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Motors Jiasheng He Scott Koziol Kelvin Chen Chih Peng ME6405 1 Overview     DC Motors (Brushed and Brushless) Brief Introduction to AC Motors Stepper Motors Linear Motors 2 Electric Motor Basic Principles Interaction between magnetic field and current carrying wire produces a force  Opposite of a generator  Kelvin Peng 3 Conventional (Brushed) DC Motors Permanent magnets for outer stator  Rotating coils for inner rotor  Commutation performed with metal contact brushes and contacts designed to reverse the polarity of the rotor as it reaches horizontal  Kelvin Peng 4 2 pole brushed DC motor commutation Kelvin Peng 5 DC Motor considerations  Back EMF - every motor is also a generator More current = more torque; more voltage = more speed  Load, torque, speed characteristics   Shunt-wound, series-wound (aka universal motor), compound DC motors Kelvin Peng 6 Conventional (Brushed) DC Motors  Common Applications:  Small/cheap devices such as toys, electric tooth brushes, small drills  Lab 3  Pros:  Cheap, simple  Easy to control - speed is governed by the voltage and torque by the current through the armature  Cons:  Mechanical brushes - electrical noise, arcing, sparking, friction, wear, inefficient, shorting Kelvin Peng 7 Brushless DC Motors  Essential difference - commutation is performed electronically with controller rather than mechanically with brushes Kelvin Peng 8 Brushless DC Motor Commutation  Commutation is performed electronically using a controller (e.g. HCS12 or logic circuit)  Similarity with stepper motor, but with less # poles  Needs rotor positional closed loop feedback: hall effect sensors, back EMF, photo transistors Kelvin Peng 9 BLDC (3-Pole) Motor Connections Has 3 leads instead of 2 like brushed DC  Delta (greater speed) and Wye (greater torque) stator windings  Delta Kelvin Peng Wye 10 Brushless DC Motors  Applications  CPU cooling fans  CD/DVD Players  Electric automobiles  Pros (compared to brushed DC)  Higher efficiency  Longer lifespan, low maintenance  Clean, fast, no sparking/issues with brushed contacts  Cons  Higher cost  More complex circuitry and requires a controller Kelvin Peng 11 AC Motors Synchronous and Induction (Asynchronous)  Synchronous: rotor rotation frequency = AC current frequency  Kelvin Peng 12 AC Induction Motors (3 Phase)  Use poly-phase (usually 3) AC current to create a rotating magnetic field on the stator  This induces a magnetic field on the rotor, which tries to follow stator - slipping required to produce torque  Workhorses of the industry - high powered applications Kelvin Peng 13 Stepper Motors Jiasheng He 14 Stepper Motor Characteristics  Brushless  Incremental steps/changes  Holding Torque at zero speed  Speed increase -> torque decreases  Usually open loop Jiasheng He 15 Stepper Speed Characteristics Torque varies inversely with speed  Current is proportional to torque  Torque → ∞ means Current → ∞, which leads to motor damage  Torque thus needs to be limited to rated value of motor  Jiasheng He 16 Types of Stepper Motors  Permanent Magnet  Variable Reluctance  Hybrid Synchronous Jiasheng He 17 Permanent Magnet Stepper Motor Rotor has permanent magnets  The teeth on the rotor and stator are offset  Number of teeth determine step angle  Holding, Residual Torques  Jiasheng He 18 Unipolar Two coils, each with a center tap  Center tap is connected to positive supply  Ends of each coil are alternately grounded  Low Torque  Jiasheng He 19 Bipolar Two coils, no center taps  Able to reverse polarity of current across coils  Higher Torque than Unipolar  Jiasheng He 20 Bipolar More complex control and drive circuit  Coils are connected to an H-Bridge circuit  Voltage applied across load in either direction  H-Bridge required for each coil  Jiasheng He 21 Variable Reluctance No permanent magnet – soft iron cylinder  Less rotor teeth than stator pole pairs  Rotor teeth align with energized stator coils  Jiasheng He 22 Variable Reluctance Magnetic flux seeks lowest reluctance path through magnetic circuit  Stator coils energized in groups called Phases  Jiasheng He 23 Hybrid Synchronous Combines both permanent magnet and variable reluctance features  Smaller step angle than permanent magnet and variable reluctance  Jiasheng He 24 Applications Printers  Floppy disk drives  Laser Cutting  Milling Machines  Typewriters  Assembly Lines  Jiasheng He Linear Motors Scott Koziol Introduction to Linear Motors How they work  