Rotary electric machine comprising a rotor and a stator for the passage of a fluid

10797556 ยท 2020-10-06

Assignee

Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

The present invention is an electrical machine comprising a rotor (10) and a stator (12) having radial passages (28) arranged circumferentially along the stator, magnetic-flux generators (34) housed in the passages, and a stator bearing (24) containing the rotor. According to the invention, the radial passages (28) comprise fluid-circulation galleries (36) facing the magnetic-flux generators (34).

Claims

1. An electrical machine comprising: a stator and a rotor; a stator bearing containing the rotor; the stator including radial passages which are substantially triangular in shape with a tip of the substantially triangular passages being proximate to and directed towards the stator bearing and the radial passages are located circumferentially in and around the stator; the stator having an annular planar external border; and magnetic flux generators housed radially outward from the tips of the substantially triangular in shape radial passages and being adjacent to the annular planar external border, elongated radial webs bounding each radial passage and which conduct magnetic flux from the magnetic flux generators to the stator bearing and the radial passages circulating cooling fluid to cool the magnetic flux generators, each radial passage being divided into a first radial outward portion having a first radial dimension and which houses one of the magnetic flux generators located radially away from the rotor and into a second radial inward portion having a second radial dimension and in which the cooling fluid flows with the second radial inward portion being located between the stator bearing and a radially inward portion of the magnetic flux generator and the second radial dimension being greater than the first radial dimension.

2. The electrical machine according to claim 1 wherein the radial webs extend substantially parallel to a longitudinal axis of the stator.

3. The electrical machine according to claim 2 wherein the radial webs are inclined in an axial direction with respect to the longitudinal axis of the stator.

4. The electrical machine according to claim 3 wherein the cooling fluid is gaseous.

5. The electrical machine according to claim 3 wherein the cooling fluid is liquid.

6. The electrical machine according to claim 2 wherein the radial webs are twisted with respect to the longitudinal axis of the stator.

7. The electrical machine according to claim 6 wherein the cooling fluid is gaseous.

8. The electrical machine according to claim 6 wherein the cooling fluid is liquid.

9. The electrical machine according to claim 2 wherein the cooling fluid is gaseous.

10. The electrical machine according to claim 2 wherein the cooling fluid is liquid.

11. The electrical machine according to claim 1 wherein the radial webs are inclined in an axial direction with respect to a longitudinal axis of the stator.

12. The electrical machine according to claim 11 wherein the cooling fluid is gaseous.

13. The electrical machine according to claim 11 wherein the cooling fluid is liquid.

14. The electrical machine according to claim 1 wherein the radial webs are twisted with respect to a longitudinal axis of the stator.

15. The electrical machine according to claim 14 wherein the cooling fluid is gaseous.

16. The electrical machine according to claim 14 wherein the cooling fluid is liquid.

17. The electrical machine according to claim 1 wherein a longitudinal section of the radial webs has an aerodynamic profile which is wing or is tear shaped.

18. The electrical machine according to claim 17 wherein the cooling fluid is gaseous.

19. The electrical machine according to claim 1 wherein the cooling fluid is gaseous.

20. The electrical machine according to claim 1 wherein the cooling fluid is liquid.

Description

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

(1) The other features and advantages of the invention will now become apparent from reading the description which will follow, which is given solely by way of illustrative and nonlimiting example, and to which are appended:

(2) FIG. 1 is a radial sectional view of the electrical machine according to the invention,

(3) FIG. 2, which is a view similar to that of FIG. 1, illustrates a sectional view of the path of the magnetic field lines in the rotor and stator,

(4) FIGS. 3 and 4 which illustrate various configurations of the stator of the machine of FIG. 1, and

(5) FIG. 5 which shows an alternative form of the electrical machine of FIG. 1.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

(6) The rotary electrical machine illustrated in FIG. 1, which is in this instance by way of example an electrical motor, comprises a rotor 10 and a stator 12 which, when assembled, are nested one inside the other coaxially, leaving the rotor free to rotate.

(7) This machine, solely by way of example in the remainder of the description, is a synchronous machine with a single pair of poles.

(8) That does not limit the invention from being used in any other electrical machine, such as with a squirrel cage or wound rotor asynchronous machines.

(9) The rotor of the machine according to FIG. 1 comprises, in a way known per se, a shaft 14, which is preferably magnetic, on which is placed a stack of identical planar ferromagnetic laminations which are assembled to one another by any known means to form a rotor body 16.

