BIPOLAR INDUCTION ELECTRIC MACHINE
20240055962 ยท 2024-02-15
Inventors
Cpc classification
H02K1/2753
ELECTRICITY
H02K19/12
ELECTRICITY
H02K1/146
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A bipolar induction electric machine is provided comprising a stator arrangement comprising a plurality of circumferentially arranged stator modules, each stator module comprising a plurality of axially arranged spaced apart stator pole elements fitted with a concentrated armature winding and terminating in an inwardly facing, curved stator pole surface; and a rotor arrangement rotatably and concentrically accommodated within the stator arrangement, the rotor arrangement comprising a plurality of axially arranged rotor modules, each rotor module comprising at least one circumferentially arranged, curved bi-polar member comprising a pair of curved rotor pole elements that are axially displaced on either side of a stationary concentric field exciter coil accommodated within the stator arrangement. The curved rotor pole elements are concentrically arranged relative to the stator pole surfaces so as to define a uniform air-gap therebetween and thus provide a plurality of axially segmented multipolar flux circuits.
Claims
1. A bipolar induction electric machine comprising: a stator arrangement comprising a plurality of circumferentially arranged stator modules, each stator module comprising a plurality of axially arranged spaced apart stator pole elements fitted with a concentrated armature winding and terminating in an inwardly facing, curved stator pole surface; and a rotor arrangement rotatably and concentrically accommodated within the stator arrangement, the rotor arrangement comprising a plurality of axially arranged rotor modules, each rotor module comprising at least one circumferentially arranged, curved bi-polar member comprising a pair of curved rotor pole elements that are axially displaced on either side of a stationary concentric field exciter coil accommodated within the stator arrangement, with the curved rotor pole elements being concentrically arranged relative to the stator pole surfaces so as to define a uniform air-gap therebetween and thus provide a plurality of axially segmented multipolar flux circuits, with the axial dimension of each rotor pole element varying in a manner so as to vary the overlap between the rotor pole element and the stator pole surface during rotation of the rotor arrangement, thus inducing a predetermined emf waveform in the armature winding of the stator pole elements.
2. The bipolar induction electric machine of claim 1, wherein the axially arranged spaced apart stator pole elements are joined by a common stator yoke, with each stator pole element extending or protruding radially inwardly towards the centre of the machine, each stator pole element comprising a stator stem to accommodate the concentrated armature winding, the stator pole element terminating in a stator pole the distal end of which defines the curved stator pole surface, so that a plurality of the circumferentially arranged stator pole elements define a substantially cylindrical stator pole surface, with the stationary field exciter coil being accommodated between adjacent stator poles of the adjacent axially arranged spaced apart stator pole elements.
3. The bipolar induction electric machine of claim 1, wherein the stator arrangement comprises a plurality of axially arranged polygonal stator frame modules joined together to define an enclosed stator body, each stator frame module comprising a plurality of stator frame module components corresponding to the number of circumferentially arranged stator modules, each stator frame module component defining an aperture or slot to accommodate a stator pole element.
4. The bipolar induction electric machine of claim 3, wherein circumferential gaps are defined between the circumferentially arranged stator modules to accommodate a pick-up sensor-coil core-element to determine position/speed.
5. The bipolar induction electric machine of claim 1, wherein the rotor arrangement includes a rotatable shaft to carry the plurality of axially arranged rotor modules, each bi-polar member of each rotor module being connected to the shaft via a support arm arrangement, with each bi-polar member having a corresponding spaced apart pair of stator pole surfaces, so that each rotor pole element lines up with a corresponding concentric stator pole element.
6. The bipolar induction electric machine of claim 5, wherein each rotor pole element comprises: a substantially straight inner edge spaced apart from a corresponding inner edge of the adjacent rotor pole element that in combination defines the bi-polar member, with this spacing corresponding to the spacing between adjacent stator pole surfaces of adjacent stator pole elements; and a shaped outer edge so as to define a shaped, curved rotor pole surface between the inner and outer edges, the curved rotor pole surface and the corresponding curved stator pole surface of the corresponding stator pole element defining the uniform air-gap therebetween, with the concentric field exciter coil encircling the centre of each rotor module, so as to excite the bi-polar member, with the shaped rotor pole surfaces providing, during rotation, a variable area overlap with the adjacent stator pole surfaces thereby varying the flux through the stator pole elements, which in turn induces a correspondingly shaped emf waveform in the armature winding of the stator pole elements.