Comparison to Rotary motors  Types  System level design  Advantages/ Disadvantages  Applications  Scott Koziol Key Points you’ll learn: The Good: ○ High linear position accuracy ○ Highly dynamic applications ○ High Speeds The Bad: ○ Expensive! (>$3500) Scott Koziol How Linear Brushless DC Motors work [4],[6],[8] ,[3, p. 6]  Split a rotary servo motor radially along its axis of rotation:  Flatten it out:  Result: a flat linear motor that produces direct linear force instead of torque Scott Koziol Analysis Method  Analysis is similar to that of rotary machines [1]  Linear dimension and displacements replace angular ones  Forces replace torques Scott Koziol Two Motor Components • [3][6, p. 480],[7],[8] Motor coil (i.e. “forcer”) – encapsulates copper windings within a core material – copper windings conduct current (I). • Magnet rail – single row of magnets or a double-sided (as below) – rare earth magnets, mounted in alternating polarity on a steel plate, generate magnetic flux density (B) Motor coil Magnetic rail Scott Koziol Generating Force [7] : force (F) is generated when the current (I) and the flux density (B) interact F=IxB  Scott Koziol Types of Linear Motors [3]  Iron core  Ironless  slotless Scott Koziol Type 1: Iron Core [3],[6],[8] Forcer  rides over a single magnet rail  made of copper windings wrapped around iron laminations Advantages:  efficient cooling  highest force available per unit volume [3, p.8]  Low cost Disadvantages:  High attractive force between the Laminated forcer assembly forcer and the magnet track and mounting plate  Cogging Hall effect and thermal sensors Coil wound Around Forcer lamination Scott Koziol Rare earth magnets Iron Plate Type 2: Ironless Motors [3],[6],[8] Forcer  rides between dual magnet rails  known as “Aircore” or “U-channel” motors  no iron laminations in the coil Advantages:  No Attractive Force- Balanced dual magnet track  No Cogging  Low Weight Forcer - No iron means higher accel/decel rates  Easy to align and install. Disadvantages:  Heat dissipation  Lower RMS power when compared to iron core designs.  Higher cost (2x Magnets!) Scott Koziol Top View Front View Winding, held by epoxy Hall Effect and Thermal Sensors in coil Forcer Mounting Plate Rare Earth Magnets Horseshoe Shaped backiron Type 3: Slotless [3],[6],[8] Forcer: has no iron toothed laminations Side View Advantages over ironless:  Lower cost (1x magnets)  Better heat dissipation  More force per package size Advantages over iron core:  Lighter weight and lower inertia forcer  Lower attractive forces  Less cogging Front View Thermal sensor Coil assembly Back Mounting iron plate Disadvantages:  Some attractive force and cogging  Air gap is critical  Less efficient than iron core and ironless  more heat to do the same job Rare Earth Magnets Iron plate Scott Koziol Comparing Linear Motor Types Linear Brushless DC Motor Type Feature Iron Core Ironless Slotless Attraction Force Most None Moderate Cost Medium High Lowest Force Cogging Highest None Medium Power Density Highest Medium Medium Forcer Weight Heaviest Lightest Moderate Scott Koziol [6, p. 479],[8] Differences in linear and rotary motor construction [3] Conventional rotary drive system  motor coupled to the load by means of intermediate mechanical components:  Gears  Ballscrews  Belt drives Scott Koziol Direct-drive linear motor  No mechanical transmission elements converting rotary into linear movement  simpler mechanical construction  low-inertia drive for highly dynamic applications Components of “complete” linear motor system 1. motor components 2. Base/Bearings 3. Servo controller/feedback elements 4. cable management [3] Scott Koziol System Components: Base/Bearings [3] Design Considerations:  speed and acceleration capability  Service life  Accuracy  maintenance costs  Stiffness  noise. Most Popular Bearings [3]  Slide bearings  Rolling-contact bearings  Air bearings Others  Track rollers (steel or plastic roller wheels)  Magnetic bearings Scott Koziol System Components: feedback control loop [3] Advantage  position sensor can be located at or closer to the load Disadvantages:  effects of external forces are significantly greater  Factors influencing ability to determine correct position: • quality of the position signal • performance of the servo controller Scott Koziol System Components: Motor Commutation [3] Conventional rotary servo systems:  Important to know the position of the rotor to properly switch current through the motor phases in order to achieve the desired rotation of the shaft Linear Motors  must know the position of the forcer in relationship to the magnet rail in order to properly switch the windings  forcer position need only be determined upon power up and enabling of the drive Scott Koziol System Components: Positional Feedback [3] analog transducers  rack-and-pinion potentiometers  laser interferometers [9]  Linear encoder (Most Popular!)  