(10) This rotor contains magnetic-flux generators (not depicted), chiefly permanent magnets of a length substantially equal to the length of the rotor body.

(11) The stator also comprises a stack of identical planar ferromagnetic laminations which are joined together by any known mechanism to form a tubular stator body 18.

(12) This stator body comprises a planar annular external border 20 (or yoke) and a recessed central part 22 delimited by a tubular bearing 24 inside which the rotor is housed.

(13) An air gap E is thus formed between the external periphery of the rotor and the internal periphery of the tubular bearing of the stator.

(14) The yoke of the stator is connected to the tubular bearing by a multitude of evenly circumferentially distributed radial webs 26, which in this instance 12 webs are disposed at 30 apart which between them delimit radial passages 28 of substantially triangular shape with the tip of the triangle directed towards the bearing. These passages extend radially from the lower edge 30 of the annular yoke 20 as far as the external edge 32 of the bearing and are deployed axially all along the stator body 18.

(15) For the sake of simplicity, in the remainder of the description, the webs are referred to as stator teeth.

(16) As illustrated in FIG. 1, the stator comprises magnetic-flux generators. In this instance, the flux generators are armature windings 34, which are preferably sealed against liquids and are housed in the passages 28. More specifically, the windings 34 are located near the radially outer edge 30 of the annular yoke. The passages have two portions with a radially outward portion that houses the armature windings and a radially inward portion in which cooling fluid flows. The radial dimension of the inward portion is greater than the radial outward portion.

(17) The stator teeth 26, which are very long, thus allow the windings to be spaced away from the bearing. In addition, as better illustrated in FIG. 2, these teeth allow the magnetic flux generated by the windings, which are distant from the rotor, to be guided towards the rotor 10.

(18) In this way, the size of the air gap E is reduced (a few millimeters) making it possible to optimize the efficiency and performance of the machine.

(19) The fluid circulation radial passages 28 include axial galleries 36 located between the windings. The external edge of the bearing 24 and the stator teeth 26 therefore form a stator grating allowing a fluid, such as a gaseous or liquid fluid, to pass through it.

(20) This makes it possible to ensure the integration in a gaseous or fluid stream of the machine and/or the cooling thereof and therefore makes it possible to ensure optimized positioning in a given system constrained by at least one of size and the release of heat.

(21) In addition, the magnetic characteristics of the machine make it possible to limit the quantity of active substance of the electrical machine for a given performance level, notably in comparison to a machine with a large air gap.

(22) As illustrated in FIG. 3, the teeth 26 that make up the stator grating may have an axial direction substantially parallel to the fluid passage, which is substantially parallel to the longitudinal axis of the stator, to have the least possible influence on the direction of the passage of the fluid.

(23) Also, the axial direction of these teeth may be inclined with respect to the longitudinal axis of the stator.

(24) This direction may also be a complex aerodynamic shape, such as a twisted shape as illustrated in FIG. 4, intended to guide; initiate or halt the movement of the fluid.

(25) This twisted shape makes it possible to increase the surface area for contact of the teeth with the cooling fluid.

(26) Moreover, the twisting of the stator teeth may prove beneficial from a magnetic standpoint because it makes it possible to reduce torque ripple according to the angle of inclination.

(27) The teeth may also have an aerodynamic profile to minimize the pressure drop losses associated with the passage of fluid through the grating, such as a cross-sectional shape of a teardrop or an aerofoil.

(28) A surface treatment of the stator renders this machine compatible with the food, petrochemical, building and public works industry and other industries requiring a fluid to be at least one of transported and guided through an electrical machine.

(29) From a machine-cooling standpoint, this type of electrical machine offers a very high surface area for heat exchange with the stator, making it possible to use a cooling system that is simplified in comparison with a conventional electrical machine of similar performance and potentially making it possible to increase current density in the stator as a result of optimized cooling.

(30) It should be noted that this type of electrical machine may notably be integrated fairly simply as a replacement for an existing system.

(31) The alternative form in FIG. 5 differs from FIG. 1 in that the windings 34 are placed in the passages 28 near the bearing 24 and therefore as close as possible to the air gap E.

(32) The fluid circulation passages include galleries 36 for the passage of fluid which are situated between the windings and the radially outer edge 30 of the annular yoke 20 of the stator and the webs 26.