ELECTRIC MACHINE
20220037979 · 2022-02-03
Assignee
Inventors
- Paul R MILLER (Derby, GB)
- Stephen M Husband (Derby, GB)
- Alexander C SMITH (Holmfirth, GB)
- Charalampos C. MANOLOPOULOS (Manchester, GB)
- Matteo IACCHETTI (Manchester, GB)
Cpc classification
Y02E40/60
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
H02K7/1815
ELECTRICITY
B64D2221/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H02K3/42
ELECTRICITY
H02K9/19
ELECTRICITY
H02K55/00
ELECTRICITY
B64D27/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H02K7/1823
ELECTRICITY
H02K2213/03
ELECTRICITY
International classification
B64D27/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H02K3/42
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
An electric machine including a stator having a fully non-magnetic core and stator windings formed of a non-superconducting transposed conductor to reduce eddy current losses. It further includes a rotor having a fully non-magnetic core and superconducting windings or superconducting magnets which produce a magnetic field for interaction with the stator windings. A cryogenic cooling system is arranged to cool the stator windings to reduce conduction losses in the stator windings.
Claims
1-15. (canceled)
16. A method of operating an electric machine, the electric machine comprising: a stator having a fully non-magnetic core and stator windings formed of a non-superconducting transposed conductor; a rotor having a fully non-magnetic core and superconducting windings or superconducting magnets which produce a magnetic field for interaction with the stator windings; and a cryogenic cooling system arranged to cool the stator windings, the method comprising: using the cryogenic cooling system, cooling the stator windings to a predetermined temperature of 223 Kelvin or below, the predetermined temperature minimizing a sum of eddy current losses and conduction losses in the stator windings.
17. The method of claim 16, in which the predetermined temperature minimizes:
P.sub.tot=V(P.sub.eddy+P.sub.conduction) wherein P.sub.eddy and P.sub.conduction are the eddy current losses and the conduction losses in the stator winding measured in Watts per cubic metre, V is a total volume of the stator windings and P.sub.tot is the total losses due to eddy current losses and conduction losses in the stator windings measured in Watts.
18. The method of claim 16, in which the predetermined temperature is determined using predetermined conductivity versus temperature data for a material from which the transposed conductor of the stator windings is made.
19. The method of claim 18, in which determining the predetermined temperature comprises using the predetermined conductivity versus temperature data and a conductivity value for the transposed conductor of the stator windings.
20. The method of claim 19, in which the conductivity value for the transposed conductor of the stator windings is given by:
21. The method of claim 20, in which B, the magnetic field strength in the transposed conductor of the stator windings, is the magnetic field at a location D.sub.S corresponding to a mean diameter of the stator windings.
22. The method of claim 21, in which, D.sub.S satisfies:
23. The method of claim 16, in which the electric machine is operated at a power of at least 1 MW.
24. The method of claim 16, in which the current density in the stator windings is, in operation, at least 8 Amps per square millimetre.
25. The method of claim 16, in which the stator windings are supplied with an alternating current at a frequency of at least 800 Hertz.
26. An electric machine comprising: a stator having a fully non-magnetic core and stator windings formed of a non-superconducting transposed conductor to reduce eddy current losses; a rotor having a fully non-magnetic core and superconducting windings or superconducting magnets which produce a magnetic field for interaction with the stator windings; and a cryogenic cooling system arranged to cool the stator windings to a predetermined cryogenic temperature of 223 kelvin or below, the predetermined temperature cryogenic temperature minimizing a sum of the eddy current losses and the conduction losses in the stator windings.
27. The electric machine of claim 26, in which the transposed conductor is a litz conductor.
28. The electric machine of claim 26, in which the stator windings are formed from wire strands having a diameter of less than 1 millimetre.
