Magnetic radial bearing with flux boost
11035406 · 2021-06-15
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F16C32/0461
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C2362/52
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H02K5/16
ELECTRICITY
F16C32/0463
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C32/048
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C2360/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F16C32/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H02K5/16
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A magnetic bearing (20) has: a rotor (22) to be supported for rotation about an axis (502); and a stator (24) extending from a first end (30) to a second end (32). The stator has: a circumferential outer winding (50); a circumferential inner winding (52); a radial spacing (54) between the inner winding and the outer winding; a plurality of laminate teeth (84A, 84B, 86A, 86B); and a plurality of radial windings (34A, 34B, 36A, 36B) respectively encircling a respective associated tooth of the plurality of teeth. A plurality of magnetic flux paths are respectively associated with the plurality of radial windings and pass: radially through the associated winding; axially through the radial spacing; radially from the radial spacing to the rotor; and axially along the rotor.
Claims
1. A magnetic bearing (20) comprising: a rotor (22) to be supported for rotation about an axis (502); and a stator (24) extending from a first end (30) to a second end (32) and comprising: a circumferential outer winding (50); a circumferential inner winding (52), the inner winding and the outer winding each fully circumscribing the axis; a radial spacing (54) between the inner winding and the outer winding; a plurality of laminate teeth (84A, 84B, 86A, 86B); and a plurality of radial windings (34A, 34B, 36A, 36B) respectively encircling a respective associated tooth of the plurality of teeth; and a plurality of magnetic flux paths respectively associated with the plurality of radial windings and passing: radially through the associated winding; axially through the radial spacing; radially from the radial spacing to the rotor; and axially along the rotor.
2. The magnetic bearing of claim 1 further comprising a metallic core (70) between the inner winding and the outer winding.
3. The magnetic bearing of claim 1 further comprising one or more additional laminates (94A, 94B, 96A, 96B), the inner winding axially between the additional laminates and the plurality of laminate teeth.
4. The magnetic bearing of claim 1 wherein: the inner winding and outer winding are connected in series to pass current (530) in opposite circumferential directions.
5. The magnetic bearing of claim 1 wherein the bearing has no permanent magnets.
6. The magnetic bearing of claim 1 being a non-thrust bearing.
7. The magnetic bearing of claim 1 further comprising: a DC power supply (830) connected to the inner winding and outer winding.
8. The magnetic bearing of claim 7 further comprising: a plurality of H-bridge amplifiers (840) coupled to the plurality of radial windings.
9. A method for using the magnetic bearing of claim 1, the method comprising running current through: the plurality of radial windings, so as to: control radial position of the rotor.
10. The method of claim 9 wherein: the plurality of radial windings comprises a diametrically opposite first pair of windings and a diametrically opposite second pair of windings orthogonal to the first pair of windings.
11. The method of claim 10 wherein: the first and second pairs of windings are each powered by a respective associated H-bridge amplifier.
12. The method of claim 10 further comprising: running current (530) through the inner winding and the outer winding to produce a magnetic flux (550A, 550B).
13. The method of claim 12 wherein: the running current through the inner winding and the outer winding comprises running a single said current in opposite circumferential directions.
14. The method of claim 12 wherein: the running current comprises: running current through one winding of the first pair of windings to augment the magnetic flux while running current through the other winding of the first pair of windings to counter the magnetic flux.
15. A machine comprising a bearing according to claim 1.
16. The magnetic bearing of claim 1 wherein: the inner winding and the outer winding each fully circumscribe the axis.
17. The magnetic bearing of claim 1 wherein: the inner winding and the outer winding are electrically in series.
18. A method for operating a magnetic bearing (20), the magnetic bearing comprising: a rotor (22) to be supported for rotation about an axis (502); and a stator (24) extending from a first end (30) to a second end (32) and comprising: a circumferential outer winding (50); a circumferential inner winding (52), the inner winding and the outer winding each fully circumscribing the axis; a radial spacing (54) between the inner winding and outer winding; and a plurality of radial windings (34A, 34B, 36A, 36B), the method comprising: running current (530) in opposite circumferential directions through the inner winding and the outer winding to produce a magnetic flux (550A, 550B).
19. The method of claim 18 wherein: the inner winding is coaxial with the outer winding.
20. The method of claim 18 wherein: the current runs in series through the inner winding and the outer winding.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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(8) Like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(9)
(10) The bearing extends from a first end 30 to a second end 32. The stator includes a number of coils (e.g., metallic wire windings). As is discussed further below, the exemplary bearing is a purely radial bearing and not an axial or thrust bearing. Alternative implementations may integrate with axial bearing features. Also, the exemplary embodiment is mechanically a symmetric end-to-end about the centerplane 510, 512. As is discussed further below, there may be more complex versions that could be grossly mechanically symmetric and may also be grossly electrically symmetric (e.g., the overall layout of the coils is symmetric) but the wrapping of the coils and the electrical connections may be asymmetric in order to provide the control described.
