Method of manufacturing a rotor and electric machine

10998800 · 2021-05-04

Assignee

Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

The invention relates to a method of manufacturing a rotor for an electric machine, wherein the rotor is composed of at least one electric sheet wherein at least one electric sheet is thermally treated regionally to directly modify its magnetic permeability in the treated region.

Claims

1. A method of manufacturing a rotor for an electric machine, wherein the rotor is composed of at least one electric sheet and the electric sheet is thermally treated regionally to directly modify its magnetic permeability in the treated region, and wherein, to avoid damage to rotor structure not being thermally treated, rotor sections adjacent to the treated region are cooled during the thermal treatment so as not to modify the magnetic permeability of the adjacent rotor sections.

2. The method in accordance with claim 1, wherein the electric sheet is heated over a predefined period of time to change a crystal structure of the electric sheet in the treated region and is subsequently cooled to bring about a stable lattice state.

3. The method in accordance with claim 2, wherein the electric sheet is heated by means of induction heating.

4. The method in accordance with claim 2, wherein the electric sheet is heated by means of a flame.

5. The method in accordance with claim 2, wherein the electric sheet is heated by means of resistive heating by supplying electrical energy.

6. The method in accordance with claim 2, wherein the electric sheet is heated by means of direct or indirect contact heat.

7. The method in accordance with claim 2, wherein the treated region is cooled by running through a thermally defined profile.

8. The method in accordance with claim 1, wherein a rotor region to be treated is heated to a predetermined minimum temperature.

9. The method in accordance with claim 8, wherein the alloy is silicon steel and the predetermined minimum temperature is between 900° C. and 1100° C. to convert a crystal structure of the electric sheet into an austenite lattice.

10. The method in accordance with claim 1, wherein the electric sheet is provided with flux barriers or slots and at least some of webs of the electric sheet thereby formed are thermally treated.

Description

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES

(1) FIG. 1 shows an iron-carbon diagram of steels.

(2) FIG. 2 shows a time-temperature diagram to illustrate the crystal formation.

(3) FIG. 3 shows a stress-strain diagram to illustrate the working range of the rotor in accordance with the invention.

(4) FIG. 4 shows a diagram of the two ring-shaped test pieces.

(5) FIG. 5 shows a microscopic photo of a treated/untreated electric sheet.

(6) FIG. 6 shows a diagram to illustrate the flux development of the heat-treated and untreated ring-shaped test pieces in accordance with FIG. 4.

(7) FIG. 7 shows a diagram representation of the relative permeability in dependence on the flux density.

(8) FIG. 8 shows a partial segment of the synchronous reluctance machine in accordance with the invention.

(9) FIG. 9 shows the representation of FIG. 8 with a shaded flux density distribution during machine operation without a previous thermal treatment of the rotor webs.

(10) FIG. 10 shows the representation of FIG. 8 with a shaded flux density distribution during machine operation after a successful thermal treatment of the rotor webs.

(11) FIG. 11 shows a diagram to illustrate the torque progression of a rotor rotation of the untreated metal sheet in accordance with FIG. 9.

(12) FIG. 12 shows a diagram to illustrate the torque progression of a rotor rotation of the thermally treated metal sheet in accordance with FIG. 10.

(13) FIG. 13 shows a representation of a synchronous machine having 12 slots and 10 poles.

(14) FIGS. 14A and 14B show detail of a rotor of an asynchronous machine with a closed and with an open rotor slot.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

(15) The torque development of a machine decisively depends on the machine flux and the stray fluxes within the machine. A stray flux path over webs that are required for the mechanical stabilization of the rotor arises in the reluctance synchronous machines and in the permanent magnet synchronous machines due to the rotor configuration. These webs are typically defined by the mechanical load and are unwanted to this degree in the magnetic design of the machine. The aim has previously been to configure the webs in as narrow and thin a manner as possible so that the stray flux path is minimized. Since the rotors are stamped out of an electric sheet, the unwanted webs are also very good magnetic conductors. The web can be narrowed to reduce the scatter flux, which reduces the mechanical capacity, however. In this invention, the reduction of the magnetic permeability is the selected approach to effectively disturb these stray paths.

