AU2003213483B2 - Seuss - Polyphase Transverse Flux Motor - Google Patents

Seuss - Polyphase Transverse Flux Motor Download PDF

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AU2003213483B2
AU2003213483B2 AU2003213483A AU2003213483A AU2003213483B2 AU 2003213483 B2 AU2003213483 B2 AU 2003213483B2 AU 2003213483 A AU2003213483 A AU 2003213483A AU 2003213483 A AU2003213483 A AU 2003213483A AU 2003213483 B2 AU2003213483 B2 AU 2003213483B2
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Australia
Prior art keywords
stator
poles
flux
rotor
motor
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AU2003213483A
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AU2003213483A1 (en
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John H Boyd Jr
Christian John Wade Gianni
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Fisher and Paykel Appliances Ltd
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Fisher and Paykel Appliances Ltd
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Priority claimed from AU13132/01A external-priority patent/AU766710B2/en
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Description

Regulation 3.2
AUSTRALIA
PATENTS ACT, 1990 COMPLETE SPECIFICATION FOR A STANDARD PATENT
ORIGINAL
Name of Applicant: Actual Inventors: Address for service in Australia: Invention Title: FISHER PAYKEL APPLIANCES LIMITED GIANNI, Christian, John, Wade; and BOYD, John, H, Jr A J PARK, Level 11, 60 Marcus Clarke Street, Canberra ACT 2601, Australia Polyphase Transverse Flux Motor The following statement is a full description of this invention, including the best method of performing it known to us.
100029981_1.DOC POLYPHASE TRANSVERSE FLUX MOTOR TECHNICAL FIELD This invention relates to polyphase transverse flux dc motors and in particular, but not solely, motors of the "inside out" type where the rotor rotates externally of the stator.
PRIOR ART The use of term "polyphase" in relation to a dc motor means a motor with a plurality of windings, or a plurality of sets of windings, which when excited sequentially from a dc source to produce a rotating flux. Commutation of the motor phases is normally achieved using electronic switching devices in a bridge arrangement with the switching sequences controlled by a micro-processor.
The advantages of transverse flux machines are well known. A transverse flux machine is capable of producing power densities several times greater than conventional electrical machines. This arises from the geometry of transverse flux motors which enables a larger number of poles while maintaining the same magnetomagnetic force (MMF) per pole as would be achieved in a conventional machine design.
Transverse flux machines have in the past been difficult to implement because standard core lamination techniques do not easily permit the three dimensional magnetic flux flow required in transverse flux machines. This difficulty is being overcome by the use of sintered powdered iron cores. These may be formed by a compression moulding technique.
Most transverse flux machine configurations disclosed hitherto are single phase machines. An example is disclosed in US patent 5,773,910 (Lange). Proposals for polyphase machines usually involve complex geometries which lead to difficulties in manufacture. For example US patents 5,117,142 (Von Zueygbergk), 5,633,551 (Weh) and 5,854,521 (Nolle).
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a polyphase transverse flux DC motor which is simple to manufacture.
DISCLOSURE OF THE INVENTION Accordingly in one aspect the invention consists in a polyphase transverse flux dc motor comprising: -3a rotor having a plurality of circumferentially disposed permanent magnets separated by segments of high permeability material to form rotor poles, a stator mounted co-axially with said rotor so as to provide at least one air gap therebetween, said stator having a plurality of circumferentially disposed and spaced apart poles, at least one stator winding per phase disposed such that when supplied with an exciting current produce flux flow through stator poles which are proximate thereto to produce a flux in said air gap adjacent to said poles, said windings in use being electronically commutated to produce a flux in said air gap which rotates about the stator axis, the improvement defined by the relationship wherein the number of motor phases is selected from the series 2, 3, N, the number of windings per phase (W) is selected from the series 1, 2, M the number of poles associated with each winding (PW) is selected from the series 2, 4, 1, and the number of stator poles (SP) is equal to the product P*WP*PW and the number of rotor poles is SP±W.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS Figure 1 shows a diagrammatic diametrical cross-section through a motor according to the present invention, Figure 2 shows an exploded view of a stator for the motor in Figure 1 with Figure 2A showing a first stator piece, Figure 2B showing a second complementary stator piece and Figure 2C showing four of six stator windings, Figure 3 shows a partial pictorial view of the periphery of the stator indicating a representative flux path produced by a single winding, Figure 4 shows a stator piece to which an electronics circuit board is mounted, Figure 5 shows a fragmentary view of the magnetic components of one preferred form of rotor and the flux flow therethrough, Figure 6 shows an alternative rotor configuration, Figure 7 shows diagrammatically a three phase commutation circuit for the motor, Figure 8 shows one piece of a two piece mould for forming a stator piece of the motor, and Figure 9 is a partial view of a stator piece showing a further pole configuration.