Optical (nanometer resolution)  Magnetic (1-5 micron resolution)  Sine encoder  Scott Koziol System Components: Servo Control [3] Extremely important to have a controller with fast trajectory update rates  no intermediate mechanical components or gear reductions to absorb external disturbances or shock loading  disturbances have a significantly greater impact on the control loop than they would when using other technologies Scott Koziol Linear Motor Advantages [3],[4]  Zero Backlash  low-inertia drive  High Speeds  High Accelerations  Fast Response  High repeatability  Highly accurate  Clean Room compatibility Scott Koziol Linear Motor Advantages cont… [3],[4]  Stiffness  Maintenance Free Operation  Long Travels Without Performance Loss  Suitable for Vacuum and Extreme Environments  Better reliability and lower frictional losses than traditional rotary drive systems 46 Linear Motor Disadvantage  COST!  In most cases, the upfront cost of purchasing a linear motor system will be more expensive than belt- or screw-driven systems 47 Sample Pricing  $3529        Trilogy T1S Ironless linear motor 110V, 1 pole motor Single bearing rail ~12’’ travel magnetic encoder Peak Velocity = 7 m/s Resolution = 5μm Scott Koziol Applications  Small Linear Motors [2], [3]  Automation & Robotics [1][3]  Semiconductor and Electronics  Flat Panel and Solar Panel Manufacturing  Machine tool industry [1]  Optics and Photonics  Large Format Printing, Scanning and Digital Fabrication Scott Koziol Optics Polishing System [9] Applications cont…  Small Linear Motors [2],  Large Linear Induction Machines (3 phase) [2]  Transportation  Materials handling  Extrusion presses  “Most widely known use of linear motors is in the transportation field [1, p. 227]” [3]  Packaging and Material Handling  Automated Assembly  Reciprocating compressors and alternators [1] Scott Koziol References      [1] A.E. Fitzgerald, C. Kingsley, Jr, S. Umans, Electric Machinery, Sixth Edition, McGraw Hill, Boston, 2003. [2] M.S. Sarma, Electric Machines, Steady-State Theory and Dynamic Performance, Second Edition, West Publishing Company, Minneapolis/St. Paul, 1985. [3] Trilogy Linear Motor & Linear Motor Positioners, Parker Hannifin Corporation, 2007 [4] Baldor's Motion Solutions Catalogs, Linear Motors and Stages – Brochure, Literature Number: BR1202-G [5] Greg Paula, Linear motors take center stage, The American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 1998. References (continued)       [6] S. Cetinkunt, Mechatronics, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken 2007. [7] Rockwell Automation, http://www.rockwellautomation.com/anorad/products/lin earmotors/questions.html [8] J. Barrett, T. Harned, J. Monnich, Linear Motor Basics, Parker Hannifin Corporation, http://www.parkermotion.com/whitepages/linearmotorar ticle.pdf [9] Aerotech Engineering Reference, http://www.aerotech.com/products/PDF/EngineeringRef. pdf [10]http://www.electricmotors.machinedesign.com/guiEdi ts/Content/bdeee3/bdeee3_7.aspx [11] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rare-earth_magnet References (continued) http://zone.ni.com/devzone/cda/ph/p/id/287  http://zone.ni.com/devzone/cda/ph/p/id/286  http://www.cs.uiowa.edu/~jones/step/types.html  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H-bridge  http://www.stepperworld.com/Tutorials/pgBipolarTutori al.htm  http://electojects.com/motors/stepper-motors-1.htm  http://www.howstuffworks.com/motor.htm  http://hyperphysics.phyastr.gsu.edu/hbase/magnetic/mothow.html#c1  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_motor  53 References (continued)       http://www.physclips.unsw.edu.au/jw/electricmotors.ht ml http://www.speedace.info/solar_car_motor_and_drivet rain.htm http://www.allaboutcircuits.com/vol_2/chpt_13/1.html http://www.tpub.com/neets/book5/18d.htm single phase induction motor http://www.stefanv.com/rcstuff/qf200212.html Brushless DC motors https://www.geckodrive.com/upload/Step_motor_basic s.pdf 54
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            