29. The electric machine of claim 26, in which the stator windings are formed from one of: copper; aluminium.
30. The electric machine of claim 26, in which the fully non-magnetic core in the stator comprises a resin.
31. The electric machine of claim 26, comprising one of: 8 poles; 16 poles.
32. A propulsion system for an aircraft, comprising: an electrical network for distributing electrical power; a source of electrical power connected with the electrical network; and one or more electric machines according to claim 26 connected with the electrical network for driving a fan to propel the aircraft.
33. The propulsion system of claim 32, in which at least one of the one or more electric machines drives a boundary layer ingestion fan.
34. A propulsion system for an aircraft, comprising: an electrical network for distributing electrical power; one or more electric machines according to claim 26 connected with the electrical network for generating said electrical power; and one or more electric propulsion units connected with the electrical network for propelling the aircraft.
35. The propulsion system of claim 34, in which the or each electric machine is driven by a respective internal combustion engine, and optionally wherein the or each internal combustion engine is one of: a piston engine; a turbomachine.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0012] Embodiments will now be described by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings, which are purely schematic and not to scale, and in which:
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0019] An aircraft 101 is illustrated in
[0020] The electric propulsion units 102 are connected via a power distribution bus 103 to a source of electrical power, which in the present example is an internal combustion engine configured to drive an electric machine. In the specific embodiment of
[0021] Each electric propulsion unit 102 includes an electric machine configured to drive a propulsive fan. In the present example, the electric propulsion units 102 are ducted fans, although it will be appreciated that in alternative embodiments the electric propulsion units 102 may be configured as open propellers (a type of propulsive fan), or any other configuration able to produce thrust by causing a pressure rise in the incident airflow.
[0022] An alternative aircraft 201 is illustrated in
[0023] Common features of the propulsion systems employed by both aircraft 101 and aircraft 201 are illustrated in block diagram form in
[0024] It will also be appreciated that additional sources of power, in the form of additional turboelectric generators, or fuel cells, batteries, etc. or any combination thereof, may be provided (for example as with aircraft 201).
[0025] In the present embodiment, the electric machine 302 is of the type claimed herein. It is shown in cross-section along its meridional plane in
[0026] As set out previously, the electric machine 302 comprises a stator 401 having a fully non-magnetic core 402 (also known as “air-cored”) and non-superconducting windings 403. The non-magnetic core 402 in the present embodiment comprises a resin in which the non-superconducting windings 403 are embedded. In a specific embodiment, the resin is a polymeric resin such as an epoxy resin, polyurethane resin, etc. Alternative non-magnetic core materials and/or support frames may be used to support the non-superconducting windings 403 to deal with the reaction torque during operation
[0027] The non-superconducting windings 403 are formed from a transposed conductor. Transposed conductors are multi-strand conductors in which each strand is insulated, and is transposed in order to occupy each possible position along a specific length. The transposition of the strands may be continuous, discrete, or random. In this way, when the conductor is exposed to a magnetic field, each strand will on average link with the same number of flux lines as every other strand, thus dividing current equally among the strands. The strands are of small enough diameter that little skin effect can occur, thereby reducing losses due to induced eddy currents caused by the rotating rotor field.
[0028] In the present embodiment, the non-superconducting windings 403 in the stator 401 are formed from litz conductor. Litz conductors are a particular type of transposed conductor in which strands of round cross-section are transposed continuously along the cable length. Other transposed conductors may be contemplated, such as Roebel conductors which use rectangular strands transposed at discrete intervals.
[0029] In an embodiment, a strand diameter of less than 1 millimetre may be selected. For example, strand diameters of 0.3, 0.2, 0.1 and 0.08 millimetres may be used.
[0030] The transposed conductor may, in an embodiment, be formed of copper. In another embodiment, it may be formed of aluminium. Alternatively, any other non-superconducting conductor may be selected.
[0031] The electric machine 302 further comprises a rotor 404 which also has a fully non-magnetic core, along with superconducting windings 405. Alternatively, the rotor 404 may comprise superconducting magnets instead. In the present example the superconducting windings 405 are mounted to a shaft 406 that is supported by bearings 407.
