ROTOR OF A SYNCHRONOUS RELUCTANCE MACHINE
20180083500 · 2018-03-22
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B22D19/0054
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H02K19/14
ELECTRICITY
B22D19/0081
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
H02K1/24
ELECTRICITY
H02K19/14
ELECTRICITY
B22D19/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A rotor designed as a reluctance rotor includes a laminated core which defines an axis and has end faces. The laminated core includes sheets which are at least partly axially layered, with the sheets having flux-conducting portions and flux-blocking portions to form a specified number of poles. A cage made of electric conductors runs in a substantially axial direction and is connected at the end faces of the laminated core by short-circuit rings. The conductors are located in a radially outer region of at least some of the flux-blocking portions arranged one behind another substantially in the axial direction, with the conductors defining conductor bars formed by conductive material at a quantity determinative to define an internal diameter of the conductor bars.
Claims
1.-10. (canceled)
11. A rotor designed as a reluctance rotor, comprising: a laminated core defining an axis and having end faces, said laminated core having sheets which are at least partly axially layered, said sheets having flux-conducting portions and flux-blocking portions to form a specified number of poles; and a cage made of electric conductors running in a substantially axial direction and connected at the end faces of the laminated core by short-circuit rings, said conductors being located in a radially outer region of at least some of the flux-blocking portions arranged one behind another substantially in the axial direction, with the conductors defining conductor bars formed by conductive material at a quantity determinative to define an internal diameter of the conductor bars.
12. The rotor of claim 11, constructed as a synchronous reluctance machine which is configured for operation directly on an electric supply network.
13. The rotor of claim 11, wherein the flux-blocking portions of the sheets are non-magnetic.
14. The rotor of claim 11, wherein the poles of the rotor are axially parallel, beveled or skewed in the axial direction.
15. The rotor of claim 11, wherein the laminated core has laminated-core assemblies arranged in axial staggered relationship, with the flux-blocking portions of the laminated-core assemblies being rotated about a specified angle such as to enable an axial design of an axially continuous electrical conductor.
16. The rotor of claim 11, further comprising a short-circuit ring shell configured to surround at least one of the short-circuit rings.
17. A method for producing a rotor, said method comprising: punching sheets with a specified sheet geometry; axially packaging the sheets so as to form a laminated core; casting a specified amount of an electrically conductive non-magnetic material into a specified number of flux-blocking portions of the sheets while simultaneously rotating and/or tumbling the laminated core in an auxiliary device; spinning the laminated core during the casting and/or thereafter around its axis at a speed sufficient to arrange the electrically conductive non-magnetic material at radially external edges of the flux-blocking portions; allowing the electrically conductive non-magnetic material at the radially external edges of the flux-blocking portions to cool down to thereby form electrically conductive bars to electrically connect short-circuit rings to one another at end faces of the laminated core.
18. The method of claim 17, wherein the flux-blocking portions are non-magnetic.
19. The method of claim 17, further comprising providing the specified amount of electrically conductive non-magnetic material in a short-circuit ring shell which is open radially inwards and ends axially with the laminated core at the radially external edges.
20. The method of claim 17, further comprising preheating the laminated core before casting the conductive non-magnetic material.
21. A synchronous reluctance machine, comprising a rotor, said rotor comprising a laminated core defining an axis and having end faces, said laminated core having sheets which are at least partly axially layered, said sheets having flux-conducting portions and flux-blocking portions to form a specified number of poles, and a cage made of electric conductors running in a substantially axial direction and connected at the end faces of the laminated core by short-circuit rings, said conductors being located in a radially outer region of at least some of the flux-blocking portions arranged one behind another substantially in the axial direction, with the conductors defining conductor bars formed by conductive material at a quantity determinative to define an internal diameter of the conductor bars.
22. The synchronous reluctance machine of claim 21, constructed for operation directly on an electric supply network.
23. The synchronous reluctance machine of claim 21, wherein the flux-blocking portions of the sheets are non-magnetic.
24. The synchronous reluctance machine of claim 21, wherein the poles of the rotor are axially parallel, beveled or skewed in the axial direction.
25. The synchronous reluctance machine of claim 21, wherein the laminated core has laminated-core assemblies arranged in axial staggered relationship, with the flux-blocking portions of the laminated-core assemblies being rotated about a specified angle such as to enable an axial design of an axially continuous electrical conductor.
26. The synchronous reluctance machine of claim 21, wherein the rotor includes a short-circuit ring shell configured to surround at least one of the short-circuit rings.
27. The synchronous reluctance machine of claim 21 for use as individual or group drives.
28. The synchronous reluctance machine of claim 21 for use in fans or compressor drives.
Description
[0036] The invention and further advantageous embodiments of the invention are described in more detail with reference to some exemplary embodiments; the diagrams show:
[0037]
[0038]
[0039]
[0040]
[0041]
[0042]
[0043]
[0044] The stator 2 is in a housing 6 which in turn is supported on the shaft 8 by means of a bearing 9. To ensure sufficient cooling, a fan 12 is shown in principle which enables an exchange of air and thereby an exchange of heat of the reluctance machine 1 by way of indicated axial coolant channels 11 in the rotor 10 or coolant channels 5 in the stator 2.
[0045]
[0046] However, the short-circuit ring 14 can also be arranged at a distance from the end face of the rotor 10 by providing intermediate elements which are arranged axially between the short-circuit ring 14 and the end face of the laminated core 13. These electrically non-conductive intermediate elements are removed after production or remain on the rotor 10.
[0047]
[0048] In addition to the previous figures,
[0049] In a cross section of the rotor 10,
[0050] By means of rotation 22 and/or tumbling of the device and thus of the laminated core 13 of the rotor 10, the fluid electrically conductive material is now distributed on the external radial edges of the flux-blocking portions 16. The cross sections of the conductor bars thus obtained are each specified by the amount of conductive material used, which in turn forms an internal diameter 21 of the conductor bars.
[0051] In addition, after the conductor material in the flux-blocking portions 16 has cooled, additionalsimilar or identicalfiller can be put into the short-circuit ring shell 23 to achieve the desired cross section and/or the electrical conductivity of the short-circuit ring 14.
[0052] Such synchronous reluctance machines 1 are used in particular for fan or compressor drives, but also for group drives of varied application.