A rotor for an electrical alternator or motor is described. The rotor has a number of disc shaped, axially magnetized, permanent magnets separated by steel discs, and elongated pole shoes parallel to the rotor axis making up the rotor periphery. The pole shoes are fixed to appropriate steel discs to give pole-shoe polarities which alternate around the rotor periphery. In order to allow starting as a motor stabilize the machine, alternate pole shoes are divided near one end and fixed to the same steel discs as transversely adjacent pole shoes to give a solid metal rotor section which gives starting by induction motor action, and forms a toothed wheel which runs at synchronous speed by reluctance motor action.
|
1. An alternating current electrical machine comprising a stator having an inner periphery with slots containing conductors of a distributed winding, and a rotor mounted to rotate with its outer periphery adjacent to the inner periphery of the stator, the rotor comprising a plurality of permanent magnets, magnet means spaced apart along the axis of rotation of the rotor with their magnetic axes coincident with the said axis and, with their directions of magnetization parallel to the said axis, a plurality of main pole shoes spaced apart around the rotor periphery and extending substantially continuously for at least three-quarters of the whole axial length of the rotor periphery, and a plurality of flux guides arranged to couple the poles of the permanent magnets magnet means to the main pole shoes magnetically to give the main pole shoes polarities which alternate around the rotor periphery but which are the same in the axial direction of the rotor over more than half the length of the outer periphery of the rotor, the flux guides and the main pole shoes being arranged to ensure that the flux density at the main pole shoes is high compared with that at the permanent magnet means, and the rotor including a speed stabilizing region having a periphery substantially formed from a plurality of circumferentially spaced salient portions of magnetic material defining spaces therebetween and a coupling portion joining substantially every salient portion to its neighboring salient portions on both sides thereof by means of a path in magnetic material, said path not including the permanent magnet means or any axial shaft for the rotor.
2. A machine according to
3. A machine according to
4. A machine according to
5. A machine according to claim 4 1 wherein the permanent magnets magnet means have like poles adjacent but separated by radial elements of the flux guides, the elements extending in a radial direction with respect to the said axis, radial elements of the guides also being positioned at the outer ends of the outer magnetic means in the rotor, and the main pole shoes being elongated, with their axes generally parallel to the said axis and with each main pole shoe magnetically coupled to at least one element.
6. A machine according to
7. A machine according to
8. A machine according to
9. A machine according to
10. A machine according to
12. A machine according to
13. A machine according to
14. A machine according to
15. A machine according to
16. A machine according to
rotate from rest by induction motor action. 17. A machine according to claim 1 wherein the main pole shoes project in both directions parallel to the rotor axis away from at least some of the positions at which the main pole shoes are coupled to flux guides situated between two permanent magnet means, and the pole shoes are integral at the said positions. 18. A permanent magnet rotor for an alternating current generator or motor, including at least two generally disc shaped axially magnetised permanent magnets each having an aperture at its centre, on each side of which magnets are generally disc shaped elements of magnetic material with central apertures and a number of radially projecting pole parts on their outer peripheries, main pole shoes arranged radially on the pole parts extending substantially continuously for at least three quarters of the whole axial length of the rotor periphery over the said elements in the axial direction, and a metal hub, having at least a periphery of non-magnetic material, which passes through the apertures in the magnets and the elements, the elements being so arranged that the pole parts of elements adjacent to permanent magnet poles of the same polarity are substantially axially aligned with one another and with gaps between the pole parts of elements adjacent to permanent magnet poles of the opposite polarity and the disc shaped elements, the pole parts and the pole shoes being arranged to ensure that the flux density at the pole shoes is high compared with that at the permanent magnets, and the rotor including a speed stabilizing region having a periphery substantially formed from a plurality of circumferentially spaced salient portions of magnetic material defining spaces therebetween and a coupling portion joining substantially every salient portion to its neighboring salient portions on both sides thereof by means of a path in magnetic material, said path not including the permanent magnets. 19. A rotor according to claim 18 wherein the pole shoes connect substantially axially aligned pole parts. 20. A machine according to claim 1 wherein the coupling portion includes a generally planar member of magnetic material positioned normal to the rotor axis. 21. A machine according to claim 20 wherein alternate main pole shoes extend only part of the way along the rotor periphery in the axial direction, and auxiliary pole shoes occupy positions in the periphery of the said stabilizing region which are substantially axially aligned with the said alternate main pole shoes, the auxiliary pole shoes being supported by one of the flux guides which forms the said coupling portion, and the auxiliary pole shoes and those portions of those main pole shoes which are between the alternate pole shoes and in the stabilizing region forming the said salient portions. 22. A rotor according to claim 19 wherein the coupling portion includes a generally planar member of magnetic material positioned normal to the rotor axis. 23. A rotor according to claim 22 wherein alternate main pole shoes extend only part of the way along the rotor periphery in the axial direction, and auxiliary pole shoes occupy positions in the periphery of the said stabilizing region which are substantially axially aligned with the said alternate main pole shoes, the auxiliary pole shoes being supported by one of the flux guides which forms the said coupling portion, and the auxiliary pole shoes and those portions of those main pole shoes which are between the alternate pole shoes and in the stabilizing region forming the said salient portions. |
constructed in accordance with5, 6 and 7 and disposed on either side of the magnets and touching the magnets at their pole faces are mounted on the shaft 8 made of stainless steel and are keyed on to it. The outer steel discs 4 and 7 are thinner than the discs 5 and 6 since they carry less flux. The steel discs overlap the magnets by a small amount sufficient to retain the magnets. Pole parts 9, 10, 11 and 12 either projecting from the steel discs or forming part of pole shoes 13 and 14 link the discs with the pole shoes magnetically. Hence polarities are induced on the pole shoes according to the magnetic discs to which they are coupled by way of the steel discs. Each pole shoe is connected to alternate steel discs along the rotor so that polarities on the pole shoes alternate around the rotor periphery. The magnet disc assembly is clamped between a flange 15 on the shaft at one end and a threaded nut or other clamping device 16 at the other end of the magnet assembly. The pole shoes can be bolted on by means of screws 17, 18, 19 and 20 or otherwise for ease of assembly.
