PRODUCTION METHOD FOR A STATOR
20190074754 · 2019-03-07
Assignee
Inventors
- Korbinian Seidel (Mindelheim, DE)
- Ralf Rauscher (Fellheim, DE)
- Günter Dreier (Deisenhausen, DE)
- Simon Fendt (Kirchheim, DE)
- Tobias Wagner (Rott, DE)
- Tobias Haggenmueller (Unterthingau, DE)
- Tobias WEGSCHEIDER (Mindelheim, DE)
Cpc classification
Y10T29/49011
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
International classification
Abstract
The invention relates to a method for the production of a component, of an electric machine, such as, for example, a stator, comprising a wire mat which is made of wire, preferably flat wire, comprising the following steps: aligning the wire, twisting the wire in at least some sections about its longitudinal axis, z-shaped angling of the wire, winding the wire, in particular winding the wire helically onto a carrier, transferring the wire mat thus obtained onto a mounting tool.
Claims
1. A method for manufacturing a stator comprising a wire mat formed from flat wire, comprising the following steps: aligning the flat wire, sectionally twisting the flat wire about the longitudinal axis thereof such that a first untwisted wire area results between two twisted sections.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein: after twisting, performing a sectional Z-shaped angling of the flat wire.
3. The method according to claim 1, wherein: after twisting helical winding up of the flat wire onto a support, and transferring the wire mat so produced onto a mounting tool.
4. The method according to claim 1, comprising: mounting the wire mat in the stator such that a second untwisted wire areas of the wire mat is guided into grooves of the stator, the second untwisted wire areas of different grooves of a flat wire area are connected by an angling and the angling at least partially takes up the first untwisted wire areas.
5. A device for producing a sectionally twisted flat wire for use in a component of an electrical machine, wherein the device comprises at least one first clamping device disposed in the feed direction of the flat wire in front of a twisting device and the twisting device can be tilted by a tilt angle relative to the clamping device about the longitudinal extend of the flat wire.
6. The device according to claim 5, wherein the clamping device and the twisting device are each formed from two interacting jaw parts for temporary clamping of the flat wire between the jaw parts, the clamping device and the twisting device are each formed from two interacting shaping rolls, each of which rotates about an axis of rotation with a tilt angle of 90.
7. A component of a stator, which comprises a plurality of grooves, and the grooves holding second untwisted wire areas of wire winding, wherein the wire winding comprises at least one continuous electrical conductor designed as a flat wire, a second untwisted wire area is placed in different grooves being connected by an angling and the angling at lest partially takes up the first untwisted wire area.
8. The component according to claim 7, wherein the flat wire of a wire winding is inserted into the groove of the stator in such as way that the short cross-sectional side of the flat wire is oriented substantially parallel to the groove depth and that the flat wire which exits the groove is first bent by 30 to 60 about the short cross-sectional side thereof, then is twisted by 90 about the long cross-sectional side thereof in this area of twisting, whereupon a counter-directional twist is provided and then the wire dips into the next groove after being bent by 30 to 60 about the short cross-sectional side.
9. The method for producing the stator of claim 1 comprising a wire mat made up of a plurality of flat wires comprising: arranging the plurality of flat wires in a first sequence, exchanging the positions of the flat wires to form a new, second sequence different from the first sequence.
10. The method according to claim 9, providing a paired exchanging of the positions of the wires for forming a second sequence.
11. The method according to claim 10, wherein prior to the paired exchange of positions of the wires, every second wire is deflected to a separate plane and then crossed over a respective first wire.
12. The method according to claim 9, comprising forming a wire supply into every second wire before, during or after the deflection thereof and the exchange of the sequence is performed before a Z-shaped angling.
13. A device for changing the sequence of a plurality of flat wires arranged side by side wherein the wires are guided in pairs in wire receptacles and each wire receptacle can be rotated about an axis of rotation, the axes being oriented essentially parallel relative to the longitudinal extent of the wires guided in the wire receptacle.
14. A device for changing the sequence of a plurality of flat wires arranged side by side at least one deflection and one crossing station is provided in the device, the deflection station deflecting at least some of the wires to a different wire plane and the crossing station moving some of the wires in a movement at a right angle to the longitudinal extent of the wires such that the sequence of arranged wires changes.