BEST MODES FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION In one preferred form of the invention the rotor 2 is located externally of the stator 7 as indicated in Figure 1. As is mentioned later a variety of known rotor configurations may be used. Rotor 2 as shown comprises an annular ring of axially oriented magnetic material pieces 3A interspersed with similarly configured permanent magnets 3B (not shown in Figure The permanent magnets 3B are magnetised in the circumferential direction with successive magnets being magnetised with opposite polarities. The annular ring of magnetic components is supported by a cylindrical nonmagnetic backing wall 4, preferably formed from a plastics material integrally with a base 5 and hub which carries the rotor shaft 6. The shaft is supported by bearings mounted either conventionally in a housing supporting the stator or within the appliance which the motor is to power. An example of the latter type of mounting in a clothes washing machine is disclosed in US patent 5,150,589.
An alternative rotor configuration is shown in Figure 6. In this construction the rotor 200 comprises an annular ring of magnetisable and magnetically permeable material, rotating exteriorly of the stator. In one embodiment of this configuration a number of circumferentially orientated magnets 202 are disposed around the internal periphery of the rotor. The permanent magnets 202 are magnetised in the radial direction, alternating in polarity, and abut an annular soft magnetic material return path 204 to complete the magnetic circuit. The annular ring of magnetic components is supported by a cylindrical backing wall 206, preferably formed from a plastics material integrally with a base 208 and hub which carries the rotor shaft.
The motor stator 7 (see also Figure 2) is fabricated by two complementary facing pieces 8 and 9 formed from material of high magnetic permeability spaced axially apart by bridging cores 10, also formed of a highly permeable material. Each stator piece 8 and 9 includes a number of spaced apart and axially directed poles 12 and 13 respectively, located at the periphery. The stator poles are of the claw pole type.
The bridging cores 10, of which there are six in the embodiment shown, are symmetrically disposed about the axis of the stator and located in proximity to the stator poles. The purpose of these cores is to allow magnetic flux to flow from one stator piece to the other. Each bridging core also conveniently forms the core for a corresponding stator winding 11.
The stator illustrated is a three "phase", 60 pole stator with two windings per phase. The two primary stator pieces 8 and 9 are, in the embodiment illustrated, similar in form and are assembled together face to face with their respective axially directed poles 12 and 13 facing the opposing stator piece with the relative rotational orientation of each stator piece being such as to allow the poles 12 of the upper piece to locate within the interspacing of the poles 13 of the lower piece. In the preferred form the interpole spacing exceeds the width of each pole and the axial length of each pole is extended such that the oppositely directed poles of the two stator pieces overlap. This can be seen in Figure 3.
Each stator piece can be visualised as a circular plate 15 carrying at its periphery spaced apart claw poles 12 and 13 respectively. A cavity 16 is provided centrally in each plate to conserve material and to allow the passage of the rotor shaft. Each pole is oriented axially and in the preferred embodiment has a circumferential width less than the interpole spacing. Each pole stands proud of "plate" 15 and the pole tips are rebated to form a reduced area tip 17 which has the effect of reducing leakage flux between adjacent pole tips and/or the other stator piece. Other pole configurations can be adopted to minimise flux leakage. For example, the claw poles can be tapered in one or more ways. In Figure 8 a pole is shown tapered in two directions. First the side faces 211 and 212 may taper from the root of the pole-to its outer radial face. Second inner face 213 may taper from where it joins the stator piece "plate' 15 to the tip 17.
Further, in the stepped pole embodiment shown in Figure 2 the step may be a ramped rebate instead of assuming the right angled rebate form shown.
To ensure at least the bulk of the flux produced by each winding flows through the poles proximate to that winding and not through the plate material to other windings it is necessary to provide regions of high reluctance in at least one of the plates between the bridging cores. Magnetically these regions appear as "slots" and in the preferred embodiment suitable slots 30 are provided in the lower stator piece plate as shown in Figure 2B. In theory the slots 30 could be air gaps but to retain the unitary structure of each stator piece an engineering strength low permeability material is used.
Preferably this is moulded into the stator piece and also forms the stator hub as shown in Figure 8.
The stator must be formed in two pieces to allow the several internal windings to be put in place during manufacture. The two pieces must be magnetically linked to provide flux paths between the two and the bridging cores adopted to achieve this are formed by providing on the inner face of one or both stator plate 15 raised "islands" which on assembly of the two pieces abut with their opposite number on the facing piece to provide a magnetic core about which a winding may be placed. The bridging cores may be formed integrally with one of the stator pieces. Alternatively some bridging cores can be formed integrally with one piece while the others are formed integrally with the second piece. As a further alternative "half height" bridging cores may be formed in each stator piece which during assembly of the stator are physically brought together in series to complete the magnetic circuit. This alternative construction is that shown in Figure 2. In this embodiment the stator pieces are similar -6but not identical since the bridging cores 10 must align while at the same time allowing for misalignment of the poles of the respective pieces. In yet a further alternative the bridging cores may be formed separately and located with the plates 15 during assembly.