77. The bipolar induction electric machine of claim 6, wherein each axially arranged rotor module is separately excited by a dedicated concentric field exciter coil, each rotor module having its own axially arranged north and south poles to define the bi-polar member.
8. The bipolar induction electric machine of claim 7, wherein the ends of the bi-polar members of one rotor module, of one polarity, are axially interleaved so as to be circumferentially adjacent, when viewed axially from an end of the shaft, with respect to the ends of an adjacent bi-polar member of an adjacent rotor module, of the opposite polarity.
9. The bipolar induction electric machine of claim 1, wherein, in the case of a 2-pole machine, each rotor module comprises one curved bi-polar member that defines an arc of 180 degrees (mechanical and electrical), with a counterweight arrangement being provided to balance the rotating shaft.
10. The bipolar induction electric machine of claim 1, wherein, in the case of a 4-pole machine, each rotor module comprises two diametrically arranged curved bi-polar members, each curved bi-polar member defining an arc of 90 degrees (mechanical), with there being a corresponding sector gap defined between the curved bi-polar members.
11. The bipolar induction electric machine of claim 10, wherein adjacent rotor modules are offset by 180 degrees (electrical) so that the curved bi-polar members of one rotor module interleave with the curved bi-polar members of an adjacent rotor module so as to occupy (or at least partly occupy) the sector gaps defined in the adjacent rotor module. In particular, the interleaving curved rotor pole elements of adjacent rotor modules have adjacent poles of opposite polarities to produce bipolar induction.
12. The bipolar induction electric machine of claim 11, wherein the shaped outer edge of the rotor pole element is curved to ultimately define a sinusoidal emf.
13. The bipolar induction electric machine of claim 11, wherein the shaped outer edge of the rotor pole element is triangular to ultimately define a triangular emf.
14. The bipolar induction electric machine of claim 11, wherein the shaped outer edge of the rotor pole element is a parallelogram, to ultimately define a double trapezoidal emf.
15. The bipolar induction electric machine of claim 11, wherein the shaped outer edge of the rotor pole element is a full sinusoid, to ultimately define a double sinusoidal emf.
16. The bipolar induction electric machine of claim 1, wherein each rotor module comprises four circumferentially arranged, equally spaced curved bi-polar members, each defining an arc of 45 degrees mechanical (when viewed axially, from an end of the shaft), with there being four corresponding sector gaps defined between adjacent curved bi-polar members.
17. The bipolar induction electric machine of claim 16, wherein adjacent rotor modules are circumferentially offset by 45 degrees mechanical so that the curved bi-polar members of one rotor module interleave with the curved bi-polar members of an adjacent rotor module so as to occupy (or at least partly occupy) the sector gaps defined in the adjacent rotor module.
18. The bipolar induction electric machine of claim 17, wherein the shaped outer edge of the rotor pole element is curved to ultimately define a sinusoidal emf, or is triangular to ultimately define a triangular emf, or is a parallelogram, to ultimately define a double trapezoidal emf, or is a full sinusoid, to ultimately define a double sinusoidal emf.
19. The bipolar induction electric machine of claim 1, wherein each stator module includes a pair of end stator pole elements, associated with endmost rotor pole elements, and at least one intermediate stator pole element, associated with intermediate rotor pole elements, the armature winding around the intermediate stator pole element/s receives an alternating flux/emf due to bipolar induction, to provide the predetermined emf waveform.
20. The bipolar induction electric machine of claim 19, wherein the armature windings around the end stator pole elements each receive single directional flux due to unipolar induction, with the two halves provided by the end stator pole elements having armature windings of opposite polarity being connected in series to define a correspondingly shaped emf.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0060] These and other features of this invention will become apparent from the following description of one example described with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF AN EMBODIMENT
[0097] Referring first to
[0098] As best shown in
[0099] As best shown in
[0100] As best shown in
[0101] Significantly, the axial dimension of each rotor pole element 54 varies in a manner so as to vary the overlap between the rotor pole element 54 and the stator pole surface 42 during rotation of the rotor arrangement 34, thus inducing a predetermined emf waveform in the armature winding 40 of the stator pole elements 38.