[0032] A cryogenic cooling system is provided to maintain the superconducting windings 405 in a superconducting state. In the present example, the cryogenic cooling system comprises a cryogenic tank 408 for storing a cryogenic cooling fluid, along with a pump 409 for circulating the fluid, which, in the present embodiment, is liquid nitrogen. A cooler 410 is included in the return path to remove heat. Alternative fluids may be used, such as liquid helium etc. Such arrangements will be familiar to those skilled in the art.
[0033] In the present embodiment, the cryogenic cooling system is also used to cool the non-superconducting stator windings 403. In an alternative arrangement, two cryogenic cooling systems may be provided, for dedicated cooling of each of the stator 401 and the rotor 404.
[0034] In the present embodiment, the cryogenic cooling system is a high temperature cryogenic cooling system. It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the term “high temperature cryogenic” has, in terms of temperature, a generally-defined upper limit in the art of 223 kelvin. In an embodiment, the cryogenic cooling system is configured to maintain the non-superconducting windings 403 at a cryogenic temperature, i.e. at 223 kelvin or below.
[0035] It should be noted that one advantage of cooling the non-superconducting windings 403 with the same cryogenic cooling system as the superconducting windings 405 is that it reduces the temperature differential between it and the superconducting windings 405 in the rotor 404. This facilitates a reduction in air gap as less thermal insulation is required.
[0036] For example, in the present embodiment the airgap length between the rotor 404 and stator 401 comprises 10 millimetres of mechanical standoff plus 2 millimetres of thermal insulation to facilitate sufficient thermal isolation therebetween. This allows higher cryogenic operational temperatures in the stator compared to in the rotor. However, it is contemplated that bringing the operational temperature of the non-superconducting windings 403 closer to that of the superconducting windings 405 will facilitate reduction of this airgap to smaller lengths, for example, 5 millimetres. Thus the airgap length will be no longer dictated by the required thermal insulation, but instead by rotordynamic constraints which do not require such large airgap lengths.
[0037] In the specific embodiment of
[0038] In the present embodiment, the electric machine 302 is configured to have a power output of 1 megawatt at a speed of 12000 revolutions per minute. In the present example, it is an 8-pole machine, however a 16-pole configuration may be contemplated. Further, the current density in the stator windings 403 may be 8 amps per square millimetre, or may alternatively be 16 amps per square millimetre depending upon desired power output. It is also contemplated that the stator windings 403 will be supplied with alternating current at a frequency of 800 hertz.
[0039] It will be appreciated however that selection of pole number, current density, and frequency is very much dependent upon the intended application of the machine, particularly in terms of power output and supply characteristics, and thus different values of each parameter may be adopted.
[0040] As described previously, the electric machine 302 combines non-superconducting stator windings 403 formed of a transposed conductor in a non-magnetically cored stator 401, with cooling thereof by a cryogenic cooling system.
[0041] It will be appreciated that as temperature decreases, the magnitude of the eddy currents in a loop, and the losses associated therewith, increases due to the attendant rise in conductivity. Eddy currents are also proportional to the square of the conductor strand radius. Conduction loss is proportional to resistivity, but is dependent only upon total conductor volume, not strand radius. Its magnitude is therefore not affected by use of transposed conductor—only the temperature changes it.
[0042] Thus, as the temperature drops, there is a sharper drop in conduction loss than there is increase in eddy current loss. Eventually, the temperature will drop to the point of the residual resistivity of the windings and the conduction loss will be substantially constant with eddy current losses dominating. The inventors have identified that the use of a cryogenic cooling system arranged to cool the non-superconducting stator windings 403 places the machine 302 into an operating regime which provides a surprisingly effective balance between these loss mechanisms.
[0043] Whilst it is contemplated that operation of the non-superconducting stator windings 403 at any cryogenic temperature as herein defined will result in this effect, a method of identifying the optimum cryogenic temperature for the stator windings 403 is set out in
[0044] Conventional machine design equations typically relate the rotor torque to the rotor volume and the assumed electric and magnetic loadings. In the case of the electric machine 302, however, the non-magnetic core 402 means that the magnetic field produced by the superconducting windings 405 is not constant, but is instead a complex function of radial position.
