BRUSHLESS ELECTRIC MOTOR WITH BUSBAR UNIT
20220239178 ยท 2022-07-28
Inventors
Cpc classification
H02K2203/09
ELECTRICITY
H01R25/168
ELECTRICITY
H02K3/50
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H02K3/50
ELECTRICITY
H01R25/16
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A brushless electric motor includes a rotor rotatable about an axis of rotation, a stator that surrounds the rotor externally and includes a stator core and coils wound on the stator core, and a busbar assembly including a busbar holder surrounding first busbars. The windings are made of a winding wire including a first end portion on one side and a second end portion on another side of the winding wire. The first busbars are electrically contacted with the second end portions, the busbar holder being placed on a top of the stator, and the busbar holder includes fastening arms which engage in longitudinal grooves of the stator.
Claims
1. A brushless electric motor, comprising: a rotor mounted to rotate about an axis of rotation; a stator externally surrounding the rotor and including a stator core and coils wound on the stator core; and a busbar assembly including a busbar holder surrounding first busbars; wherein the windings are made from a winding wire including a first end portion on one side of the winding wire and a second end portion on another side of the winding wire; the first busbars are electrically contacted with the second end portions, the busbar holder is on top of the stator, and the busbar holder includes fastening arms engageable in longitudinal grooves of the stator.
2. The brushless electric motor according to claim 1, wherein the busbar holder includes an annular base body from which the fastening arms project radially outwards, the fastening arms being angled in a direction of the stator and engaging with their ends in respective ones of the longitudinal groove of the stator.
3. The brushless electric motor according to claim 1, wherein the fastening arms include lugs at their free ends which are received in the longitudinal grooves of the stator and define an axial position of the busbar holder relative to the stator.
4. The brushless electric motor according to claim 1, wherein each of the first busbars includes a power source connection terminal to be electrically connected to a power source; and the power source connection terminals are held in a holding portion of the busbar holder which is radially outward from the base body of the busbar holder.
5. The brushless electric motor according to claim 4, wherein a fastening arm is provided on the holding portion.
6. The brushless electric motor according to claim 1, wherein the busbar assembly includes second busbars which connect the first end portions to ground.
7. The brushless electric motor according to claim 6, wherein the second busbars each extend circumferentially over an angular range including three successive coils of the windings which correspond to different phases so that three of the first end portions are in contact with a common one of the second busbars.
8. The brushless electric motor according to claim 6, wherein the stator includes insulators partially surrounding the stator core to define stator teeth, the windings being arranged on the insulators, and the second busbars are located at an end surface of the insulators.
9. The brushless electric motor according to claim 6, wherein the second busbars are provided separately from the busbar holder and occupy an imaginary circle, an inner circumference of the imaginary circle being larger than an outer circumference of the busbar holder.
10. A method of mounting a busbar assembly on a stator including a stator core and coils wound on the stator core, the windings being formed from a winding wire including a first end portion on one side and a second end portion on another side of the winding wire, the busbar assembly including first busbars, a busbar holder surrounding the first busbars, and second busbars, the method comprising: placing busbar holder on an upper side of the stator, the busbar holder including fastening arms which engage in longitudinal grooves of the stator during placement; and contacting the second end portions with respective ones of the first busbars, the second end portions being bent from an inside to an outside in radial direction to the longitudinal axis of the stator to contact the second end portions with the first busbars.
11. The method according to claim 10, further comprising performing, before the placing of the busbar holder on the upper side of the stator: placing the second busbars on the upper side of the stator and contacting the second busbars with the first end portions to connect the winding wires to ground.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0024] Example embodiments of the present disclosure are explained in more detail below with reference to the drawings. Similar or similarly acting components are designated in the figures with the same reference signs.
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0028]
[0029] The busbar holder 9 consists at least partly or entirely of an electrically insulating material so that short circuits between the first busbars 10,11,12 can be effectively prevented. The busbar holder 9 is preferably manufactured by injection molding and extends at least partially over the first busbars 10,11,12, which are overmolded. In this way, a fixed and well-defined physical connection can be provided between the busbar holder 9 and the first busbars 10,11,12.
[0030] The busbar holder 9 has an annular base body 13 from which two fastening arms 14 extend which project radially outwards from the base body 13 and are angled, the fastening arms 14 extending in the direction of the stator with the angled region when the busbar assembly 2 is mounted on the stator. Each fastening arm 14 has a lug 15 at its free end.
[0031] The stator core has packaged stator laminations. The stator core and the stator laminations are grooved on the outside. The slots 16 are longitudinal slots. They extend longitudinally, preferably over the complete height of the stator core, and are evenly spaced along the circumference. The lug 15 of the fastening arms is received, in particular pressed, in one of the longitudinal grooves 16.
[0032] This axial connection represents an anti-rotation device. The position of the busbar assembly can thus be clearly defined in the axial and rotational direction.
[0033] As shown in detail in
[0034] The two fastening arms 14 and the third fastening arm 19 are spaced apart from each other in the circumferential direction and have approximately the same distance.
[0035]
[0036] The second busbars 20 form an imaginary circle whose inner circumference is larger than the outer circumference of the busbar holder 9.
[0037] After the second busbars 20 have been brought into contact with the insulators 3 and the first end portions of the winding wires 6 have been contacted with them, the busbar holder 9 with the first busbars 10,11,12 is placed on the upper side of the stator 1. In the process, the fastening arms 14,19 engage in the longitudinal grooves 16 on the outside of the stator 1. The lugs of the longitudinal grooves 15 are inserted or pressed into the longitudinal groove 16 from above and limit the insertion depth so that an axial position of the busbar holder 9 relative to the top of the stator is defined.
[0038] The busbars 10,11,12 have contact sections 21 which project radially inwards and angled upwards from the busbar holder 9. The contact sections 21 of all busbars are evenly spaced in the circumferential direction. The contact sections 21 project on the inside of the busbar holder 9. The second end portions 7 lie radially inwardly in front of the contact sections 21 and are contacted therewith in a process not shown. Each contact section 21 thus electrically contacts an inner winding wire end. In the circumferential direction, the contact sections are assigned to the phases u,v,w, which are connected four times repeatedly in this order.
[0039] While example embodiments of the present disclosure have been described above, it is to be understood that variations and modifications will be apparent to those skilled in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the present disclosure. The scope of the present disclosure, therefore, is to be determined solely by the following claims.