[0102] Focusing initially on the stator arrangement 32, with reference to
[0103] Each stator pole element 38 comprises a protruding or salient stator stem or leg 62 to accommodate the concentrated armature winding 40. The stator pole element 38 terminates in a stator pole 64, the distal end of which defines the curved stator pole surface 42. As a result, a plurality of the circumferentially arranged stator pole elements 38 define a substantially cylindrical stator pole surface 42, with the stationary field exciter coil 56 being accommodated between adjacent stator poles 64 of the adjacent axially arranged spaced apart stator pole elements 38. Thus, in this embodiment, there are 3 stator pole elements 38, when viewed from the side (as in
[0104] Although a step is shown between the stator stem 62 and the stator pole 64, as shown in
[0105] Turning now to
[0106] The number of circumferentially arranged stator modules 36 depends upon the desired number of phases, with the machine 30 in the figures being described being a 3-phase machine. This will be described in more detail below with reference to the structure of the rotor arrangement 34 (and the winding diagram for a 3-phase machine in
[0107] Each stator frame module component 74 defines an aperture or slot 76 to accommodate a stator pole element 38, as best shown in
[0108] As best shown in
[0109] A retainer plate 82 is provided to secure the stator elements 38 together to define the armature module 80. In this regard, the machine 30 may be called a slotless machine and would therefore not experience or display slot harmonics. Slots, from an electric machine perspective, are only slots if they are part of the flux changing circuit. The gaps between the stator poles are not slots, as such, as they do not form part of the magnetic circuit, or rather they do not at any one instant disturb or obstruct the flux during the rotation of the rotor arrangement 34 (when the machine 30 is operating).
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[0111] As best shown in
[0112] In one version, these gaps 90 may receive or accommodate a laminated unit, similar to the armature modules 80 but much narrower, and have an armature winding which may be used as a sensor to indicate position and speed of the machine by supplying an analogue signal in the shape of the emf waveform. This pick-up or sensor coil would act in exactly the same manner as the armature modules 80 but would have a much weaker emf; however, this signal will not be influenced by changes in the main armature modules 80 and is therefore ideally suited for signal pickups or sensors. In some cases, the armature modules 80 may be too wide to leave any space between each other for pickup coils. In such cases, it would be sufficient for pickup coils to only be installed on one intermediate segment or alternatively to both end-segments. These particular armature modules would be narrower than the rest, thereby yielding less emf than the rest. However, when in series with the intermediate coils, the total result will be a sine wave (since sine waves of different amplitudes, when combined, will result in another sine wave).
[0113] When compared to the conventional homopolar induction alternator 10 described above with reference to
[0114] Turning now to
[0115] In an embodiment, each rotor pole element 54 comprises a substantially straight inner edge 104 spaced apart from a corresponding inner edge 104 of the adjacent rotor pole element 54 that in combination defines the bi-polar member 52. This spacing corresponds to the spacing between adjacent stator pole surfaces 42 of adjacent stator pole elements 38, with an intermediate saliency groove 106 being defined between the inner edges 104 of the adjacent rotor pole elements 54.
[0116] It is clear from
[0117] Each rotor pole element 54 further comprises a shaped outer edge 108 so as to define a shaped, curved rotor pole surface 110 between the inner and outer edges 104, 108, the curved rotor pole surface 110 and the corresponding curved stator pole surface 42 of the corresponding stator pole element 38 defining the uniform air-gap 58 therebetween.
[0118] Alternatively, the stator pole surface 42 may be shaped instead of the rotor pole surface 110, but shaped, curved, arcuate rotor pole surfaces 110 are preferable because the area of the pole surface 110 is smaller and therefore the rotor arrangement 34 has less weight. Also, winding rectangular stator poles (i.e. stator stem or leg 62 in this case), is relatively easy.
