Rotational electric machine rotor
11258341 · 2022-02-22
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H02K24/00
ELECTRICITY
Y10T29/49009
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
H02K11/21
ELECTRICITY
H02K1/276
ELECTRICITY
Y10T29/53143
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
H02K2213/03
ELECTRICITY
International classification
B23P19/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H02K11/21
ELECTRICITY
H02K7/00
ELECTRICITY
H02K24/00
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A method of manufacturing a rotational electric machine rotor includes: forming a rotor shaft having a non-circular sectional outer shape; forming a rotor core by stacking a predetermined number of magnetic body thin plates each including a center hole having a non-circular shape corresponding to the non-circular sectional outer shape of the rotor shaft; and forming a protruding part for fixing the rotor core and the rotor shaft to each other by inserting the rotor shaft into the non-circular center hole of the rotor core and squashing the rotor shaft extending out of an axial-direction end face of the rotor core by using a predetermined swaging jig to expand the rotor shaft outward beyond an outer periphery of the non-circular section along the axial-direction end face of the rotor core.
Claims
1. A rotational electric machine rotor comprising: a rotor shaft having a non-circular sectional outer shape; a rotor core in which a predetermined number of magnetic body thin plates each including a center hole having a non-circular shape corresponding to the non-circular sectional outer shape of the rotor shaft are stacked; and a protruding part with which the rotor core and the rotor shaft are fixed to each other while the rotor shaft is expanded outward beyond an outer periphery of the non-circular section along an axial-direction end face of the rotor core by squashing the rotor shaft extending out of the axial-direction end face of the rotor core with the rotor shaft being inserted into the non-circular center hole of the rotor core.
2. A rotational electric machine rotor comprising: a rotor shaft having a non-circular sectional outer shape; a rotor core in which a predetermined number of magnetic body thin plates each including a center hole having a non-circular shape corresponding to the non-circular sectional outer shape of the rotor shaft are stacked; a metal ring including a center hole having a non-circular shape corresponding to the non-circular sectional outer shape of the rotor shaft; and a protruding part with which the metal ring and the rotor shaft are fixed to each other while the rotor shaft extending out of an axial-direction end face of the metal ring is squashed to expand the rotor shaft outward beyond an outer periphery of the non-circular section along the axial-direction end face of the metal ring with the rotor shaft being inserted into the non-circular center hole of the rotor core and the metal ring being fitted to the non-circular sectional outer shape of the rotor shaft, wherein the rotor core and the rotor shaft are fixed to each other through the metal ring.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
(1) Embodiments of the present disclosure will be described by reference to the following figures, wherein:
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DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
(28) Embodiments of the present disclosure will be described below in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings. In the following description, a rotor shaft has an octagonal sectional outer shape, and a rotor core includes an octagonal center hole, but this configuration is merely exemplary for description. In place of octagonal shapes, the rotor shaft may have a non-circular sectional outer shape, and the rotor core may include a non-circular center hole. Dimensions, shapes, materials, the number of stacked magnetic body thin plates, the number of magnetic poles of a rotor, the number of permanent magnets per magnetic pole, and the like described below are merely exemplary for description, and may be changed as appropriate in accordance with, for example, specifications of a rotational electric machine rotor. Hereinafter, identical elements in all drawings are denoted by identical reference signs, and duplicate description thereof will be omitted.
(29)
(30) The rotor 10 includes a rotor shaft 20, a rotor core 40, and a resolver 70 attached to the rotor shaft 20.
(31) The rotor shaft 20 includes a through-hole along the axial direction, to which an output shaft (not illustrated) of the rotor 10 is fixed. The output shaft is a shaft, both ends of which in the axial direction are rotatably supported by bearings and that rotates cooperatively with the stator (not illustrated) when the rotor 10 is included in a rotational electric machine. Description of the through-hole of the rotor shaft 20 will be omitted below unless otherwise mentioned. The rotor shaft 20 includes, from the one side toward the other side in the axial direction, a circular shaft 22 having a diameter D0, an octagonal shaft 24 including a side circumscribed with a circle having the diameter D0, a circular shaft 26 having the diameter D0, an octagonal shaft 28 including a side circumscribed with a circle having a diameter D1, and a circular shaft 30 having the diameter D1. The octagonal shaft 24 has a length H.sub.S in the axial direction, and the octagonal shaft 28 has a length H.sub.R in the axial direction. The length H.sub.R is set to be larger than the thickness of the resolver 70 in the axial direction. The rotor shaft 20 may be a steel material fabricated in a predetermined shape.