15. A system for manufacturing the wire mat or wire winding of a component of a stator, the system comprising a device for changing the sequence of a plurality of wires arranged side by side, wherein the wires are guided in pairs in wire receptacles and each wire receptacle can be rotated about an axis of rotation, the axes being oriented essentially parallel relative to the longitudinal extent of the wires guided in the wire receptacle as well as a device for manufacturing a flat wire which is twisted in areas according to claim 5.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0041] The invention is shown schematically in the drawing in an exemplary embodiment. Shown are:
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[0061] producing the shaft winding and a rolling machine according to the invention;
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0082] In the figures, the same elements, or elements that correspond with one another, are identified with the same reference signs and are therefore not described again unless it is useful to do so. The disclosures contained in the overall description are logically analogous and transferable to the same parts that have the same reference signs or the same component names. Also, the positional information selected in the description, such as top, bottom, side, etc., refer to the figure directly described and shown and are logically transferable to the new position when a positional change is made. Furthermore, individual features or featural combinations from the various exemplary embodiments shown and described can represent independent, inventive solutions in their own right or solutions according to this invention.
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[0085] Both the clamping device 3 and the twisting device 4 comprise cooperating jaw parts, respectively. In the closed state of these devices, in other words when the wire 5 is held thereby, the edges of the flat wire run parallel to one another and also straight, i.e. parallel to the longitudinal extent of the flat wire 5.
[0086] As soon as the twisting device 4 is pivoted by 90, for example, a first twisting section 101a forms in the wire 5 between the first clamping jaw 3,3a and the twisting device 4, and a second twisting section 101b to also forms after the twisting device 4 and the second clamping jaw 3,3a. The twisted area 18 thus forms between the two twisting sections 101a and 101b. In the twisted area 18, the edges of the flat wire again run straight and parallel to one another, whereas the edges of flat wire 5 extend along a curved or helical line in space in twisting section 101a, 101b.
[0087] The twisting in the second twisting section 101b is opposite to the twisting in the first twisting section 101a, both in the direction of rotation and the angle of rotation (relative to the longitudinal extent of the wire), this second twisting section 101b is also identified and described in this application as being in counter-directional twist.
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[0090] In
[0091] In the sequence of
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[0093] In
[0094] In
[0095] In
[0096] In
[0097] Of course, in addition to the process explained here as being discontinuous, a continuous twisting process is also possible, for example designed with co-moving shaping discs of different groove geometries along the periphery.
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[0099] In the view shown here, the short cross-sectional side of the flat wire 5 is oriented substantially parallel to the groove depth (radially) and the flat wire 5 which exits the groove 70 is first bent about the short cross-sectional side thereof by approximately 30 to 60. Then, a twisting section 101a follows the section twisting the flat wire by 90 about the longitudinal axis thereof. In this view, therefore, the width of the wire 5 narrows. Then, a first untwisted wire area 18 follows which includes angle 72, which is approximately 90. The total area of the flat wire area located outside the groove 70 is called the angling. The arrangement is symmetric relative to angle 72 and the counter-directional twist is implemented in twisting section 101b, whereupon the fiat wire 5 dips into the next groove 70 after a small bend.
[0100] The dashed area C is intended to indicate that the twisting sections 101a and 101b can alternatively also be located in the stator 66.
[0101] The grooves 70 extend over the entire design height of the stator 66. In the lower left area, the installed situation of the fiat wire 5 in the groove is shown schematically.
[0102]
[0103] The arrangement of parallel wires 5 is held fixed in a first clamping jaw 16 and a second clamping jaw 17 which is located at a distance from the first in the feed direction 100 of the wire 5. It is clear that each of the clamping jaws 16,17 shown comprises two cooperating jaw sections which, depending on the positions thereof relative to one another, either hold the wire 5 fixed or release it.
[0104] The arrangement of the ends of the clamping jaws 16,17 relative to one another is such that a twisted area 18 of the wires 5 exists therebetween, the area not being held fixed by a clamping jaw.
[0105] Then, to impress the Z-angling the second clamping jaw 17 is tilted by a tilt motion 19 about a tilting axis which is perpendicular to the wires 5 and perpendicular to the piano of the drawing, wherein the alignment of the second clamping jaw 17 remains parallel to the alignment of the first clamping jaw 16. This means that the wire area held by the second clamping jaw 17 continues to be parallel to the area of the wires 5 held in clamping jaw 16.
[0106] This Z-angling ultimately defines the groove jump which the respective wire 5 overcomes when the wire exits out of the first groove of the stator in the installed state, and then dips back into a second groove at a specific distance removed from this first groove.
[0107] In
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[0109] In addition to the mobile clamping jaw 16, the angling station 47 also comprises a fixed clamping jaw 17, wherein the mobile clamping jaw 16 is located between the fixed clamping jaw 17 and the twisting station 46.
[0110] Strictly speaking, a crossing table guide is provided. The mobile, first clamping jaw 16 and she twisting station 46 are mounted on sled 53 by way of guide track 49, the sled being movable and positionable on a guide track 52, wherein the longitudinal extent of guide track 52 is perpendicular to the longitudinal extent of guide track 49. Fixed clamping jaw 17 is positionally fixed relative to this crossing table guide.