[0119] The concentric field exciter coil 56 encircles the centre of each rotor module 50, so as to excite or polarise the bi-polar member, with the shaped rotor pole surfaces 110 providing, during rotation, a variable area overlap with the adjacent stator pole surfaces 42 thereby varying the flux through the stator pole element 38, which in turn induces a correspondingly shaped emf waveform in the armature winding 40 of the stator pole elements 38.
[0120] In an embodiment, as best shown in
[0121] As best shown in
[0122] In an embodiment, as best shown in
[0123] Before describing several specific embodiments,
[0127] In any event, what
[0128] The machine 30 described above with particular reference to
[0129] In this embodiment, adjacent rotor modules 50 are offset by 180 degrees (electrical) so that the curved bi-polar members 52 of one rotor module 50 interleave with the curved bi-polar members 52 of an adjacent rotor module 50 so as to occupy (or at least partly occupy) the sector gaps 116 defined in the adjacent rotor module 50 (as best shown in
[0130] In a first version of this embodiment, as best shown in
[0131] In yet another embodiment, although not illustrated, a two-pole rotor arrangement may be provided. In this case, each rotor module 50 comprises one curved bi-polar member 52 (instead of the two shown in
[0132] Depending upon the number N of rotor modules 50, the machine may be termed an N-stage machine i.e. 2 rotor modules 50 (as shown in
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[0135] Again, the outer edges of the rotor pole elements 54 of this machine 150 may have various shapes, including curved to ultimately define a sinusoidal emf, triangular to ultimately define a triangular emf, a parallelogram to ultimately define a triangular or double trapezoidal emf or a full sinusoid, to ultimately define a double sinusoidal emf.
[0136] As best shown in
[0137] As best shown in
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[0141] In the various versions described above, the rotor pole elements 54 are cast elements.
[0142] In
[0143] The bi-polar members 182 of rotor module 180 are fitted to an assembly 192 comprising a central hub 194 that also gets secured to the pole arm support plate 172 with the bolts 178. The bi-polar members 182 of rotor module 181 are fitted directly to the pole arm support plate 172, with bolts 196 that extend through a holder 197, and related nuts 198.
[0144] In
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[0146] In
[0147] Regarding the damper ring 235 feature, conventional alternators (bigger units for electric power production) usually have a set of rods sunk in the face of the poles (or simply a squirrel cage like that is used on an induction motor). These dampers are required in that for any changing load the flux variation in the stator coils will cause fluctuations in the rotor core. This is undesirable as hunting results where the rotor oscillates torsionally. The damper ring 235 is relatively simple and does not require slots as all the flux threads through it.
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[0149] The figures so far have all shown 4-pole rotor arrangements. However, an 8-pole rotor arrangement 260 may be used, as shown in
[0150] In this embodiment, adjacent rotor modules 262, as shown in
[0151] Each bi-polar member 264 comprises a pair of spaced apart rotor pole elements 268, each of which comprises a substantially straight inner edge 270 spaced apart from a corresponding inner edge 270 of the adjacent rotor pole element 268 that in combination defines the bi-polar member 264. Each rotor pole element 268 further comprises a shaped outer edge 272 so as to define a shaped, curved rotor pole surface 274 between the inner and outer edges 270, 272.
[0152] In this illustrated version, the shaped outer edge 272 is a parallelogram, to ultimately define a double trapezoidal emf. As indicated above, other envisaged shapes include a curve to ultimately define a sinusoidal emf, triangular to ultimately define a triangular emf, or a full sinusoid, to ultimately define a double sinusoidal emf.
[0153] Again, although the rotor pole elements 268 are shown as cast rotor pole elements, they may also be laminated rotor pole elements.
[0154] Although not shown, other rotor arrangements are possible. In one such example, 3 bi-polar members may be provided, in which case a two-phase machine may be constructed having 6 armature stator modules, or a single phase machine having 3 armature stator modules. In this case, each bi-polar member is spaced 120 mechanical but arcing 60 mechanical, to make space for the interleaving 60 degree poles of the adjacent rotor module.