Since the magnets have a relatively large combined pole area and the magnetic flux is brought out to a number of relatively small area pole parts, a fairly inexpensive type of magnet such as a barium ferrite magnet can be used. Each of the discs 5 and 6 distributes magnetic flux to those parts of the pole shoes which extend in opposite directions from one another from a radial axis of the disc for a distance approximately equal to the distance between the radial axes of the disc. Hence these discs must be of a cross-sectional area sufficient to carry the flux available from the magnets without saturation. Also the pole shoes 13 and 14 must have cross-sectional areas sufficient to carry the flux, required for those parts of the pole shoes which project from the discs, without saturation.
Epoxy resin can be cast on top of the magnets if desired to help to retain them. It will be understood that the invention can be applied to rotors having pole numbers other than sixteen.
The steel discs, pole parts and pole shoes can be made as integral members provided that the pole shoes are divided as shown by the dashed lines 22. Each disc will then have integral pole parts and pole shoes in alternate pole positions. The rotor is clamped together in the way already described, with the parts of the pole shoes adjacent but not necessarily in contact.
Since the rotor can be extended as desired in the axial direction by adding disc magnets and steel discs and it has in effect a number of permanent magnetic poles, it may be used in any conventional induction motor stator having a distributed winding, with conductors extending the whole length of the rotor periphery located in slots in the stator periphery, to form an a.c. generator or a synchronous motor. Part of such a stator is shown schematically in cross-section in FIG. 1 at 25 with slots 26 and conductors 27. The stator winding should of course have the same number of poles as the rotor.
The operation of the machine is conventional for machines with permanent magnet rotors and will be apparent to those skilled in the art.
A machine constructed in accordance with FIGS. 1, 2 and 3 will not start as a synchronous motor without being brought up to synchronous speed, or by reduction in supply frequency for starting.
This problem can be overcome giving the steel disc 7 pole shoes at every pole position where a pole from another disc would otherwise overlap as seen at 28 in FIG. 4. Thus the disc 7 and its pole shoes are made into what is, in effect, a solid steel rotor having a starting action similar to that of the known solid rotor induction motor. After running up to full speed the toothed wheel formed by the pole shoes and the disc 7 will run at synchronous speed, in known manner, as a reluctance motor. Hence when operating as a motor the machine will start as an induction motor and run at synchronous speed partly as a reluctance motor, and partly as a synchronous motor by virtue of the permanent magnets.
The addition of the "toothed wheel" also provides a stabilizing region which stabilizes the speed of the motor and minimises load angle oscillation when acting as a generator. In fact the machine of FIG. 4 can be used as a generator with only a small loss in efficiency and some gain in stability.
Again the steel discs can be made with integral pole parts and pole shoes, the pole shoes again being separated in the same places as the rotor of FIG. 3.
As can be seen in FIGS. 3 and 4 the pole shoes are skewed in relation to the rotor axis and this has been found to reduce harmonics in the stator winding since it has an effect analogous to a better distribution of the stator winding.
Although some forms of rotors, alternators and motors according to the invention have been specifically described it will be appreciated that the invention can be put into practice in many other ways.
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
10756607, | Sep 24 2013 | Denso Corporation | Motor and rotor |
5111094, | Sep 03 1991 | Delphi Technologies, Inc | Permanent magnet rotor having magnet retention apparatus |
5130595, | Nov 23 1987 | Chrysler Corporation | Multiple magnetic paths machine |
5233252, | Nov 20 1985 | Allied-Signal; Allied-Signal Inc | Motor having integral detent |
5483116, | Aug 30 1993 | Nippondenso Co., Ltd. | Rotor for a rotating electric machine |
5723931, | Jan 17 1996 | MPC Products Corporation | Multiple pole, multiple phase, permanent magnet motor and method for winding |
5793144, | Aug 30 1993 | NIPPONDENSO CO , LTD | Rotor for a rotating electric machine |
5925964, | Aug 30 1993 | Denso Corporation | Rotor for a rotating electric machine |
6392370, | Jan 13 2000 | Bedini Technology, Inc.; BEDINI TECHNOLOGY, INC | Device and method of a back EMF permanent electromagnetic motor generator |
6967425, | Jul 12 2004 | Novanta Corporation | Multi-functional electric stepper motor assembly having increased motor torque |
7109671, | Mar 26 2002 | Energenx, Inc. | Device and method of a back EMF permanent electromagnetic motor generator |
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
2632123, | |||
2784331, | |||
3462627, | |||
3513341, | |||
3517237, | |||
3553511, | |||
3696260, | |||
3849682, | |||
FR1164391, |
Executed on | Assignor | Assignee | Conveyance | Frame | Reel | Doc |
Nov 27 1978 | National Research Development Corporation | (assignment on the face of the patent) | / |
Date | Maintenance Fee Events |
Date | Maintenance Schedule |
Jul 16 1988 | 4 years fee payment window open |
Jan 16 1989 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Jul 16 1989 | patent expiry (for year 4) |
Jul 16 1991 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 4) |
Jul 16 1992 | 8 years fee payment window open |
Jan 16 1993 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Jul 16 1993 | patent expiry (for year 8) |
Jul 16 1995 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 8) |
Jul 16 1996 | 12 years fee payment window open |
Jan 16 1997 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Jul 16 1997 | patent expiry (for year 12) |
Jul 16 1999 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 12) |