(16) This can be achieved by a punctiform thermal treatment of these webs. The rotor webs are greatly heated for this purpose, for example via flame, induction heating, and resistive heating by current or contact heat and are subsequently cooled by running through a thermal profile.

(17) Reference to FIG. 1 is made to illustrate the phase composition in iron to the iron-carbon diagram that represents an equilibrium diagram for the binary system iron-carbon from which the phase composition can be read in dependence on the carbon content and on the temperature. The mass percentages of the carbon are applied to the x axis, the temperature to the y axis. The lines represent the break points or kink points displaced with respect to other temperatures and delineate the individual phase fields from one another. The significant points are marked by letters.

(18) The series of lines ABCD represents the liquidus line above which the alloy is liquid; the series of lines AHIECF corresponds to the solidus line beneath which the alloy is completely solidified. The alloy has a paste-like consistency in the temperature interval between the liquidus temperature and the solidus temperature and comprises remaining melt, δ-iron, γ-iron and cementite (Fe3C) in changing concentrations and proportions. If the liquidus line is fallen below during the cooling of the alloy, the primary crystallization from the melt begins.

(19) Different phases form in dependence on the carbon content due to the different allotropic modifications of the iron. The iron forms different interstitial solid solutions, δ-solid solutions, γ-solid solutions and α-solid solutions with different solubilities for carbon. The electric sheet used for the rotor manufacture is in the range with pure ferrite, that is α-ferrite that is marked by reference numeral 10 in the diagram illustration.

(20) The thermal treatment of the rotor webs takes place at a temperature within the temperature range 20 that is between 1000° and 1100° Celsius. During the thermal treatment (e.g. martensite hardening), the crystal structure of the electric sheet is converted in the treated sections in the martensite structure, the bainite structure or an austenite-ferrite structure. The crystal structure have a very small magnetic permeability and a lower saturation field strength in contrast to a pure α-lattice (ferrite). The magnetic resistance is thus greatly reduced in the webs and the stray flux is minimized.

(21) While the material is briefly heated in the regions to be processed until an austenite lattice is formed, the surrounding material has to be cooled to avoid damage. The time routine determines the transition of the lattice structure and the resulting lattice. The quenching process should therefore adopt a cooling progression such as is marked by the characteristic line 30 in FIG. 2. α-lattice structures can be avoided with the selected temperature progression.

(22) The material tends to become harder by the hardening and can be loaded more mechanically. The reduction of the elongation at break is unproblematic since the rotors are loaded within the linear range of the stress-strain diagram (FIG. 3). The rotor can be configured and observed mechanically as before. The treated segments only change the magnetic permeability and thereby reduce the stray flux.

(23) For the evaluation, the magnetic saturation and permeability of two ring-shaped test pieces of an electric sheet M330-35A was measured before and after the thermal treatment. The ring-shaped test pieces are shown in FIG. 4, with the left ring-shaped test piece being untreated and the ring-shaped test piece shown at the right in FIG. 4 having been heat-treated in accordance with the method. The result of the measurement can be seen in FIG. 6. The flux progression of the untreated ring-shaped test piece at 50 Hz is reproduced by the hysteresis curve 40; the progression of the treated ring-shaped test piece is marked by reference numeral 50. It can be recognized that the saturation flux density has reduced by 0.22 T at the shown modulation amplitude. It should be noted for comparison that the minimum of the saturation flux density of cast iron is reached at approximately 0.8 T-1 T. FIG. 7 shows the relative permeability in dependence on the flux density B. In the representation of the Figure, the curve development 41 characterizes the magnetic resistance of the untreated ring-shaped test piece while the curve 51 reflects the magnetic resistance with respect to the flux density B for the treated ring-shaped test piece. A noticeable reduction in the permeability by the thermal treatment is also recognizable here.

(24) The ring-shaped test pieces used were cut laterally and ground. The result can be seen in FIG. 5 that shows microscopic photos of the surface structure. The heat-treated metal sheet (right illustration of FIG. 5) shows a clear change of the structure.