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[0156] The small diameter stator 280 in
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[0161] In addition, as the segmentation of the flux circuit is independent of the number of poles, the above wind-turbine may be termed a direct-drive wind-turbine (in that it has no gearbox) and at 4 seconds per revolution (for a 4-pole machine) the alternator will be functioning at 1 Hz. As such, the switching of the rectification will have a 1 Hz frequency, which can practically be called a DC current (unlike the normal 50 or 60 Hz in a national grid). Of course, the machine may have many poles for higher frequency and/or voltage output.
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[0164] The operation of a machine with curved/sinusoidal rotor pole elements (such as rotor pole elements 54 in
[0165] Drawing 1 shows an arrangement of sinusoidal shaped poles 54 of a rotor with a stator pole surface 42 (of the type shown in
[0166] The field coil in the stator will generate an emf, shown below in Graph 1, according to BLV law
[0167] The height of the virtual pole h.sub.E, as shown below in Graph 2, varies in a sinusoidal manner and may be defined as
[0168] The virtual pole phase angle (advance offset) is a linear ratio and is simply half the difference between the field pole and armature pole arcs.
[0169] This is shown in the following graph, Graph 3:
[0170] It can be seen that in case where the armature pole width matches that of the field pole the virtual and physical poles coincide in size and position, i.e. they are identical.
[0171] Electromotive force emf is calculated as per the virtual pole shape in that the effective length per coil turn will be on a sine curve twice the height of the virtual pole. This is for bipolar induction, in respect of the intermediate stator element and associated intermediate rotor elements, as described above. The end stator elements and associated endmost rotor elements, in respect of which there is unipolar induction, as described above, will now be described. As indicated above, when opposite stator coils are connected in series, the combined result is equivalent to bi-polar induction. The emf plot of an end coil is shown in the following figure, Drawing 2:
[0172] A convenient graphic tool may be used to plot the emf. If the overlapping common area of the stator pole surface and rotor pole surface defines the flux linkage , then the sum of the intersection height of the rectangular stator pole face leading and trailing edges will define the emf, with the following rules: [0173] Leading edge over the South pole: +l.sub.S (positive) [0174] Trailing edge over the South pole: t.sub.S (negative) [0175] Leading edge over the North pole: l.sub.N (negative) [0176] Trailing edge over the South pole: +l.sub.N (positive)
[0177] When both the leading and trailing edges overlap a rotor pole surface then the emf changes according to Curve 1 in Drawing 2, which is a sinusoidal curve. However, when only one edge overlaps a rotor pole surface the emf varies as per Curve 2 in Drawing 2, a sine wave that is sqrt(3) smaller in amplitude when the armature pole width (or arc) is that of field pole pitch. This pole width corresponds to a 3-phase machine where the armature coils are consecutive over one pole pitch. Thus, the resultant emf curve in Drawing 2 is a composite of two sine curves and is shown in bold.
[0178] The choice of datum for angle is arbitrary but in the above case is chosen as the stator pole trailing edge offset from when the stator pole is centrally positioned over the rotor pole.
[0179] In the following figure, Graph 4, the emf position 8 moves from Curve 1 to Curve 2.
[0180] The opposite end-coil (with relation to Drawing 2), on the other hand, is shown in the following figure, Graph 5.
[0181] If the end coils are wound in the same direction as per the following figure, Drawing 3, the emf for each coil may be represented in Graph 6 below.
[0182] Regarding Graph 6 above, in order to achieve the stagger of the two curves (this stagger is half the difference between the rotor and stator pole angles), the end pole elements of the rotor modules have to be phased by 180 degrees electrical. This in turn means that the stator module preferably has to have an odd number of stator pole elements (i.e. stator legs), or, in terms of the rotor arrangement, an even number of rotor modules (i.e. an even number of field exciter coils), as shown/confirmed in the figures and related descriptions. A machine with an odd number of stages will introduce harmonics due to the end coils, these harmonics becoming less pronounced with increasing number of stages.
[0183] The following figure, Graph 7, is an oscilloscope trace of the prototype machine showing emf waveforms of the end-coils.
[0184] The above waveform of end coils 1 and 3 combined will be identical to bipolar induction of intermediate coil no. 2.
[0185] The following two figures, Graphs 9 and 10, show the end-waveforms in yellow and blue, while the white line is the combined curve integrated by the oscilloscope.
