Electric motor for use in pressurized fluid environment
11349368 · 2022-05-31
Assignee
Inventors
- Matthew Allen Carroll (Christiansburg, VA, US)
- Lee L. Snider (Christiansburg, VA, US)
- Mohammad Khandan-Barani (Radford, VA, US)
- Ronald G. Flanary (Blacksburg, VA, US)
- Allen Duncan (Radford, VA, US)
- Travis S. King (Christiansburg, VA, US)
Cpc classification
H02K5/10
ELECTRICITY
H02K2213/03
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H02K5/10
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
An electric motor built for exposure to high pressure fluid includes a unitary metal sleeve that provides a fluid barrier between the rotor and the stator. An overmolded resin encapsulates the stator windings and reinforces the sleeve to minimize deformation of the sleeve under high fluid pressures. The overmolded resin also fixes the positions of insulation displacement connectors connected to the stator windings, thereby avoiding mechanical brackets and fasteners for holding the insulation displacement connectors in position.
Claims
1. An electric motor (10) comprising: a rotor (12) having an axis of rotation (13); a stator (14) surrounding the rotor, the stator including a plurality of windings (22); a unitary metal sleeve (24) including a side portion (24A) between the rotor and the stator and a flange portion (24C) extending radially outward from the side portion, wherein the unitary metal sleeve provides a fluid barrier between the rotor and the stator, wherein the flange portion includes a rim (27) having an axially extending portion (27A); and a resin overmold (28) encapsulating the stator, wherein the resin overmold engages the side portion of the unitary metal sleeve; a unitary metal housing (16) including at least one sidewall (16A) defining a cavity (20) extending along the axis of rotation of the rotor and an end wall (16B) adjacent the at least one side wall, wherein the rotor and the stator are received within the cavity of the unitary metal housing; wherein the end wall of the unitary metal housing includes a recess (17), and the unitary metal sleeve further includes a closed end portion (24B) projecting into the recess in the end wall of the unitary metal housing; and wherein the end portion of the unitary metal sleeve and the recess in the end wall of the unitary metal housing correspond in shape and are in surface-to-surface engagement with one another.
2. The electric motor according to claim 1, wherein the axially extending portion of the rim is radially spaced from an inner surface of the at least one sidewall of the unitary metal housing.
3. The electric motor according to claim 2, wherein the cavity and the axially extending portion of the rim are each cylindrical, and an annular space is defined between the axially extending portion of the rim and the inner surface of the at least one sidewall.
4. The electric motor according to claim 1, wherein the resin overmold further engages the flange portion of the unitary metal sleeve.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The nature and mode of operation of the present invention will now be more fully described in the following detailed description of the invention taken with the accompanying drawing figures, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(12) Reference is made to
(13) In addition to rotor 12 and stator 14, motor 10 further comprises a unitary metal sleeve 24, shown alone in
(14) Sleeve 24 includes a side portion 24A between rotor 12 and the stator 14, and a flange portion 24C extending radially outward from side portion 24A. In the depicted embodiment, side portion 24A is cylindrical over its entire extent. As shown in
(15) Motor 10 also comprises a plurality of insulation displacement connectors 26 connected to corresponding windings 22 of stator 14. For example, motor 10 may have a Wye winding configuration and six insulation displacement connectors 26, one for each of the three phase starts and one for each of the three phase ends.
(16) In addition to the structural elements described above, motor 10 comprises a resin overmold 28 encapsulating stator 14 and a portion of each insulation displacement connector 26. Resin overmold 28 engages the side portion 24A and the flange portion 24C of sleeve 24, thereby stabilizing and reinforcing sleeve 24 against pressurized fluid.
(17) Resin overmold 28 also encapsulates a portion of each insulation displacement connector 26, thereby fixing the position of each insulation displacement connector 26 relative to stator 14. By setting the positions of insulation displacement connector 26 with the resin overmold 28, mechanical fasteners and brackets are avoided, and locational accuracy of the insulation displacement connectors 26 may be precisely controlled at very low cost. As a result, a very economical and reliable connection of stator windings 22 to a printed circuit board (not shown) may be achieved.
(18) Motor 10 may further comprise a unitary metal housing 16 that includes at least one sidewall 16A surrounding rotor 12 and stator 14. Housing 16 may further include an end wall 16B. As may be seen, the one or more sidewalls 16A and the end wall 16B cooperate to define an open end 18 of housing 16 opposite end wall 16B, and to define a cylindrical cavity 20 aligned along rotational axis 13. End wall 16B has a plurality of portals 21, visible in
(19) If motor 10 is provided with unitary metal housing 16, the insulation displacement connectors 26 may be arranged to extend through the plurality of portals 21. If sleeve 24 has a closed end portion 24B, the closed end portion 24B may be arranged to engage end wall 16B of housing 16. For example, as shown in
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(21) As shown in
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(23) For all embodiments, sleeve 24 may be manufactured from a single thin sheet of metal shaped by a metal drawing process. In this way, tight tolerances may be achieved while avoiding subtractive machining operations and seams in the material. By way of non-limiting example, sleeve 24 may be drawn from a sheet of titanium in a range from 0.010 inches (0.0254 cm) through 0.020 inches (0.0508 cm) in thickness. Burrs and sharp edges may be removed from the drawn sleeve, and the surface finish of the drawn sleeve may be prepared using citric acid passivation pursuant to ASTM A-967-Olel. Two important considerations in choosing the material for sleeve 24 are mechanical strength and magnetic characteristics. Mechanical strength is important for maintaining shape under high pressure loading. Magnetic characteristics are important for motor performance. The material needs to be nonmagnetic, and should have low eddy currents when exposed to a changing magnetic field.
(24) Electric motor 10 may further comprise a retainer ring 30 and an elastomeric O-ring 32 arranged to form a fluid tight seal between the region occupied by rotor 12 and the region occupied by stator 14.
(25) In the embodiments shown in
(26) In the embodiment shown in
(27) Motor 10 may be assembled by performing the following steps. First, stator 14 is assembled by insulating a stack of laminations, for example by attaching snap-on plastic insulation or overmolding insulation on the stack. The insulated stack is inserted into a winder to apply stator windings 22 to the stack, and the wound stack is rolled into a round shape to form stator 14. Insulation displacement connectors 26 are inserted in pockets in the stack insulation and are attached to corresponding windings 22 to make electrical connections with the windings. As mentioned, a total of six insulation displacement connectors 26 may be provided, one for each phase start and one for each phase end. Any additional wire from the windings 22 that extends beyond the corresponding insulation displacement connector 26. A neutral printed circuit board is installed to connect the three phase ends together to form a neutral for a Wye motor winding configuration. If a separate housing 16 is used, stator 14 is installed into housing 16 by preheating housing 16 and directing the housing onto stator 14 to form a tight mechanical fit. Unitary metal sleeve 24 is then inserted into the central open region of stator 14, and the assembly is overmolded to provide protective and structurally supportive resin overmold 28. The assembly is then ready to accept rotor 12 within sleeve 24.
(28) While the invention has been described in connection with exemplary embodiments, the detailed description is not intended to limit the scope of the invention to the particular forms set forth. The invention is intended to cover such alternatives, modifications and equivalents of the described embodiment as may be included within scope of the claims.