Inductor and system for welding for maintaining welding arcs
10919103 ยท 2021-02-16
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
H01F27/26
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A welding system includes an inductor on an output of a welding power supply. The power supply may be of the type including an engine and a generator for producing power, with power conversion circuitry conditioning the power to a form suitable for a stick welding application. The inductor has an inductance sufficient for storing energy for maintaining a welding arc with XX10 electrodes, such as on the order of 700 mH. The inductor may have a particular structure, such as one designed around T and L shaped core elements.
Claims
1. An inductor assembly for a welding power supply, comprising: an L shaped core element; a T shaped core element, the T shaped core element having a central extension with an end disposed adjacent to a short side of the L shaped core element and a top section disposed adjacent to a long side of the L shaped core element; combs disposed about the central extension of the T shaped core element, the combs having a plurality of openings or slots; and a winding at least partially disposed within the plurality of openings or slots of the combs and spaced from the L and T shaped core elements by the combs.
2. The inductor assembly of claim 1, wherein the inductor assembly has an inductance of approximately 700 mH.
3. The inductor assembly of claim 1, wherein the L shaped core element is secured to the T shaped core element.
4. The inductor assembly of claim 3, wherein the L shaped core element is secured to the T shaped core element by welding.
5. The inductor assembly of claim 1, wherein the winding is disposed around the T shaped core element.
6. The inductor assembly of claim 1, comprising spacers disposed between the L and T shaped core elements at locations where the core elements approach one another.
7. The inductor assembly of claim 1, wherein the winding comprises aluminum.
8. The inductor assembly of claim 1, wherein at least one of the L and T shaped core elements comprise steel.
9. The inductor assembly of claim 1, wherein the combs comprise fiberglass.
10. A welding power supply, comprising: power conversion circuitry configured to convert an input power into direct current (DC) output power; and an inductor assembly coupled to the power conversion circuitry, wherein the inductor assembly comprises: an L shaped core element and a T shaped core element, the T shaped core element having a central extension with an end disposed adjacent to a short side of the L shaped core element and a top section disposed adjacent to a long side of the L shaped core element, spacers disposed between the L and T shaped core elements at locations where the core elements approach one another, combs disposed about the central extension of the T shaped core element, the combs having a plurality of openings or slots, and a winding at least partially disposed within the plurality of openings or slots of the combs and spaced from the L and T shaped core elements by the combs.
11. The welding power supply of claim 10, wherein the inductor assembly has an inductance of approximately 700 mH.
12. The welding power supply of claim 10, wherein the L shaped core element is secured to the T shaped core element.
13. The welding power supply of claim 12, wherein the L shaped core element is secured to the T shaped core element by welding.
14. The welding power supply of claim 10, wherein the winding is disposed around the T shaped core element.
15. The welding power supply of claim 10, comprising spacers disposed between the Land T shaped core elements at locations where the core elements approach one another.
16. The welding power supply of claim 10, wherein the combs comprise fiberglass.
17. The welding power supply of claim 10, wherein the winding comprises aluminum.
18. The welding power supply of claim 10, wherein at least one of the L and T shaped core elements comprise steel.
19. The welding power supply of claim 10, comprising a torch configured to be coupled to the welding power supply, to hold a stick electrode, and to transfer the DC output power to the stick electrode for a stick welding operation.
20. The welding power supply of claim 10, comprising an engine and a generator coupled to the engine to generate alternating current (AC) power provided as the input power to the power conversion circuitry.
Description
DRAWINGS
(1) These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the present invention will become better understood when the following detailed description is read with reference to the accompanying drawings in which like characters represent like parts throughout the drawings, wherein:
(2)
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(8) Turning now to the drawings, and referring first to
(9) Power conditioning circuitry 20 is coupled to the generator 18 to receive power generated during operation and to convert the power to a form desired for a load or application. In the illustrated embodiment generator 18 produces three-phase power that is applied to the power conditioning circuitry 20. In certain embodiments, however, the generator may produce single phase power. The power conditioning circuitry includes components which receive the incoming power, converted to a DC form, and further filter and convert the power to the desired output form. More will be said about the power conditioning circuitry 20 in the discussion below.