[0111] In the twisting station 46, the wires 5 remain clamped after twisting. Now, the twisting station 46 is moved in the direction of the fixed clamping jaw 17 up to the point of contact, wherein the fixed clamping jaw 17 is not clamping the wires 5 during this time, in other words is open. Then, the fixed clamping jaw 17 is clamped, the twisting station is opened (releasing the wires 5) and pushed back to the initial position according to
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[0113] In the figure sequence according to
[0114] In
[0115] The different wires 5a and 5b are clearly shown in
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[0117] The paired conductor exchange is described best in
[0118] The result of this shift can be seen in
[0119] In the twisted area 18 which is also simultaneously the crossing area 60, the Z-angling 45 is incorporated as well, as is shown in
[0120] At first glance, it appears complicated to make a large proportion of the twisting machine 1 tiltably mounted. However, this provides the advantage that the parallel wires 5 on the right always leave the twisting machine 1 at the same position at the end of the twisting machine 1 (see
[0121] Since wires 5a and 5b are now being guided in different planes, the pivot points thereof are not at the same point for forming the Z-angling. A comparison of the design of the rounding 58 according to
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[0123] The invention also involves a device for carrying out this method.
[0124] In
[0125] The wire winding here comprises twelve parallel wires 5, resulting in the connection areas 67, 68 each having twelve wire ends. The wire winding in its entirety is placed in the stator 66 in three rows, resulting in six bars 71 each being disposed in one groove 70.
[0126] The normal (overwhelmingly) wire arrangement (see
[0127] To improve the efficiency of an electrical machine so constructed, it has already been found that a one-time paired wire exchange or wire switching should be provided in the stator centrally, i.e. approximately at half the wire winding. It is known from the prior art in this regard that the wires should be cut and then re-connected after being re-sorted, for example by way of welding. Such a process is obviously complicated and prone to error, and thus requires an additional insulation step:
[0128] However, in a skillful manner, this wire crossing step or wire exchange can be incorporated into a skillful wire winding production process itself, for which the method steps described above are intended and which lead to a special type of stator 66 for implementing this exchange of lines which does not require the cutting of the wires.
[0129] In the paired wire exchange to be provided centrally, wire A, for example, in turn exits groove 701 but does not then dip back down into groove 707 as usual, but into groove 708 which had been occupied by the second wire B up to that point. Wire B exits groove 702 and then dips back down into groove 707. The dipping process here is into a different, second radial layer than the exiting process occurring in the first radial layer under the condition that the second radial layer has a smaller diameter than the first radial layer.
[0130] The result is that the crossing area 60 is also contained in the twisted area 18, wherein wire A almost completely hides wire 8 in the axial view.
[0131] To improve the electrical properties, a single or also a double wire exchange area, paired in each case, is provided for all twelve wires per stator 66. In particular, the wire exchange area(s) is/are located at the side of the stator opposite to the connection area 67, 68. In particular, the wire exchange area is also located in the middle area of the layers of the wire winding, for example in the third and fourth layer of a total of six layers. In this example with two wire exchange areas, wire exchange areas are located therebetween which have conventional, normal wire arrangements as described above.
[0132] A layer is understood to he the radial position of a wire or bar 71 in groove 70.
[0133] However, the invention is not limited to the embodiment described above. Many such wire exchange areas can be provided per stator. These areas can be exchanged with the conventional, normal wire arrangements described above.
[0134] The figure sequence 37A, 37B, 37C, and 37D shows an alternative embodiment of an exchange station 55. The variant of the exchange station 55 shown here comprises a number of wire receptacles 74, in particular linear here, disposed next to one another, the receptacles holding and guiding the wires 5 in respective pairs. It should be noted that the arrangement of wire receptacles 74 can be widely varied according to the invention, i.e. not limited to the straight, linear arrangement shown here. Conceivable arrangements include those with multiple rows or circular arrangements. The wire receptacles 54 are able to pivot about an axis of rotation which is essentially parallel to the longitudinal extent of the wires being guided in the wire receptacles 54. A total of six wire receptacles 54 are shown, each of which hold two wires 5, but the number of wires guided per wire receptacle is not limited according to the invention. It is also conceivable that the exchange stations described are multiply disposed one after the other in the feed direction, thus making possible any number of wire jumps.
[0135] The twelve wires shown here are numbered from 1-12 individually with Arabic numerals. This numbering makes it very clear how the sequence of wires changes among themselves by the use of the proposed exchange station (see the figure sequence 37A, 37B, 37C and 37D).
