Methods for designing and manufacturing transformers
10090105 ยท 2018-10-02
Assignee
Inventors
- Jack Aaron (Lake Forest, CA, US)
- Herb Shapiro (Laguna Niguel, CA, US)
- Robert Johnson (Bellflower, CA, US)
Cpc classification
G06F2111/20
PHYSICS
G06F30/398
PHYSICS
Y02E40/70
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
G06F2111/06
PHYSICS
Y04S10/50
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
Y10T29/49071
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
H01F41/064
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
Disclosed is an electrical transformer for improved transformer power capacity and efficiency designed by the application of disclosed design considerations. One embodiment design consideration is a method to configure power transformer windings wherein the minimum distance of the primary windings from the winding axis/core center is greater (the primary windings are more distal) from the winding axis than the minimum distance of the secondary windings, which are wound around the minimum interior core diameter. This design consideration is extended from single bobbin transformer designs to split bobbin designs, with the requisite distal increase of the primary windings (from the core axis) geometrically provided by an enlarged core bobbin center leg (axial) dimension beneath the primary winding window. Another disclosed design consideration is to fix the primary winding length relationship to the core weight for given transformer specifications in accordance with the disclosed unexpected experimental results and formula.
Claims
1. A method for manufacturing a transformer comprising: configuring a magnetic core of a specified magnetic material defining a geometry with a space for a primary and a secondary winding, setting an initial primary winding length at a first length based on conventional transformer design criteria; determining a first length and gauge of said secondary winding according to a ratio of said specified primary voltage and said specified secondary voltage multiplied by a number of turns determined by the length of said primary winding length and optimized to utilize said space, adjusting iteratively said primary winding length without lengthening said primary winding length and iteratively adjusting first said secondary winding length and said primary winding length to reestablish said ratio; winding said secondary winding about a bobbin which engages said core; winding said primary winding about said bobbin outside of said secondary winding.
2. The method for manufacturing a transformer as in claim 1, wherein said winding of said secondary winding and the winding of said primary winding is about a split bobbin which laterally spaces the primary and secondary windings, wherein said primary winding minimal axial distance from an axial center of said selected core segment is greater than said secondary winding minimal axial distance from said axial center of said selected core segment.
3. The method as in claim 1 further comprising: adjusting the secondary windings to compensate for a voltage loss.
4. The method for manufacturing a transformer as in claim 1, wherein the transformer is a step-down transformer.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(11) Disclosed are several embodiments including various transformer configurations and design considerations which when followed result in improved power capacity over the conventional design approaches for transformers.
(12) Conventional single bobbin transformer designs based on a E-I configuration of core laminations are represented by a set of transformer cores from Tempel Manufacturing, identified by Tempel catalog part numbers as EI-X where X identifies the core geometry according to Tempel specifications. Based upon empirical and empirically derived results, the primary winding lengths for optimal power efficiency in step-down configurations of transformers based upon these core lamination geometries was determined. As a generalized and unexpected result, the length of the primary winding was found to be the driving factor for determining the optimal transformer configuration. Design considerations based upon this driving factor were then considered and optimal configurations are disclosed. As discussed below, certain design considerations apply to both step-up and step-down configurations.
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(14) For this embodiment, once the primary length is determined, the secondary winding length may be determined according to the ratio of input and output voltages equivalency to input and output winding turns. As described below, for various embodiments when the primary winding is located an increased axial distance from the core center, if the length of the primary remains constant, the number of turns around the core decreases. Since the number of primary winding turns decreases for a given configuration, the number of secondary winding turns must decrease in order to maintain the input to output ratio of turns (as specified by the input and output voltages).
(15) For this embodiment, the specified input voltage is 120 volts and the specified output voltage is 24 volts. Core laminations for this embodiment are specified as grade M 19 according to industry standards for the core material characteristics known as the AISI Gradeper the American Iron and Steel Institute (AISI) Designation. The maximum temperature (the target temperature after 2 hours of operation) for this embodiment is 200 F., and the material for the windings is specified to be copper. Input and output or primary and secondary voltages operate at a specified frequency, in these embodiments 60 Hz.