[0045] Assuming, however, that there are no harmonic fields and the power factor of the electric machine 302 is close to unity, it is possible to instead relate the torque developed by the machine to the rotor volume and only the electric loading of the stator and the rotor.
[0046] Thus, at step 501, an initial set of parameters are set: [0047] τ: torque to be developed by the electric machine 302; [0048] g: magnetic airgap length between the stator 401 and the rotor 404; [0049] n: pole-pair number; [0050] J.sub.s: current density in the non-superconducting windings 403 of the stator 401; [0051] J.sub.r: current density in the superconducting windings 405 of the rotor 404; [0052] α: aspect ratio of the electric machine 302; [0053] h.sub.s: radial height of the non-superconducting windings 403 of the stator 401; [0054] h.sub.r: radial height of the superconducting windings 405 of the rotor 404.
[0055] At step 502, the mean diameter D.sub.s of the non-superconducting windings 403 in the stator 401 may be evaluated by using the following relation:
τ=k.sub.τJ.sub.sJ.sub.rf(D.sub.s) [Equation 1]
where:
k.sub.τ=μ.sub.0π/8αh.sub.sh.sub.r [Equation 2]
and:
[0056] Equations 1, 2, and 3 stem from a two-dimensional analytical solution of the magnetic field distribution in free space for a current sheet placed at the mean diameter of the superconducting winding 405, D.sub.r, which is related to D.sub.s by h.sub.s, h.sub.s, and g. This enables the magnetic field at D.sub.s to be expressed in terms of D.sub.r, J.sub.r, and n.
[0057] Equation 1 may be solved for D.sub.s using, for example, Newton's method.
[0058] Once D.sub.s has been evaluated, the magnetic field at that location may be evaluated at step 503.
[0059] At step 504, the eddy current losses, P.sub.eddy, in one strand of the non-superconducting windings 403 may be expressed as:
where B is the magnetic field strength, w is the frequency which is dependent upon rotor speed and pole-pair number n, r.sub.strand is the radius of a strand in the transposed conductor, and ρ(T) is the resistivity of the transposed conductor at a given absolute temperature T.
[0060] The conduction losses, P.sub.conduction, in one strand of the non-superconducting windings 403 may be expressed as:
P.sub.conduction=J.sub.s.sup.2ρ(T) [Equation 5]
[0061] Defined in this way, both P.sub.eddy and P.sub.conduction are in terms of watts per cubic metre.
[0062] An expression for the total losses P.sub.tot due to these mechanisms at a particular absolute temperature T may therefore be constructed:
P.sub.tot=V(P.sub.eddy+P.sub.conduction) [Equation 6]
where V is the total volume of the non-superconducting windings 403.
[0063] The optimum temperature to which to cool the non-superconducting windings 403 may therefore be determined at step 505 by differentiating Equation 6 with respect to p to determine the value of p that gives the lowest losses. This produces the following relation for p:
[0064] Then, this value of p may be converted into a temperature by use of established conductivity versus temperature data for the particular material selected for the non-superconducting windings 403.
[0065] It will of course be appreciated by those skilled in the art that other methods of establishing an optimal operational temperature may be valid and may be used in place of the method set out in
[0066] An exemplary plot of efficiency of the electric machine 302 against operational temperature of the non-superconducting windings 403 in the stator 401 is shown in
[0067] Curve 601 was produced by the method of
[0068] Curve 602 was produced by the method of
[0069] Curve 603 was produced by the method of
[0070] Curve 604 was produced by the method of
[0071] Various examples have been described, each of which feature various combinations of features. It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that, except where clearly mutually exclusive, any of the features may be employed separately or in combination with any other features and the invention extends to and includes all combinations and sub-combinations of one or more features described herein.