Electric machine with phase change material for a turbomachine starter/generator

11264854 · 2022-03-01

Assignee

Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

An electric machine includes a stator and a rotor configured to be driven in rotation in relation to one another. The rotor includes a plurality of permanent magnets, and the stator further includes a magnetic circuit including poles extending toward the rotor. The machine includes windings of conducting elements around each pole and at least one heat sink arranged inside a conducting element and/or between the conducting elements. The heat sink includes a phase change material.

Claims

1. An electric machine comprising: a stator and a rotor configured to be driven in rotation relative to each other, the rotor comprising a plurality of permanent magnets, the stator comprising a magnetic circuit comprising poles extending towards the rotor; windings of conductive elements around each pole; and at least one heat sink disposed inside a conductive element, the heat sink comprising a phase change material, wherein the phase change material of the heat sink is contained in a sealed metal shell.

2. The electric machine according to claim 1, wherein the winding is a set of hollow cylindrical wires.

3. The electric machine according to claim 1, wherein the winding is a hollow bar winding.

4. The electric machine according to claim 3, wherein the winding is formed in one piece.

5. The electric machine according to claim 4, wherein the winding is obtained according to an additive manufacturing method.

6. The electric machine according to claim 1, wherein the phase change material is capable of changing physical state between the solid state and the liquid state in a given temperature range.

7. The electric machine according to claim 1, wherein the phase change material is in a form of salts or in a form of organic or eutectic compounds having solid-liquid phase change temperatures, adapted according to constraints of use of the electric machine, between 100° C. and 300° C.

8. The electric machine according to claim 1, wherein the heat sink comprises, in addition to the phase change material, at least one element which is electrically conductive so as not to disturb circulation of magnetic field lines in said machine.

9. The electric machine according to claim 1, wherein the shell is electrically conductive or not, and thermally conductive.

10. A starter-generator comprising an electric machine according to claim 1.

11. An aircraft engine comprising a starter-generator according to claim 10.

12. An alternator comprising an electric machine according to claim 1.

13. A pump comprising an electric machine according to claim 1.

Description

PRESENTATION OF THE FIGURES

(1) Other features, objects and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following description, which is purely illustrative and non-limiting, and which should be read with reference to the appended drawings wherein:

(2) FIG. 1 illustrates a schematic sectional view of an electric machine according to one embodiment of the invention;

(3) FIGS. 2a and 2b illustrate views of conductive elements of an electric machine according to the invention;

(4) FIG. 3a, 3b, 3c illustrate sectional views of wires constituting the winding of an electric machine according to the invention;

(5) FIGS. 4 and 5 illustrate a view of a hollow bar winding, according to two variants, of an electric machine according to the invention;

(6) FIG. 6 illustrates curves of temperature rise within the notch of the stator containing the winding and the phase change material, as a function of the duration of the thermal stress (i.e., transient phases of the electric machine related to startup of the aircraft engine.

(7) In all the figures, the similar elements bear identical references.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

(8) In the following, the term “phase change material” means a material capable of changing physical state in a given temperature range and which will absorb a large amount of heat energy from its surrounding environment to switch from the solid to liquid state and which restores part of the heat energy when the material cools down while switching from the liquid state to the solid state. These phase change materials are salts which may be composed of nitrate or hydroxide. The change from solid to liquid phase of the material is made at a temperature exceeding one hundred degrees Celsius up to a temperature in the order of 300° C.

(9) FIG. 1 illustrates an electric machine according to one embodiment of the invention. Such an electric machine is in particular used in an aircraft engine.

(10) The electric machine of FIG. 1 is a permanent magnet machine and comprises a stator 1 and a rotor 2.

(11) The stator 1 comprises a magnetic circuit 3. The magnetic circuit 3 comprises a peripheral portion 6 of generally cylindrical shape and poles 7 extending towards the rotor 2 and the stator 1 comprises an electric circuit 4 consisting of a winding of N conductive elements 41 around each pole 7 of the magnetic circuit 3. In this figure, the conductive elements 41 have a cylindrical section but other sections may be envisaged.

(12) The rotor 2 carries permanent magnets 5. In FIG. 1, the electric machine comprises six permanent magnets 5 but a different number can be envisaged.

(13) This type of electric machine topology makes it possible to operate either in generator mode (i.e., the rotor 2 rotates thanks to the application of an external mechanical torque and the variation of magnetic flux in the electric circuit 4 induces an electric current) or in engine mode (i.e., the power supply of the electric circuit 4 generates a magnetic flux through the magnetic circuit 3 and the interaction with the magnetic flux from the magnets 5 generates a rotation of the rotor 2 therefore a mechanical torque to the outside).

(14) In order to promote the dissipation of the heat of the electric machine in particular during the transient phases presented above, there are provided hollow conductive elements for the winding and at least one heat sink 8 housed inside at least one conductive element and/or disposed between the conductive elements (see FIGS. 2a and 2b illustrating heat sinks between the conductive elements 41 with or without heat sink 8 inside the conductive elements).