(16) Other embodiments for determining the primary winding length may be readily derived from the optimized relationship from
(17) In other embodiments in accordance with the optimized relationship from
(18) Single bobbin transformer designs are commonly configured with the primary and secondary windings wound around a single core segment. For step down transformers, the primary or high voltage winding is typically wound closer to the core segment center axis, with the secondary, or low voltage winding wound outside the primary winding. By empirical and empirically derived analysis, the unexpected result of improved power capacity was obtained for transformer configurations wherein the primary winding (high voltage) is wound outside the secondary winding (low voltage).
(19) For the specific configuration of the embodiment shown in
(20) Locating the primary winding further from the core axial center of a comparable transformer configuration provides the unexpected utility of increased power capacity. For such embodiments when the primary winding is located at increased axial distance from the core center, if the length of the primary winding remains constant, the number of turns around the core decreases. Since the number of primary winding turns decreases for a given configuration, the number of secondary winding turns must decrease in order to maintain the input to output ratio of turns (as specified by the input and output voltages). When the number of secondary windings is decreased, the length of the secondary winding consequently decreases, and the amount of space occupied by the primary and secondary windings in the core window decreases. The increased available space for the windings in the window may then be utilized by larger gauge windings, increasing the power capacity. This design consideration is extended to other configurations for the transformer as disclosed herein, but should not be construed to be limited to these disclosed embodiments as other will be apparent to those skilled in the art.
(21) Split bobbin transformer designs are commonly configured with a core geometry that isolates the primary and secondary windings onto adjacent bobbins surrounding the same core segment. In conventionally designed split bobbins with this configuration, the core center leg segment, which extends through both bobbins, has a given cross section dimension, diameter, or width. In an embodiment of the invention, split bobbin transformers with both bobbins surrounding the same core segment, the core is configured with multiple such widths, which effectively increases the primary winding minimum axial distance from the core center as compared to the secondary winding minimum winding axial distance.
(22) For the specific configuration of the embodiment shown in
(23) Various core lamination configurations for split bobbins of E-E and E-I type core geometries are shown in
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(26) Next the iterative process for experimentally optimizing the winding lengths is initiated winding the estimated secondary winding around the given core segment, and then winding the optimal primary winding length around the secondary winding accordingly 505. Then output or secondary voltage is check against the specification requirements 506, and if not within specification, the secondary winding length is modified 507 and the transformer is rewound and tested again 508. If the secondary winding does not cover the winding window width 509, the gauge for the secondary winding is increased 510 to cover the window width and the transformer is rewound and retested 511. The last step for the iterative testing is to check that the primary winding covers the available winding window 512 and if available space remains, the gauge for the primary winding is increased 513, the transformer is rewound and retested. The process continues until the optimal winding lengths and wire gauges is determined 515.
(27) Various alternative embodiments are available for the application of aspects of the invention, including increasing the axial distance from the core center for the primary winding as compared with the secondary winding for step-down (and step-up) transformers, including additional single and split bobbin laminated core geometries, as well as toroidal transformer cores.
(28) The implications of the present invention's numerous potential configurations and embodiments are far reaching. The unexpected finding of improved power capacity and efficiency for transformers designed according to the various embodiments of the invention allow transformers to operate at lower temperatures, save energy, or operate at the same efficiency of existing conventional designs made with copper windings with the use of aluminum windings, reducing both the cost of the transformer and the weight.
(29) Although the invention has been described in terms of the preferred and exemplary embodiments, one skilled in the art will recognize many embodiments not mentioned here by the disclosed of the included invention embodiments and the included drawings. Interpretation should not be limited to those specific embodiments disclosed in this specification.
(30) The Commissioner is hereby authorized to charge any fees which may be required with respect to this application to Deposit Account No. 505949.