(11) In the exemplary radial bearing, there are four radial coils: two orthogonal pairs of two diametrically opposed coils. In the X-Y frame of reference shown in
(12) The stator comprises a circumferential outer winding 50 (
(13) The exemplary ring 70 is formed as a continuous full annulus single piece rather than segmented. The ring 70 has an ID face and an OD face and opposite axial end faces. Extending radially inward from the ID face are a plurality of laminate teeth (
(14) The exemplary teeth have ID and OD faces, opposite axial end faces, and opposite circumferential end faces. The ID faces fall along a central portion 38-2 of the gap 38. The OD portions may bear attachment features for mounting to the ring 70. An exemplary attachment feature 100 is a dovetail projection on the OD face of the tooth mating with a dovetail groove or channel 102 in the ID surface of the ring. In combination, the teeth 84A, 84B, 86A, 86B may be designated as a second end laminate. In some implementations, there may be a single second end laminate such that, for example, an outer diameter portion is full annulus and the teeth extend radially inward therefrom. Such an assembly could be mounted in the ring 70 by shrink fit (e.g., heating the ring, sliding the laminate in and then cooling the ring).
(15) Returning to
(16)
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(18) Electrical hardware may comprise a traditional H-bridge for control of current in the coils 34A, 34B, 36A, 36B such as is disclosed in the WO '775 publication.
(19) An alternative to direct connection of the DC supply involves a DC-DC converter to be able to control the magnitude of the current.
(20) In one example, each H-bridge amplifier 840 has a single associated coil and vice-versa. This allows independent powering of the coils so that different current magnitudes may be applied to each. The amplifier 840 has two legs or branches 841 and 842 connected in parallel to a voltage source 844. The exemplary voltage source 844 is a constant DC voltage source and may be shared by the H-bridge amplifiers of the different coils.
(21) The terminals 880 and 882 of the coil are connected across central locations of the two legs 841 and 842. To each side (high voltage and low voltage) of each leg, the terminal 880, 882 is connected to the voltage source via the parallel combination of a respective switching device 851, 852, 853, 854 and diode 861, 862, 863, 864. Exemplary switching devices are gate controlled switching devices such as insulated gate bipolar transistors (IGBT) or metal oxide field effect transistors (MOSFET). As noted above, 880 and 882 may represent terminals of an individual coil. Alternatively, the coils in a given pair may be in series powered by a single H-bridge amplifier so that the terminal 880 is one terminal of the first coil, the terminal 882 is one terminal of the second coil, and the other terminals of the coils are connected to each other.
(22) Alternative embodiments may have asymmetries between the coils of the two respective pairs or the two coils of a given pair. For example, it may be desirable to provide a baseline upward bias. Also, yet alternative embodiments may have configurations other than the two pairs (e.g., three coils and associated teeth at 120° intervals. Similarly, the exemplary embodiment has the same number of turns for the inner winding and outer winding. However, other embodiments may have asymmetries with more turns in one than the other.
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(24) As is discussed above, there may be various further modifications to the stator and/or rotor. One area for modifications involves the arrangement of the inner and outer windings. For example, in axial cross-section, other layouts of the windings may be used. For more efficient and gradual turning of the flux, the ring 70 could be of arcuate central longitudinal section (e.g., convex outward and concave inward with the individual turns of the windings following that shape). However, such a configuration may tend to radially expand the bearing and be inefficient from a packaging point of view. Other modifications may compromise electric/magnetic efficiency for packaging efficiency. Examples of such a system might include reversing the concavity and convexity so that a central portion of the ring 70 is radially inwardly recessed relative to axial end portions.
(25) A variety of other variations may be made on the rotor. For example, U.S. Patent Application No. 62/480,405, filed Apr. 1, 2017, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference in its entirety herein as if set forth at length, discloses several examples of rotors bearing permanent magnets. Accordingly, similar rotor magnets may be used to boost the baseline DC-induced flux of
(26) Contrasted with different alternative prior art bearings, various implementations may have one or more of several advantages. The DC windings and any added magnets provide an additional flux boost. For example, in various embodiments this boost may allow use of non-rare earth magnets or, as illustrated in
(27) The use of “first”, “second”, and the like in the description and following claims is for differentiation within the claim only and does not necessarily indicate relative or absolute importance or temporal order. Similarly, the identification in a claim of one element as “first” (or the like) does not preclude such “first” element from identifying an element that is referred to as “second” (or the like) in another claim or in the description.
(28) One or more embodiments have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made. For example, when applied to an existing basic system, details of such configuration or its associated use may influence details of particular implementations. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.