ELECTRICAL STEEL LAMINATION STACKS WITH MAGNETIC INSULATOR COATING FOR ELECTRICAL APPARATUS CORES
20230238163 · 2023-07-27
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01F1/344
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A core for an electrical apparatus includes a plurality of electrical steel sheets having a ferromagnetic or ferrimagnetic coating applied to both sides of the electrical steel sheets. The electrical steel sheets are arranged in a stack to form a laminated stack. The ferromagnetic or ferrimagnetic coating is applied to both sides of the electrical steel sheets. The coating may comprise MnZn ferrites, NiZn ferrites, MgMnZn ferrites, CoNiZn ferrites, Co ferrites, Ni ferrites, Yttrium iron garnets (Y3Fe5O12) or other ferromagnetic or ferrimagnetic coating materials.
Claims
1. A core for an electrical apparatus comprising: a plurality of electrical steel sheets arranged in a stack to form a laminated stack; and a ferromagnetic or ferrimagnetic coating applied to both sides of the electrical steel sheets, wherein the relative magnetic permeability of the coating is between μ.sub.r=5 to 20,000.
2. The core of claim 1 wherein the coating is electrically insulating and has a finite and greater than 1 dielectric constant.
3. The core of claim 1 wherein the coating consists of: MnZn ferrites; NiZn ferrites; MgMnZn ferrites; CoNiZn ferrites; Co ferrites; Ni ferrites; or Yttrium iron garnets (Y3Fe5O12).
4. The core of claim 1 wherein the coating has a thickness of between is 0.05 and 5 micrometers.
5. The core of claim 1 wherein the core is adapted to be used in a transformer.
6. The core of claim 1 wherein the core is adapted to be used in an inductor.
7. The core of claim 1 wherein the core is adapted to be used in a stator.
8. The core of claim 1 wherein the core is adapted to be used in a rotor.
9. A core for an electrical apparatus comprising: a plurality of electrical steel sheets arranged in a stack to form a laminated stack; and an electrically insulative magnetically permeable coating applied to both sides of the electrical steel sheets, wherein the relative electrical permittivity of the coating is finite and greater than 1, and the relative magnetic permeability of the coating is between μ.sub.r=5 to 20,000.
10. The core of claim 9 wherein the coating consists essentially of: MnZn ferrites; NiZn ferrites; MgMnZn ferrites; CoNiZn ferrites; Co ferrites; Ni ferrites; or Yttrium iron garnets (Y3Fe5O12).
11. The core of claim 9 wherein the coating has a thickness of between 0.05 and 5 micrometers.
12. The core of claim 9 wherein the core is adapted to be used in a transformer.
13. The core of claim 9 wherein the core is adapted to be used in an inductor.
14. The core of claim 9 wherein the core is adapted to be used in a stator.
15. The core of claim 1 wherein the core is adapted to be used in a rotor.
16. A core for an electrical apparatus comprising: a plurality of electrical steel sheets arranged in a stack to form a laminated stack; and a ferromagnetic or ferrimagnetic coating applied to both sides of the electrical steel sheets, wherein the coating comprises: MnZn ferrites; NiZn ferrites; MgMnZn ferrites; CoNiZn ferrites; Co ferrites; Ni ferrites; or Yttrium iron garnets (Y3Fe5O12).
17. The core of claim 16 wherein the coating has a thickness of between 0.05 and 5 micrometers.
18. The core of claim 16 wherein the relative magnetic permeability of the coating is between μ.sub.r=5 to 20,000.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
[0029]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0030] The illustrated embodiments are disclosed with reference to the drawings. However, it is to be understood that the disclosed embodiments are intended to be merely examples that may be embodied in various and alternative forms. The figures are not necessarily to scale and some features may be exaggerated or minimized to show details of particular components. The specific structural and functional details disclosed are not to be interpreted as limiting, but as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art how to practice the disclosed concepts.
[0031] Electrical steel sheets are stamped and then stacked together to make laminations to form the cores of transformers, inductors, and the cores of stators and rotors of electric machines. Electrical steel may include a range of iron alloys that have favorable magnetic properties for electric machine construction. Iron alloys suitable for electrical steel may include a percentage of silicon. Electrical steel sheet has various thicknesses, typically in the range from 0.65 mm to 0.1 mm.
[0032] Electrical steel is usually coated on both surfaces to increase electrical resistance between the laminations and reduce eddy current loss. The coating also provides resistance to corrosion or rusting and acts as lubrication during stamping. ASTM A9760-3 classifies the different types of coating for electrical steels from C0 to C6. All the coating materials are non-ferromagnetic and non-ferrimagnetic with relative magnetic permeability μ.sub.r=1. In other words, the coating layers can be treated as airgaps in the stack, which leads to very low permeability along the stack's normal direction and have low saturation flux density.
[0033]
[0034]
[0035] Magnetic insulator coating materials are provided on the surface of electrical steel sheets. The magnetic insulator coating material is electrically insulating while possessing magnetic orderings, such as ferrimagnetic ordering. A few examples of such magnetic insulators are MnZn ferrites, NiZn ferrites, MgMnZn ferrites, CoNiZn ferrites, Ni ferrites, Co ferrites, and Yttrium iron Garnets (Y3Fe5O12), and the like. These materials have good magnetic properties with relative magnetic permeability (μ.sub.r) ranges from 10 to 20000 and high resistivity.
[0036]
[0037] Referring to
[0038]
[0039] Electrical steel with a conventional coating has high magnetic permeability and is highly anisotropic. The conventional coating has high saturation flux density but less than the saturation flux density of the magnetic insulator coating. Electrical steel with a conventional coating has no 3D flux path because it is highly anisotropic.
[0040] Electrical steel with a magnetic insulator coating enables new types of magnetic circuit designs with a high degree of freedom. Electrical steel with a magnetic insulator coating presents benefits in terms of high torque density especially for low-speed high torque applications. The new electrical steel with magnetic insulator coating simplifies the manufacturing process of axial and transverse flux electric machines.
[0041] Referring to
[0042] Referring to
[0043] Referring to
[0044] Referring to
[0045] Referring to
[0046] Referring to
[0047] Coating the magnetic insulator layer on one or both surfaces of electrical steel sheets, may be performed with conventional coating or a printing process, such as a dip coating or spin coating process. The thickness of the coating layer can be as thin as tens of nanometer to several micrometers. The thickness of the coating may be in the range of between 0.05 and 5 micrometers.
[0048] In a dip-coating process, after immersing the electrical steel sheet into a viscous coating solution containing a metal-organic complex, the electrical steel sheet is then taken out of the coating solution and subject to a heat treatment. In the spin coating process, the magnetic insulator coating layer is formed by spin coating a diluted solution containing the metal on the electrical steel sheet or stamped lamination, and subsequently heating the electrical steel sheet or stamped lamination. Other coating methods, such as chemical vapor deposition, electrophoretic deposition (EPD) can also be used.
[0049] The ferrite type magnetic insulators that are discussed in this disclosure are examples only, and other types of magnetic insulators may also be used as the coating material for electrical steel.
[0050] The embodiments described above are prophetic examples that do not describe all possible forms of the disclosure. The features of the illustrated embodiments may be combined to form further embodiments of the disclosed concepts. The words used in the specification are words of description rather than limitation. The scope of the following claims is broader than the specifically disclosed embodiments and also includes modifications of the illustrated embodiments.