OLEOPHILIC SURFACE TREATMENTS FOR ENHANCED HEAT-TRANSFER CHARACTERISTICS OF ELECTRIC MACHINES
20230011641 · 2023-01-12
Assignee
Inventors
- SeungHwan Keum (Northville, MI, US)
- Mei Yang (Troy, MI, US)
- Neal Parsons (Onsted, MI, US)
- Ruth Herrera Reed (Warren, MI, US)
Cpc classification
H02K3/38
ELECTRICITY
Y02T10/70
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
H02K2209/00
ELECTRICITY
H02K15/12
ELECTRICITY
H02K3/44
ELECTRICITY
H02K9/19
ELECTRICITY
H02K3/24
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
Presented are oleophilic surface treatments for electric machines, methods for making/using such electric machines, and vehicles employing traction motors having stator windings with oleophilic treatments on select surfaces. An electric machine includes an outer housing with a direct-cooling thermal management system fluidly connected to the housing to circulate thereto a coolant fluid. A stator assembly, which is attached to the housing, includes a stator core with one or more electromagnetic windings mounted to the stator core. A rotor assembly is movably mounted to the hosing adjacent the stator assembly. The rotor assembly includes a rotor core with one or more magnets mounted to the rotor core spaced, e.g., across an air gap, from the winding(s). Select components of the stator assembly have a target surface with an oleophilic surface treatment that enlarges the target surface's wetted area and increases a coolant mass of the coolant fluid contacting the target surface.
Claims
1. An electric machine, comprising: an outer housing; a direct-cooling thermal management system fluidly connected to the outer housing and configured to circulate thereto a coolant fluid; a stator assembly attached to the outer housing and including a stator core with an electromagnetic winding mounted to the stator core; and a rotor assembly movable with respect to the stator assembly and including a rotor core with a magnet mounted to the rotor core in spaced relation to the electromagnetic winding, wherein the stator assembly has a target surface with an oleophilic surface treatment configured to enlarge a wetted area of the target surface and increase a coolant mass of the coolant fluid contacting the target surface, the oleophilic surface treatment including a surface etching with an isotropic pattern.
2. The electric machine of claim 1, wherein only the electromagnetic winding of the stator assembly includes the target surface with the oleophilic surface treatment.
3. The electric machine of claim 2, wherein the electromagnetic winding includes a hairpin crown with a pair of hairpin legs projecting from the hairpin crown and extending through stator slots in the stator core, and wherein only exposed segments of the hairpin crown and legs protruding from the stator core include the target surface with the oleophilic surface treatment.
4. The electric machine of claim 1, wherein the oleophilic surface treatment further includes an ultraviolet (UV) ozone treatment applied onto the electromagnetic winding.
5. The electric machine of claim 4, wherein the electromagnetic winding includes a hairpin crown with a pair of hairpin legs projecting from the hairpin crown and extending through stator slots in the stator core, and wherein only exposed segments of the hairpin crown and legs protruding from the stator core include a varnish coating with the UV ozone treatment applied to the varnish coating.
6. The electric machine of claim 1, wherein the oleophilic surface treatment further includes a chemical deposition treatment of an inorganic compound applied onto the electromagnetic winding.
7. The electric machine of claim 6, wherein the inorganic compound includes a silane-based material and/or a dodecyltrimethoxysilane-based material.
8. The electric machine of claim 6, wherein the electromagnetic winding includes a hairpin crown with a pair of hairpin legs projecting from the hairpin crown and extending through stator slots in the stator core, and wherein only exposed segments of the hairpin crown and legs protruding from the stator core include a varnish coating with the inorganic compound applied to the varnish coating.
9. The electric machine of claim 7, wherein the inorganic compound has a thickness of about 5 microns to about 0.1 mm.
10. The electric machine of claim 1, further comprising a dielectric coating on the electromagnetic winding, wherein the oleophilic surface treatment including the surface etching with the isotropic pattern is applied onto the dielectric coating on the electromagnetic winding.
11. The electric machine of claim 1, wherein the surface etching is an ultraviolet etching, a plasma etching, a flame etching, and/or an acid etching.
12. The electric machine of claim 1, wherein the electromagnetic winding includes a hairpin crown with a pair of hairpin legs projecting from the hairpin crown and extending through stator slots in the stator core, and wherein only exposed segments of the hairpin crown and legs protruding from the stator core include a varnish coating with the surface etching applied to the varnish coating.
13. The electric machine of claim 1, wherein the surface etching includes a series of mutually parallel grooves recessed into the exposed segments of the hairpin crown and the hairpin legs.