(15) In particular, in the example of FIG. 2a, cylindrically-shaped heat sinks 8 extend in the spaces arranged between conductive elements 41, which themselves have a shape of cylindrical wires. The heat sinks 8 extend along the conductive elements 41, along a direction of extension substantially parallel to those of the conductive elements.

(16) As illustrated in FIGS. 3a, 3b, 3c, a heat sink 8, 8′, 8″ consists of a shell 81, 81′, 81″ containing a phase change material 82. The shell 81, 81′, 81″ is sealed to maintain and confine the material in the liquid state.

(17) In a non-limiting manner, in FIG. 3a, the heat sink is cylindrical to fit conductive wires of the winding which is also cylindrical. Of course, other shapes are possible and depend on the shape of the conductive element: like a diamond in FIG. 3b, like a star in FIG. 3c.

(18) Depending on the application, and more particularly within the context of the high-power electric motors for the more electrical applications for aircraft, the stator winding (i.e., of the stator: electric circuit) can be advantageously of topology called “bar winding”; that is to say the coils of cylindrical wires are replaced by massive, homogeneous and rigid winding in order to have a better filling rate of the notches (i.e., equal to the effective copper surface/total notch surface ratio) and therefore to have the possibility either of increasing electric power of the electric machine for the same mass, or of minimizing the copper mass for a constant power requirement.

(19) The problem of heat dissipation is in this case much greater than with a winding consisting of N cylindrical wires, because when these bar windings are powered by alternating currents of relatively high frequencies beyond the kHz, Joule losses are increased by the “skin effect” (i.e., reduction of the apparent resistance of the conductor because the electric currents are more and more concentrated at the periphery during an increase in the power frequency).

(20) FIG. 4 illustrates a bar winding 50 consisting of two solid conductors 50a, 50b plated together. The shape of the two conductors 50a, 50b is such that the two conductors 50a, 50b define a housing 51 allowing to house thereinside a heat sink (not represented). In this figure, the housing 51 has a “star” shape but may have another shape.

(21) Advantageously, as illustrated in FIG. 5, the bar winding is formed in one piece and consists of one or several bars. In addition, in this figure, the bar winding comprises a housing having a “diamond” shape.

(22) Advantageously, the bar winding is formed in one piece or composed of a set of unit bars and is obtained by means of an additive manufacturing method (i.e. SLM “Selective Laser Melting” type or the like . . . ) which allows making complex shapes inside the winding, promoting the optimization of thermal transfers (i.e., exchange surface increased between the phase change materials and the conductor), the housing 51 therefore contains a heat sink and therefore allows limiting the rise in temperature and thus ensuring a high level of reliability (i.e., strength of the winding insulator in particular).

(23) In the case where a heat sink is provided inside the conductive elements, the shell and the phase change material having to disturb as little as possible the circulation of the field lines in the magnetic circuit, the shell is itself metallic and is a good electrical conductor.

(24) Still in this case, a phase change material being by definition an electrical insulator, the heat sink may comprise, in addition to the phase change material, conductive elements such as carbon nanotubes to also allow the free circulation of field lines in the magnetic circuit of the machine.

(25) However, in the case where a heat sink is provided between the conductive elements, the shell is insulating so as not to contribute to the transmission of the electric currents.

(26) The phase change material is in the form of salts or in the form of organic or eutectic compounds having solid-liquid phase change temperatures greater than about a hundred degrees Celsius, typically between 100° C. and 300° C. preferably. It may be, for example, nitrates or hydroxides (LiNO.sub.3, NaNO.sub.3, Li.sub.2CO.sub.3, . . . ), preferably with graphite.

(27) FIG. 6 illustrates the rise in temperature as a function of the duration: the curve A corresponds to the rise in the temperature of the winding without heat sink; the curves in dotted lines correspond to the rise in the temperature of the heat sink; the curves in solid lines correspond to the rise in the temperature of the winding with heat sink.

(28) The curve network corresponds to several thermal resistances named “Rth” in FIG. 6. This resistance represents the efficiency of the thermal transfers from one medium to another. The lower the value of Rth, the more the heat transfers take place efficiently. In FIG. 6, from A to C, the thermal resistance Rth increases.

(29) It is observed that the temperature reached without a heat sink can be above 200° C., which results for example in the degradation of the insulator of the winding. By adding heat sinks and by taking into consideration an optimized thermal resistance between the heat sink and the support, the maximum temperature reached on the sensitive component remains below its limit temperature.

(30) In a complementary manner, in addition to housing the heat sink that the phase change material represents, inside the bar winding, heat sinks can be disposed at other locations of the electric machine as described in the document FR 3 012 698 in the name of the Applicant.

(31) An electric machine with a stator winding has been described here. Of course, the invention also applies to an electric machine with a rotor winding, that for example the electric machine called wound-rotor synchronous electric machine constitutes (i.e., in this case the permanent magnets are advantageously replaced by an electromagnet to generate the magnetic flux).

(32) The invention also relates to a direct current or alternating current machine such as a starter-generator, an alternator, a pump comprising an electric machine as described above.

(33) And the invention also relates to an engine of an aircraft, such as a helicopter, comprising an electric machine according to the invention.