[0186] The following figure, Graph 11, shows an oscilloscope trace of an end-coil:
[0187] The following figure, Graph 12, shows an oscilloscope trace of the opposite end-coil:
[0188] The following figure, Graph 13, is an oscilloscope trace of both end-coils connected in series:
[0189] The operation of a machine with a triangular rotor pole elements, of the type shown in
[0190] The back emf is triangular and therefore in the case of a motor it may be driven by a square waveform and in the case of an alternator for DC current the two phases may be rectified, as described further below. It can be seen in the above figure that the armature poles have no gaps and that in practice there will be a gap which will cause the emf waveform into a truncated triangle (trapezoidal) waveform, as shown in the next figure, Graph 15.
[0191] Rotor pole surfaces with a trapezoidal shape are more desirable as there can be gaps between the armature poles. The armature pole pitch pa is half the field pole pitch .sub.f. This is an important geometric defining feature of this invention. This is desirable as there is a dwell of zero emf at zero crossing, t.sub.d, a desirable feature for power electronics drive where the switching is done. With parallelogram field poles it is also possible to have gaps between the field poles themselves which is shown in the following figure, Graph 16. This will introduce chamfers on all corners of the trapezoidal waveform.
[0192] The emf waveform remains symmetrical about its half amplitude, as shown in the next figure, Graph 17:
[0193] The above figure, Graph 17, shows the two phases rectified. When the phases are connected in series a DC current will result. The dwell time is also shown. Although DC current may be obtained by passive diodes a switching convertor may be used where the dwell time is very desirable for mosfet switches to operate at low speed.
[0194] Graphs 18, 19 and 20 below double sinusoidal induction:
[0195] It is worth mentioning that only the double sinusoidal waveform may have an odd (as well as even) number of phases for DC rectification without ripple. All other shapes, such as triangular and trapezoidal must have pairs of phases.
[0196] The following figure, Graph 21, is a scan of the prototype 3-phase alternator.
[0197] One application of the present invention is a 2-phase synchronous motor/generator. The generator has a triangular back-EMF waveform and two phases. Each phase is rectified with a full bridge rectified, with the rectified phases being connected in series to produce uniform DC current.
[0198] Regarding the motor, there are two topologies for the motor, namely a back-EMF with a triangular waveform and a back-EMF with a square waveform. In a square waveform synchronous motor, the power electronics driver has current switching control with a triangular wave output. In a triangular waveform synchronous motor, the power electronics driver has current switching control with a square wave output. With the stator teeth having a skew of pole pitch there is no cogging. Poles may be shaped to have a sinusoidal or any other waveform.
[0199] In a generator-motor combination, a square waveform generator may be used to synchronously drive a triangular waveform motor and vice versa.
[0200] In the case of a battery storage DC or rectified DC current the motor may be run by power electronics. A square back-EMF waveform motor has a driver with current switching output of a triangular waveform. A triangular back-EMF waveform motor has a driver with current switching output of a square waveform.
[0201] In general, regarding the generator, the triangular or double-trapezoidal waveform has an output of high quality, ripple-free, uniform DC current. It is simple in construction. It has simple winding with maximum copper utilization (minimal end winding length) since each tooth is wound individually. It has very high efficiency. The DC output may be readily chopped and inverted into clean AC current.
[0202] In general, regarding the motor, the triangular back-EMF waveform motor has no cogging torque. It has high quality, ripple-free, uniform torque. Its efficiency is superior of the high-end, state of the art 3-phase sinusoidal driven (Field Orientated Control, Direct Torque and other control algorithms) motors. It is simple in construction. It has simple winding with maximum copper utilization (minimal end winding length) since each tooth is wound individually.
[0203] When a hybrid drive arrangement with a prime mover, an alternator and motor are used, for example in an electric vehicle drive where an IC engine drives an alternator which drives a motor of this invention, complete control may be achieved by varying the relatively low current in the exciter coils of the motor and/or alternator resulting in a relatively inexpensive and simple power electronics drive. This is in contrast to state of the art where the main armature current has to be processed by costly and complicated power electronics.