ROTATING ELECTRIC MACHINE COMPRISING A STATOR WITH SEALED SLOTS, AND MORE PARTICULARLY PERMANENT MAGNET-ASSISTED RELUCTANT SYNCHRONOUS ELECTRIC MACHINE
20200059125 ยท 2020-02-20
Inventors
- Benjamin Gaussens (Buc, FR)
- Julien Boisson (Rueil Malmaison, FR)
- Luca FAVRE (Valpelline (AO), IT)
- Davide Bettoni (Settimo Vittone To Italy, IT)
- Wissam Dib (Suresnes, FR)
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
The present invention relates to an electric machine comprising a rotor (1) and a stator (2) having a wall (3) opposite the rotor, said stator comprising a multiplicity of radial slots arranged circumferentially along said stator. Said slots are provided with apertures (6) opening into said inner wall that are closed by closing means (7, 8) so as to form a multiplicity of closed slots (5).
Claims
1.-8. (canceled)
9. An electrical machine comprising a rotor and a stator having an inner wall opposite the rotor, the stator comprising radial slots arranged circumferentially along the stator, the slots having open apertures opening into the inner wall, and wherein the apertures are closed by closing means which close the opening to form closed slots.
10. An electrical machine as claimed in claim 9, wherein the slots extend longitudinally along an axis of the stator.
11. An electrical machine as claimed in claim 9, wherein the closing means comprises a wedge made of a magnetic material, having dimensions corresponding to the open apertures to close the slots.
12. An electrical machine as claimed in claim 10, wherein the closing means comprises a wedge made of a magnetic material, having dimensions corresponding to the open apertures to close the slots.
13. An electrical machine as claimed in claim 11, wherein a thickness of the wedges is flush with a surface of the inner wall of the stator.
14. An electrical machine as claimed in claim 12, wherein a thickness of the wedges is flush with a surface of the inner wall of the stator.
15. An electrical machine as claimed in claim 11, wherein the wedges are crimped, welded or glued in the apertures.
16. An electrical machine as claimed in claim 12, wherein the wedges are crimped, welded or glued in the apertures.
17. An electrical machine as claimed in claim 13, wherein the wedges are crimped, welded or glued in the apertures.
18. An electrical machine as claimed in claim 14, wherein the wedges are crimped, welded or glued in the apertures.
19. An electrical machine as claimed in claim 9, wherein the closing means comprises a cylinder made of a magnetic material, located on the inner wall of the stator, to close the open slots.
20. An electrical machine as claimed in claim 10, wherein the closing means comprises a cylinder made of a magnetic material, located on the inner wall of the stator, to close the open slots.
21. An electrical machine as claimed in claim 19, wherein the cylinder is press fit to the inner wall of the stator.
22. An electrical machine as claimed in claim 20, wherein the cylinder is press fit to the inner wall of the stator.
23. An electrical machine as claimed in claim 19, wherein an inside diameter of the cylinder receives the rotor.
24. An electrical machine as claimed in claim 20, wherein an inside diameter of the cylinder receives the rotor.
25. An electrical machine as claimed in claim 21, wherein an inside diameter of the cylinder receives the rotor.
26. An electrical machine as claimed in claim 22, wherein an inside diameter of the cylinder receives the rotor.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0018] Other features and advantages of the invention will be clear from reading the description hereafter, given by way of non limitative example, with reference to the accompanying figures wherein:
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0023]
[0024] The rotor construction includes, as is well known and notably described in document WO-2016/188,764, preferably a magnetic shaft comprising bundles of identical plane ferromagnetic laminations assembled to one another by any known means.
[0025] The laminations of circular shape comprise a central bore traversed by the rotor shaft and a plurality of axial recesses 20 running throughout the laminations.
[0026] A series of rectangular axial recesses 20, radially arranged one above the other and spaced at a distance from one another, which form housings for magnetic flux generators, which here are permanent magnets in a form of rectangular bars of identical length substantially equal to the length of the lamination bundle. Preferably, the rotor comprises at least two series of rectangular axial recesses 20, radially arranged one above the other, with the rectangular axial recesses 20 being circumferentially distributed over rotor 1.