This stator geometry allows a single winding to produce flux through several poles. Each winding is separately wound on single bobbins 14 (see Figure 2C) according to conventional winding techniques. The bobbins 14 are preferably formed from a plastics material and are shaped so as to fit about each bridging core In the three phase stator described two diametrically opposite windings are connected together in parallel or in series and on commutation are excited in series with the windings of another phase to clause flux to flow in the stator in the vicinity of the excited windings. One flux path so produced is shown in Figures 3 and 5. Each winding in this embodiment causes flux to flow through five poles in each stator piece.
For the path shown the flux passes through the bridging cores 10 (flux segment a) into the plate of the upper stator piece (flux segment then into a pole of the upper piece (segment leaves the pole and crosses the motor air gap (segment d) radially into the physically most proximate soft magnetic material piece 3A of rotor 2 (shown in Figure passes circumferentially into and through adjacent permanent magnet 3B and into the magnetic material piece 3A on the opposite side of this magnet (segment e, visible in Figure passes through the soft magnetic material piece in an axial direction and leaves the soft magnetic material piece to cross the air gap radially (segment f) to the closest pole on the lower stator piece, travels through that pole (segment g) to the lower stator plate where it proceeds radially (segment h) to return to the bridging core 10 to complete the flux circuit.
In the case of the alternative rotor construction shown in Figure 6 the flux path through the rotor differs somewhat. The flux leaves the pole and crosses the motor air gap (segment d, Figure 3) radially into the physically most proximate permanent magnet (202, Figure 6) circumferentially through the soft magnetic material return path (204, Figure 6) and back radially through an adjacent permanent magnet to cross the air gap radially (segment f, Figure 3) to the closest pole on the lower stator piece.
Only one flux path for two poles is shown for purposes of clarity. In reality flux flows three dimensionally through all five poles in the upper stator piece and all five poles of the lower stator piece which are excited by winding 11.
In a two phase firing embodiment (refer to Fig after commutation of motor current through the windings of phase A and phase B, motor current is then commutated to flow through the phase A and phase C windings to cause the radially -7directed flux produced at the periphery of the stator to move around the periphery of the stator in the desired direction. The permanent magnets in rotor 2 which are alternately located between the soft magnetic material pieces 3A are attracted or repelled by the stator flux to cause the rotor to move in synchronism with the rotating stator flux. The supply of the winding current and the commutation of the windings can be carried out in a known manner using two semi-conductor switching devices per phase ("totem pole") in a bridge configuration between de rails with the devices being switched under the control of a micro-processor (not shown) which stores sequences of switching patterns which are caused to execute in a cyclical manner to produce a flux which rotates about the stator in one direction or other as selected. Such stator winding commutation control is described in US patents 4,540,921 (Boyd), 4,857,814 (Duncan) and WO 98/35429 (Boyd et al), particularly with reference to figures 1 (which corresponds to present Figure 7) and 2 of the latter.
The present invention provides a polyphase transverse flux de motor having simple geometry which is relatively easy to fabricate. As opposed to some prior art proposals the stator geometry allows for a motor having a single air gap.
In a motor according to the present invention the following relationship holds:- If the number of phases P 2, 3, N; the number of windings per phase W 1, 2, M; and the number of poles per winding PW 2, 4, L; then the number of stator poles SP is given by SP P x W x PW; and the number of rotor poles RP SP+W per phase.
It is advantageous to make the number of windings per phase even to balance the radial forces acting when the phase is excited and in some cases it is desirable for the number of poles per winding to be even when an opposed pair claw pole geometry is chosen. However, it is possible to have an odd number of poles per winding, for example nine.
When the number of windings per phase is two or more the windings may connected in either series or in parallel. However a parallel connection may have the advantage in that it will reduce the radial force dissymmetry in the presence of air gap dissymmetries.
In the embodiment illustrated and described three phases have been chosen with two windings per phase and 10 poles per winding. This results in a stator having poles and the rotor to use with the stator must have either 62 or 58 poles.
It is convenient for manufacturing purposes to locate the motor commutation electronics in physical association with the motor. This is shown in Figure 4 where the electronics are located on a printed circuit board 20 which is fixed to stator piece 8.
The stator pieces can be formed by pressing a soft magnetic material powder, such as iron powder, into a mould 40 shaped for the purpose (see Figure For one of the two stator pieces a former 41 made of low permeability material is preferably used to provide the high reluctance slots 30 in the stator pieces. The former remains as an integral part of the stator piece on removal of the piece from the mould. -This former can also function as a bearing retainer. Pressing the soft magnetic material powder around the former allows very accurate concentricity between the bearing and the air gap. In the preferred embodiment the other stator piece does not require slots and no former is required.

