embodiment of the invention, the three-phase unbalanced reluctance motor has six slots for three pairs of coils in the stator, the stator having a number of teeth in rotor, denoted nTeeth, which is equal to n*6 where n is a positive integer equal to or larger than three. The angle from centre of the first slot only for coil 1 in the stator to the first tooth is 360°/nTeeth and that there is (nTeeth/6−1) teeth with an angle of 360°/nTeeth between each tooth before there is a second slot for coil 1 and 2 where the angle between the teeth on each side of the slot is (7/3)*360°/nTeeth, and that then there is ((nTeeth/6)−1) teeth with an angle of 360°/nTeeth between each tooth before there is a third slot only for coil 2 where the angle between the teeth on each side of the slot is 2*360°/nTeeth, and that then there is ((nTeeth/6)−1) teeth with an angle of 360°/nTeeth between each tooth before there is a forth slot for coil 2 and 3 where the angle between the last tooth and the centre of the slot is (2/3)*360°/nTeeth, and that then the pattern from centre of first slot to centre of forth slot is mirrored through the plane through the rotation axis and centre of first/forth slot to complete the full circle.
According to an embodiment of said two variants of the three-phase reluctance motor, all the variants which occurs if any of the sided in the motor is mirrored through the planes through the centre axis and the centre of the slots for coils.
Some of the stator teeth may be moved slightly out of the position described here to archive a skewing effect, and there may be an additional tooth in the slots which is big enough for it. Also some of the teeth can be removed from the described geometry without altering the motor principle. Further, the slots for the coils may be placed slightly irregular compared to the geometry according to the two main embodiments described above, e.g. to reduce saturation in the iron behind the teeth close to the slots.
One embodiment of the invention will be described in further details below, referring to the drawings where:
The stator 4 and rotor 5 is made up of a stack of sheets of electric steel with thin layers of insulation between them. These motor elements 4,5 could also be made of solid iron or pressed powder iron but such embodiment would be more expensive and give less performance.
The pair of coils 1,2,3 are arranged is three phases, i.e. phase 1, phase 2, and phase 3 for the numbering to be consistent with
Assuming counter clockwise direction of rotation of the rotor 5, phase 2 in
The motor will not work unless the asymmetric geometry is correct.
There are six coils in the stator 4, each being wound around a big tooth 16. As indicated in
Regarding the number of teeth, it makes little sense of having only one small tooth on each big stator tooth 16, so the smallest power is 3. The number of teeth in rotor must then be nTeeth=n*6, n=3,4,5 . . . . Higher number of teeth will give higher torque because the motor can utilize a larger percentage of the air gap circumference, at least until the number of teeth becomes so high that a considerable amount of flux leaks to rotor through paths which does not create torque.
Reference is made to the embodiment shown in
The advantage of this design over other designs is that the attracting forces between stator and rotor is balanced because the linked coils are opposite of each other. This reduces the forces on the bearings. If rotor is perfectly centred the forces on the bearings would be zero.
The disadvantage is that the magnetic field from all the phases go through the entire machine and therefore interacts with each other. As a result the back iron in stator 4 is rather thick because magnetic field from two phases has to pass through it. This reduces the torque because it reduces rotor radius. It also makes it more difficult to run the motor “smoothly” with sensor free control. With “smoothly” means that the rotor does not start and stop at every step as it would if the speed was controlled simply by switching the current to the phases as shown in
In the unbalanced variant of this motor there is an angle of 360°/nTeeth from centre of first slot 151 to centre first tooth. Then there are (nTeeth/6−1) teeth with 360°/nTeeth between centres of each tooth before there is a second slot 152. The angle between centres of the teeth on each side of the second slot 152 is (7/3)*360°/nTeeth. Then there are (nTeeth/6−1) teeth with 360°/nTeeth between centres of each tooth before there is a third slot 153. The angle between the teeth on each side of the third slot 153 is 2*360°/nTeeth. Then there are (nTeeth/6−1) teeth with 360°/nTeeth between centre of each tooth before the forth slot 154. The angle between centres of the last tooth and the centre of the forth slot 154 is (2/3)*360°/nTeeth. The stator 4 is then mirrored through the plane through the rotation axes and centre of first/forth slot 151,154. Compared to the motor shown in
Torque is larger for the unbalanced machine and it is easier to run the motor “smoothly”, but the bearings must handle a huge torque.
Enclosures:
(1) Wikipedia—Stepper Motor, pages 1-8, print out 18.01.2011
(2) Web-Books—Stepper Motors, page 1-10, print out 18.01.2011
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20110191 | Feb 2011 | NO | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/NO2012/050013 | 2/2/2012 | WO | 00 | 11/1/2013 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2012/105849 | 8/9/2012 | WO | A |
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Entry |
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International Preliminary Report on Patentability dated Feb. 13, 2013, issued in connection with International Application No. PCT/NO2012/050013. |
Notification of Receipt of Demand by Competent International Preliminary Examining Authority dated Dec. 21, 2012 in connection with International Application No. PCT/NO2012/050013. |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20140042837 A1 | Feb 2014 | US |