[0027] Another series of recesses 40 are perforations inclined in a radial direction that extend the housings through to the vicinity of the edge of the laminations.
[0028] Flux barriers formed by the perforations are thus created. The magnetic flux from the magnets then can only be transmitted through the solid portions between the perforations.
[0029] The presence of series of rectangular axial recesses 20 radially arranged one above the other and at a distance from one another, forming housings for magnetic flux generators, and the inclined radial perforations 40 extending the housings through to the vicinity of the laminations edge improves the direction of the magnetic flux and thus improves the electrical machine performance. The magnetic flux is then better channeled on walls of the rotor, which are both more numerous and thinner.
[0030] A stator 2 according to the prior art, as partly shown in
[0031] This ring comprises a multiplicity of holes 5, of oblong section here, forming slots designed to receive the armature coils.
[0032] More precisely, these holes extend axially all along the stator by being radially arranged on the ring while being circumferentially arranged at a distance from one another, by a distance D.
[0033]
[0034] Thus, wall 3 is a continuous wall and air gap 4 is quasi-constant between the rotor and the stator, over the entire circumference thereof.
[0035] Furthermore, as the outside of the rotor and the inside of the stator are smooth, a reduced aerodynamic noise is obtained.
[0036] Document WO-2016/188,764 notably describes the advantages of the closed slots.
[0037]
[0038] The object of the present invention is both to combine the benefit provided by closed slots with an open-slot stator allowing to reduce the cost of making with the possibility of automated winding and to obtain a better winding coefficient, of the order of 0.6.
[0039] Therefore, after winding, apertures 6 of the stator are closed by a suitable means or mechanism such as plates or wedges made of a magnetic material of the same width as apertures 6 and of length corresponding to the length of the stator.
[0040] The thickness of these wedges is advantageously such that they are flush with the surface of the inner wall of the stator.
[0041] Thus, the air gap is substantially constant over the entire circumference, and inner surface 3 of the stator is practically smooth.
[0042]
[0043] Thus, the inner surface of the stator is entirely covered by the wall of cylinder 8, or retaining ring, and all the apertures of the slots are thus closed. Air gap 4 is made up of the outer surface of the rotor and the inner surface of ring 8. Cylinder 8, which is referred to as a retaining ring, is made of a magnetic material. The cylinder can be fastened onto inner surface 3 of the stator by any means or mechanism known to the person skilled in the art, notably by press fitting, gluing, welding. Cylinder 8 is thin in thickness in relation to the diameter thereof. Therefore press fitting is a suitable process of retention. Hence the denomination of retaining ring for the means of closing the apertures of the stator slots.
[0044] In a permanent magnet-assisted synchro-reluctant structure, closing the open slots of a stator affords three advantages: [0045] reduction of torque ripple (and of the torque ripple harmonics), [0046] reduction of rotor and stator iron losses (less harmonics on the magnetic induction in iron), [0047] reduction of the noise caused by aerodynamic phenomena of the machine since the air gap is constant.
[0048] When rotor 1 of the permanent magnet-assisted synchro-reluctant machine comprises series of rectangular axial recesses 20 radially arranged one above the other, at a distance from one another, and forming housings for magnetic flux generators, and when the rotor also comprises recesses 40 of inclined radial perforation type, extending the housings through to the vicinity of the laminations edge (as illustrated in
[0049]
[0050] It can be noted that, in the case of open slots O, the torque ripple is much higher (9.0%), whereas it is 5.1%, 6.4%, 5.4% respectively for the configurations with closed slots E, slots closed by magnetic wedges C and slots closed by magnetic rings F.
[0051] Furthermore,
[0052] It is clear that a posteriori closing of the slots receiving the armature coils, notably with magnetic wedges or magnetic retaining rings, reduces the torque ripple more when compared with the open-slot stator structure, as well as the torque harmonics.
[0053] Besides, a posteriori closing causes no significant changes in the electromagnetic performances compared with the closed-slot structure.