Claims (2)

1. A polyphase transverse flux dc motor including: a rotor having a plurality of circumferentially disposed permanent magnets separated by segments of high permeability material to form rotor poles, a stator mounted co-axially with said rotor so as to provide at least one air gap therebetween, said stator having a plurality of circumferentially disposed and spaced apart poles, at least one stator winding per phase disposed such that when supplied with an exciting current produce flux flow through stator poles which are proximate thereto to produce a flux in said air gap adjacent to said poles, said windings in use being electronically commutated to produce a flux in said air gap which rotates about the stator axis, the improvement defined by the relationship wherein the number of motor phases is selected from the series 2, 3, N, the number of windings per phase (W) is selected from the series 1, 2, M, the number of poles associated with each winding (PW) is selected from the series 2, 4, 1, and the number of stator poles (SP) is equal to the product P*WP*PW and the number of rotor poles is SP±W.
2. A polyphase transverse flux dc motor according to claim 1 substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to the accompanying drawings. LIMITED Attorneys for the Applicant Date: 15 July 2003
AU2003213483A 1999-10-26 2003-07-16 Seuss - Polyphase Transverse Flux Motor Ceased AU2003213483B2 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU2003213483A AU2003213483B2 (en) 1999-10-26 2003-07-16 Seuss - Polyphase Transverse Flux Motor

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
NZ500679 1999-10-26
NZ501077 1999-11-12
AU13132/01A AU766710B2 (en) 1999-10-26 2000-10-25 Polyphase transverse flux motor
AU2003213483A AU2003213483B2 (en) 1999-10-26 2003-07-16 Seuss - Polyphase Transverse Flux Motor

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AU13132/01A Division AU766710B2 (en) 1999-10-26 2000-10-25 Polyphase transverse flux motor

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AU2003213483B2 true AU2003213483B2 (en) 2004-05-27

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Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4883999A (en) * 1988-08-15 1989-11-28 Pacific Scientific Company Polyphase electronically commutated reluctance motor
EP0858149A1 (en) * 1997-02-06 1998-08-12 Voith Turbo GmbH & Co. KG Use of a transversal flux machine to drive a wheel in a vehicle, and wheel drive for a vehicle

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4883999A (en) * 1988-08-15 1989-11-28 Pacific Scientific Company Polyphase electronically commutated reluctance motor
EP0858149A1 (en) * 1997-02-06 1998-08-12 Voith Turbo GmbH & Co. KG Use of a transversal flux machine to drive a wheel in a vehicle, and wheel drive for a vehicle

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