(10) The engine 16, the generator 18 and the power conditioning circuitry 20 are all coupled to control circuitry, illustrated generally by reference numeral 22. In practice, the control circuitry 22 may comprise one or more actual circuits, as well as firmware and software configured to monitor operation of the engine, the generator and the power conditioning circuitry, as well as certain loads in specific applications. Portions of the control circuitry may be centrally located as illustrated, or the circuitry may be divided to control the engine, generator and power conditioning circuitry separately. In most applications, however, such separated control circuits may communicate with one another in some form to coordinate control of these system components. The control circuitry 22 is coupled to an operator interface 24. In most applications, the operator interface will include a surface-mounted control panel that allows a system operator to control aspects of the operation and output, and to monitor or read parameters of the system operation. In a welding application, for example, the operator interface may allow the operator to select various welding processes, current and voltage levels, as well as specific regimes for welding operations. These are communicated to a control circuitry, which itself comprises one or more processors and support memory. Based upon the operator selections, then, the control circuitry will implement particular control regimes stored in the memory via the processors. Such memory may also store temporary parameters during operation, such as for facilitating feedback control.
(11) Also illustrated in
(12) To allow for feedback control, the system is commonly equipped with a number of sensors which provide signals to the control circuitry during operation. Certain sensors are illustrated schematically in
(13)
(14) Finally, an output inductor 54 is typically used for welding applications. As will be appreciated by those skilled in the welding arts, the size and energy storage capacity of the output inductor is selected to suit the output power (voltage and current) of the anticipated application. Although not illustrated, it should also be noted that certain other circuitry may be provided in this arrangement, and power may be drawn and conditioned in other forms.
(15) While only certain features of the exemplary systems have been illustrated and described herein, many modifications and changes will occur to those skilled in the art. For example, in addition to the output terminals illustrated in
(16) The present invention provides a new inductor structure designed to function as the output inductor 54 of
(17) The inductor illustrated and described herein is particularly well-suited to welding applications with certain types of electrodes. That is, the inductor is specifically designed for use in a welding system that may be used with stick electrodes commonly referred to in the art as XX10 electrodes. As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, the formulation of such electrodes may lead to high voltage spikes that may occur quickly during welding, requiring higher voltage input, on the order of 40 or more volts. If the voltage requirements are not supplied adequately, the arc may be extinguished during welding, resulting in degraded performance, inferior welds, increased spatter, and so forth. Specifically, the inductor is intended for operation with multi-speed engine driven arrangements that have the ability to maintain a welding arc with a XX10 electrode with operational speeds as low as 2400 to 2800 RPM of the engine drive. Such speeds will result in lower bus voltage, and thus lower output voltage.
(18) The inductor contemplated is specifically oversized to provide higher energy storage which assists in maintaining the weld arc even though the bus voltage may be inadequate. The energy of the magnetic field of the inductor, which may be represented by the letter W is:
W=LI.sup.2;
where W is the stored power of the inductor field, L is the inductance and I is the current through the inductor. As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, the particular winding and core designs and sizes are selected based upon the number of turns, the reluctance of the material, the cross-sectional area, the length of the core or air gap between core sections, and the permeability of the core material and air. In particular, the inductance may be computed from the relationship:
L=N.sup.2/R;
where N is the number of turns of the inductor and R is the reluctance. Moreover, the reluctance itself may be computed from the relationship:
R=li/uiAi+lg/uaAg;
where li is the length of the core, lg is the length of the air gap, ui is the permeability of the core material times the permeability of air, ua is the permeability of air, Ai is the cross-sectional area of the core, and Ag is the cross-sectional area of the air gap.
(19) In a presently contemplated embodiment, the inductor comprises multiple turns of a winding around a ferrous core material. The term of the coil may have one or multiple connection points to adjust the inductance as necessary. The ferrous core material forms a closed loop which incorporates one or more air gaps or spaces between the T-core element and the L-core element. These gaps are adjusted and sized to provide the desired inductance.
(20) Referring to
(21) The assembly is shown again in
(22) In the presently contemplated embodiment, to accommodate XX10 electrodes, the inductor parameters are selected to provide an inductance on the order of 700 mH by contrast, typical welding operations and machinery often include inductors on an output of the power on the order of a magnitude smaller. However, it has been appreciated that for providing lower bus voltages and output voltage levels, while nevertheless storing sufficient power for XX10 electrodes, the particular inductor structure and size greatly improves performance.
(23) While only certain features of the invention have been illustrated and described herein, many modifications and changes will occur to those skilled in the art. It is, therefore, to be understood that the appended claims are intended to cover all such modifications and changes as fall within the true spirit of the invention.