14. A motor vehicle comprising: a vehicle body; a plurality of road wheels attached to the vehicle body; and a traction motor attached to the vehicle body and operable to drive one or more of the road wheels to thereby propel the motor vehicle, the traction motor including: a motor housing; a direct-oil-cooling thermal management system fluidly connected to the motor housing and configured to circulate thereto a dielectric oil; a stator assembly rigidly mounted inside the motor housing, the stator assembly including an annular stator core defining a hollow center and a plurality of circumferentially spaced stator slots, and a plurality of U-shaped electromagnetic hairpin windings packaged inside the stator slots; and a rotor assembly rotatably disposed inside the hollow center of the annular stator core, the rotor assembly including a cylindrical rotor core defining a plurality of circumferentially spaced rotor slots, and a plurality of permanent magnets mounted inside the rotor slots in spaced relation to the hairpin windings, wherein each of the hairpin windings of the stator assembly has a respective target surface with an oleophilic surface treatment configured to enlarge a wetted area of the target surface and increase a coolant mass of the dielectric oil contacting the target surface, the oleophilic surface treatment including a surface etching with an isotropic pattern.
15. A method of assembling an electric machine, the method comprising: providing an outer housing of the electric machine; fluidly connecting a direct-cooling thermal management system to the outer housing to circulate thereto a coolant fluid; attaching a stator assembly to the outer housing, the stator assembly including a stator core and an electromagnetic winding mounted to the stator core; applying an oleophilic surface treatment to a target surface of the stator assembly, the oleophilic surface treatment configured to enlarge a wetted area of the target surface and increase a coolant mass of the coolant fluid contacting the target surface, the oleophilic surface treatment including a surface etching with an isotropic pattern; and movably mounting a rotor assembly adjacent the stator assembly, the rotor assembly including a rotor core and a magnet mounted to the rotor core spaced from the winding.
16. The method of claim 15, wherein only the electromagnetic winding of the stator assembly includes the target surface with the oleophilic surface treatment.
17. The method of claim 16, wherein the electromagnetic winding includes a hairpin crown with a pair of hairpin legs projecting from the hairpin crown and extending through stator slots in the stator core, and wherein only exposed segments of the hairpin crown and legs protruding from the stator core include the target surface with the oleophilic surface treatment.
18. The method of claim 15, wherein the oleophilic surface treatment further includes an ultraviolet ozone treatment applied onto the target surface.
19. The method of claim 15, wherein the oleophilic surface treatment further includes an inorganic compound applied via a chemical deposition treatment onto the target surface.
20. The method of claim 15, further comprising applying a dielectric coating onto the electromagnetic winding, wherein the oleophilic surface treatment including the surface etching with the isotropic pattern is applied onto the dielectric coating.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020] Representative embodiments of this disclosure are shown by way of non-limiting example in the drawings and are described in additional detail below. It should be understood, however, that the novel aspects of this disclosure are not limited to the particular forms illustrated in the above-enumerated drawings. Rather, the disclosure is to cover all modifications, equivalents, combinations, subcombinations, permutations, groupings, and alternatives falling within the scope of this disclosure as encompassed, for instance, by the appended claims.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0021] This disclosure is susceptible of embodiment in many different forms. Representative examples of the disclosure are shown in the drawings and herein described in detail with the understanding that these embodiments are provided as an exemplification of the disclosed principles, not limitations of the broad aspects of the disclosure. To that end, elements and limitations that are described, for example, in the Abstract, Introduction, Summary, Description of the Drawings, and Detailed Description sections, but not explicitly set forth in the claims, should not be incorporated into the claims, singly or collectively, by implication, inference, or otherwise. Moreover, the drawings discussed herein may not be to scale and are provided purely for instructional purposes. Thus, the specific and relative dimensions shown in the Figures are not to be construed as limiting.
[0022] For purposes of the present detailed description, unless specifically disclaimed: the singular includes the plural and vice versa; the words “and” and “or” shall be both conjunctive and disjunctive; the words “any” and “all” shall both mean “any and all”; and the words “including,” “containing,” “comprising,” “having,” and permutations thereof, shall each mean “including without limitation.” Moreover, words of approximation, such as “about,” “almost,” “substantially,” “generally,” “approximately,” and the like, may each be used herein in the sense of “at, near, or nearly at,” or “within 0-5% of,” or “within acceptable manufacturing tolerances,” or any logical combination thereof, for example. Lastly, directional adjectives and adverbs, such as fore, aft, inboard, outboard, starboard, port, vertical, horizontal, upward, downward, front, back, left, right, etc., may be with respect to a motor vehicle, such as a forward driving direction of a motor vehicle, when the vehicle is operatively oriented on a horizontal driving surface.
[0023] Referring now to the drawings, wherein like reference numbers refer to like features throughout the several views, there is shown in
[0024] The representative vehicle powertrain system is shown in
[0025] To propel the hybrid vehicle 10, the transmission 16 is adapted to receive, selectively manipulate, and distribute tractive power received from the engine 12 and motor 14 to the vehicle's final drive system 11, which is represented herein by a driveshaft 15, rear differential 22, and a pair of rear road wheels 20. The power transmission 16, motor 14, and torque converter 18 of
[0026] The ICE assembly 12 operates to propel the vehicle 10 independently of the electric traction motor 14, e.g., in an “engine-only” operating mode, or in cooperation with the motor 14, e.g., in “vehicle-launch” or “motor-boost” operating modes. In the example depicted in
[0027]
[0028] Power transmission 16 may use differential gearing 24 to achieve selectively variable torque and speed ratios between transmission input and output shafts 17 and 19, respectively, e.g., while sending all or a fraction of its power through the variable elements. One form of differential gearing is the epicyclic planetary gear arrangement. Planetary gearing offers the advantage of compactness and different torque and speed ratios among all members of the planetary gearing subset. Traditionally, hydraulically actuated torque establishing devices, such as clutches and brakes (the term “clutch” used to reference both clutches and brakes), are selectively engageable to activate the aforementioned gear elements for establishing desired forward and reverse speed ratios between the transmission's input and output shafts 17, 19. While envisioned as an 8-speed automatic transmission, the power transmission 16 may optionally take on other functionally appropriate configurations, including Continuously Variable Transmission (CVT) architectures, automated-manual transmissions, etc.