(25) Starting from these material properties, a reluctance synchronous machine with and without these modified webs was now calculated and compared in a finite element simulation. The rotor webs to be treated are illustrated in FIG. 8. The illustration shows a rotor quadrant 60 having a total of four flux barriers 61 per distinctive rotor pole. A part region of the stator 70 is likewise recognizable. The webs 62 are created by a mechanical separation of the innermost flux barriers along the radial axis. In addition, webs 63 are formed at the end side at the flux barrier extent at the rotor periphery. Both the webs 62 and the webs 63 serve the mechanical strengthening of the rotor structure, but disadvantageously form disturbance paths due to their magnetic conductivity.

(26) Two machine cross-sections with an underlying flux density distribution of the identical working point in FIG. 9 and FIG. 10 are shown by way of example in the following. FIG. 9 shows the flux density distribution before the thermal treatment of the rotor of FIG. 8; FIG. 10 shows the flux density distribution after the thermal treatment of the webs 62 and 63. It can be recognized that the webs of the treated metal sheet have substantially smaller flux densities than before the treatment, which becomes clear by the darker coloring in the web region. The resulting torque of the rotor increases substantially with a constant current excitation. The torque density/power density is thus greatly increased and the efficiency is elevated.

(27) The torque of the two machines is shown in FIGS. 11 and 12 over a quarter rotor rotation)(0°-90°, with FIG. 11 showing the torque progression of the untreated rotor and FIG. 12 showing the progression of the treated rotor. The mean value is increased for the rotor geometry from 10.25 Nm to 12.02 Nm. This corresponds to an increase in the mean torque density/power density of more than 17%. The actual level of the power increase depends greatly on the geometry and on the reference design of the machine. However, such an increase for the machine shown would not be conceivable without a treatment of the metal sheet.

(28) The method in accordance with the invention cannot only be used in rotors for synchronous reluctance machines, bur likewise for other machine types, for example for a synchronous machine or an asynchronous machine.

(29) Subharmonic field components can also arise due to the magnetomotive force (MMF) distribution with synchronous machines having concentrated windings such as with a 12 slot/10 pole machine. This generally applies to synchronous machines in which the result of the equation
n/(t.Math.m)
is an even number, where t is the greatest common divisor of the number of slots n and of the number of the poles p and m represents the number of phases. These machines generate high losses in the rotor due to the high penetration depth in the material at a low frequency. The magnetic losses are specifically decisively determined hereby. To avoid losses, flux barriers can be worked into the stator that substantially reduce the subharmonic field components. A method of segmenting and reducing subharmonic field components is already known from DE 10 2008 054 284 A1.

(30) The previously described segmentation processes can be replaced with a thermal treatment by the method in accordance with the invention. The improvement becomes less powerful, but will nevertheless have a substantial effect with respect to an untreated metal sheet. The regions of the rotor for a synchronous machine to be treated are marked by markings 80 in FIG. 13; the rotor regions at the periphery are in particular treated.

(31) Unwanted stray fluxes can likewise occur with specific rotor geometries for asynchronous machines, in particular with designs in which the required conductors are received by rotor slots that are closed due to the mechanical and/or production technical necessity. The details of FIGS. 14A and 14B show two variants of such a rotor. A detail of the stator 95 and of the rotor 90, 90′ can be recognized. FIG. 14A shows an open slot 91, while the rotor model 90′ of FIG. 14B is designed with a closed slot 92. The variant of FIG. 14B is in particular used with machines of smaller performance classes to simplify the introduction of the conductors by an injection molding method using aluminum. In addition, a closed rotor slot 92 increases the mechanical strength that is in particular required for machines of high speeds such as spindle drives or cutters.

(32) A closed rotor slot 92, however, also disadvantageously increases the stray flux of the field in an electromechanical manner in comparison with open rotor slots 91, in particular by the resulting web 93 that the closed slot 92 forms. The breakdown torque of the asynchronous machine is disadvantageously reduced by the stray flux. The stray flux can be minimized by a thermal treatment of the magnetic material at the web points 93 to obtain a characteristic similar to the design with open rotor slots 91.