[0136] Also, the exchange station 55 comprises two clamping jaws 75, 76 which can be moved toward one another, the jaws having a sawtooth structure and thus fixing the wires 5 therebetween in the clamped situation (see
[0137] The exchange station 55 exchanges the wires in pairs, so the exchange station 55 comprises six wire receptacles 74, each of which can hold a pair of wires. The wire receptacles 74 of the exchange station 55 each have a cylindrical shape with an exterior tooth structure and are located between two tooth racks 77 and 78 which can be moved relative to one another by way of a common central drive unit 73, thereby facilitating a rotating motion of the individual wire receptacles 74 (see
[0138] The movement of the wire receptacles 54 of the exchange station 55 is preferred to occur synchronously and is described by the following table with reference to the figure sequence 37A, 37B, 37C, 37D and figure sequence 39A, 33B and 39C. The respective positions are identified with the circled Arabic numerals 1-4.
TABLE-US-00001 Exchange station Position Figure Wires Rotation 1 37A, 39A held 0 2 37B, 39A free 0 3 37C, 39B free 90 4 37D, 39C free 180
[0139] In
[0140] The principle construction of this machine 21 is described with the aid of
[0141] The overall arrangement of sword 24 and annular support 31 is mounted also rotatably about a central rotating axis 23. The central rotating axis 23 and the sword axis 28 of the sword 24 run in parallel and offset from one another in the application example shown, for example horizontally. The overall arrangement consists of the sword 24, annular support 31 with clamping jaws 32 and guide rods 25, bridge 300 and annular support mating part 301, wherein the clamping jaws 32 can rotate together with the sword 24 relative to the annular support 31 about the sword rotational axis 28. The rotating mount is implemented in the annular support 31 and the annular support mating part 301.
[0142] In the feed direction 100 of the wire arrangement 22 before the sword 24, there is a pushing piece 30 on the bottom side of the wire arrangement 22, the piece being rotatable about a rotating axis 29 and adjustable relative to the wire arrangement 22 from below. The rotating axis 29 of the pressure piece 30 runs parallel to the sword rotating axis 28 and the central rotating axis 23. A connection line between the central rotating axis 23 and the rotating axis 28 of the pressure piece 30 includes a right angle to a connection line between the central rotating axis 23 and the sword rotating axis 28. This angle can in general also lie in a range between 70 and 110, preferably between 80 and 100 within the scope of this disclosure.
[0143] In the entrance area 102, there is a temporary guide shoe 26 in front of the pressure piece 30.
[0144] The image sequence of
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[0152] To this end, the overall arrangement is rotated by 10, 15 or 20 more in the counterclockwise direction (past the horizontal position according to
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[0158] Between the end of the sword 24 and the transfer tool 35, the transfer length 37 is bridged by a transport tool 38 which is indicated in
[0159] In
[0160] The wire mat 27 is rolled onto the transfer tool 35 using a drive unit 34.
[0161] In
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[0163] As seen in section (in
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[0165] The insulating paper 42 can now be pre-positioned either on the transfer tool 35 internally or externally relative to the wire mat (depending on how the transfer tool 35 is designed) or on the pressing tool 45, likewise inside or outside relative to the wire mat 27. It is also possible to cut the insulating paper 42 to length, which is continuous when inserted prior to installing the wire mat in the stator. Continuous here means continuous relative to the dimension/number of grooves of the stator.
[0166] When the wire mat 27 is installed in the stator, the insulating paper is located in the grooves of the stator between the wire mat and the stator, either as a continuous design or cut into segments.
[0167] The wire mat 27 is installed into the stator using the pressing tool 45. In this installed situation, the insulating paper Is then located on the outside of the wire mat 27, If necessary already cut to length in this state, and positioned using suitable holders.
[0168] It is also possible for the wire mat 27 to be wound directly onto the pressing tool 45; the embodiment according to
[0169] The attractive feature of the arrangement is particularly that the insulating paper is applied onto the pressing tool 45 and pre-mounted prior to installation of the wire mat in the stator after the wire mat 27 is already located on the pressing tool 45.
[0170] The claims now submitted with the application and those submitted later are not prejudiced against further attainment of further protections.
[0171] If upon closer inspection here, in particular inspection of the related prior art, it is found that one or another feature is indeed favorable for the purpose of the invention, but not decidedly important, of course a formulation will be sought that no longer contains such a feature, in particular in the independent claim. Such a subcombination is also covered by the disclosure of this application.
[0172] It should be further noted that the designs described in the various embodiments and shown in the figures, and the variants of the invention can be combined together in any way. As such, individual or multiple features can be exchanged with one another arbitrarily. These featural combinations are also disclosed.
[0173] The antecedent references made in the dependent claims refer to the further development of the object of the independent claim through the features of the respective dependent claim. However, these are not understood to obviate independent, objective protection for the features of the referring dependent claims.
[0174] Features that were only disclosed in the description or individual features from claims that encompass a number of features can be incorporated into the independent claim or claims at any time as being significant to the invention for delineation against the prior art, especially if such features were mentioned in connection with other features or if they achieve especially favorable results in connection with other features.