[0029] Hydrokinetic torque converter assembly 18 of
[0030]
[0031] With continuing reference to
[0032] Rotor assembly 118 of
[0033] Stator assembly 116 of
[0034] For ease of manufacture, simplified assembly, and increased costs savings, it may be desirable that all of the permanent magnets 120 share an identical, rectangular polyhedron shape. It should be recognized, however, that any one or more or all of the PM bodies may take on innumerable shapes and sizes, including other polyhedral block-type magnets, ring-shaped (annular) magnets, bread-loaf block-type magnets (cross-section with quadrilateral section adjoining semioval section), curved tile magnets, etc. In one non-limiting example, each permanent magnet 120 may have a thickness of about 1.5 mm to 2.5 mm to fit within a slot 130 having complementary dimensions. In at least one embodiment, a total mass of magnet material (i.e., the mass of all magnets 120) used by the electric machine 114 may be about 150 grams to about 250 grams. The permanent magnets 120 of the electric machine 114 may all be fabricated from the same material, such as Neodymium Iron Boron (NdFeB); alternatively, any one or more or all of the magnets 120 may employ different materials, such as Samarium Cobalt (SmCo), Aluminum Nickel Cobalt (AlNiCo), or any combination of rare earth magnet materials.
[0035] Similar to the permanent magnets 120 of
[0036] During operation of the electric machine 114, e.g., in a regenerative-charging mode, the rotor assembly 118 is rotated via the motor shaft while the stator assembly 116 is held relatively stationary. In so doing, the permanent magnets 120 are moved past the multiphase stator windings 134; the magnetic field emitted by the permanent magnets 120 generates an electric current in the windings 134 through electromagnetic induction. This induced electric current may be used to power a load (e.g., recharge traction battery pack 30 of
[0037]
[0038] For maximum cooling efficiency, it is often desirable to direct the largest possible volume and mass of coolant fluid onto a target surface of a component being cooled. Moreover, as heat transfer typically increases linearly with wetted area, it is generally desirable to direct coolant fluid over the largest possible contact area of a target surface of the component being cooled. Presented herein are oleophilic surface coatings and texturizations that are engineered to enhance the cooling efficiency of a direct-contact coolant fluid that is cooling the subject component. These oleophilic surface treatments help to increases surface energy and wetted area of the target surface, which in turn helps to retain the coolant on the target surface with a concomitant increase in coolant mass on the target surface. As used herein, the term “wetted area” may be defined to include the ordinary and customary meaning accorded to it by those of ordinary skill in the art, including a total surface area of a target surface that is immersed in, comes into direct contact with, or otherwise interfaces with a fluid medium. Likewise, the term “oleophilic” may be defined to include the ordinary and customary meaning accorded to it by those of ordinary skill in the art, including an object with a chemical affinity to oil and oil-based substances with a concurrent chemical intolerance or aversion to water.
[0039]
[0040] Disclosed oleophilic surface treatments enlarge the wetted area of its target surface while increasing the mass of the coolant fluid contacting the target surface. Inset within
[0041] Continuing with the discussion of
[0042] Each multiphase stator winding 134—in addition or as an alternative to coating-based treatments—may be treated with an oleophilic surface texturization 150B. The outer surface of the winding 134 or, alternatively, the outer surface of the coating 152 on the winding 134 may be fabricated with a surface etching that exhibits isotropic wetting behavior and oleophilic characteristics when contacted by an oil-based dielectric coolant. The surface etching may be formed by any suitable technique, including an ultraviolet (UV) etching, a plasma etching, a flame etching, and/or an acid etching. Only the target surfaces of the hairpin legs/crown 133, 135 exposed at the ends of the stator core 122 are treated with the dielectric coating 152 and the surface-based surface texturization 150B applied onto the dielectric coating 152. In accord with the illustrated example, the surface etching may be typified by a series of mutually parallel grooves, each of which is recessed into the exposed segments of the hairpin crown 135 and legs 133.
[0043] Aspects of the present disclosure have been described in detail with reference to the illustrated embodiments; those skilled in the art will recognize, however, that many modifications may be made thereto without departing from the scope of the present disclosure. The present disclosure is not limited to the precise construction and compositions disclosed herein; any and all modifications, changes, and variations apparent from the foregoing descriptions are within the scope of the disclosure as defined by the appended claims. Moreover, the present concepts expressly include any and all combinations and subcombinations of the preceding elements and features.