(32) The rotor core 40 is a stacked body in which a predetermined number of magnetic body thin plates 42 are stacked in the axial direction. The rotor core 40 includes a center hole 44 having an octagonal shape corresponding to an octagonal sectional outer shape of the octagonal shaft 24. The rotor core 40 includes a plurality of magnet through-holes 50, and a permanent magnet 60 inserted into the magnet through-holes 50 and fixed therein. In the rotor core 40, the stack of the magnetic body thin plates 42 has a length H.sub.C in the axial direction, which is set to be shorter than the length H.sub.S of the octagonal shaft 24 of the rotor shaft 20 in the axial direction.
(33) Each magnetic body thin plate 42 is an electromagnetic steel plate as a kind of silicon steel plate. In the rotor core 40, the center hole 44 and the magnet through-holes 50 extend and penetrate in a direction parallel to the axial direction. In other words, the rotor core 40 is formed by stacking the predetermined number of magnetic body thin plates 42 while the center hole 44 and the magnet through-holes 50 are positioned to extend and penetrate in the axial direction, inserting the permanent magnet 60 into the penetrating magnet through-holes 50, and fixing the permanent magnet 60 therein.
(34) The permanent magnets 60 are a plurality of magnets disposed at predetermined places on the outer peripheral side of the rotor core 40 to form magnetic poles of the rotor 10. The permanent magnets 60 generate torque cooperatively with a rotational magnetic field generated by performing predetermined energization to the winding wire coil wound around the stator (not illustrated) of the rotational electric machine, and accordingly, the rotor 10 rotates. Such a permanent magnet 60 is a rare-earth magnet such as a neodymium magnet containing neodymium, iron, and boron as primary components, or a samarium cobalt magnet containing samarium and cobalt as primary components. Alternatively, the permanent magnet 60 may be, for example, a ferrite magnet.
(35) The resolver 70 is a rotation angle sensor used for operation control of the rotational electric machine, and includes one primary winding wire provided to the rotor shaft 20, and two secondary winding wires provided to the stator. The resolver 70 in
(36) The rotor shaft 20 and the rotor core 40 are fixed to each other by using protruding parts 80 and 82, and the rotor shaft 20 and the resolver 70 are fixed to each other by using a protruding part 84. Detailed contents of formation of the protruding parts 80, 82, and 84 and fixation by using the protruding parts 80, 82, and 84 will be described later.
(37) The following describes, with reference to
(38) In
(39) The formation of the rotor shaft 20 starts with preparation of a cylindrical material (S10).
(40) The octagonal shaft 24 has an octagonal sectional outer shape including a side circumscribed with a circle having the diameter D0 of the cylindrical material 8. The octagonal shape includes an apex part on the outer peripheral side of the circular shafts 22 and 26 having the diameter D0. Only the apex part of the octagonal shape is different between the diameter D0 of the cylindrical material 8 and the outer shape of the octagonal shape, and thus the octagonal shaft 24 can be formed with a smaller fabrication load as compared to large plastic deformation. The octagonal shaft 28 satisfies D1<D0 in comparison with the outer shape of the cylindrical material 8 having the diameter D0, but the length H.sub.R in the axial direction is significantly shorter than the length H.sub.S of the octagonal shaft 24 in the axial direction. Thus, a fabrication load when the octagonal shaft 24 and the octagonal shaft 28 are simultaneously shaped is substantially uniform in the axial direction.
(41) The rotor shaft 20 has a significantly complicated shape including the circular shafts 22, 26, and 30 and the octagonal shafts 24 and 28, but is integrally shaped by cold extrusion forging. Accordingly, the material cost, the fabrication man-hours, and the like can be reduced as compared to a case in which the same outer shape is performed by another fabrication method such as machining fabrication.
(42) The formation of the rotor core 40 proceeds separately from the formation of the rotor shaft 20. As shown in
(43) As illustrated in
(44) After the stacked body is formed, permanent magnets 62, 63, 64, and 65 are inserted into the respective magnet through-holes 52, 53, 54, and 55 (S26), and the magnet through-holes 52, 53, 54, and 55 are filled with resin adhesive for fixing the permanent magnets 62, 63, 64, and 65. Thereafter, the resin adhesive is subjected to appropriate curing processing, and accordingly, the rotor core 40 described with reference to
(45)
(46) When the formation of the rotor shaft 20 (S14) and the formation of the rotor core 40 (S28) are completed, the rotor shaft 20 is inserted into the center hole 44 of the rotor core 40 (S30). The center hole 44 of the rotor core 40 is an opening hole having an octagonal sectional shape orthogonal to the axial direction, and the octagonal shaft 24 of the rotor shaft 20 is inserted into the octagonal center hole 44.
(47) An octagon is an exemplary non-circular shape for preventing rotation of the rotor shaft 20 and the rotor core 40 relative to each other, and the rotation prevention is achieved at long sides of the octagon. To reliably achieve the rotation prevention, a smaller gap is preferably present between the octagonal center hole 44 of the rotor core 40 and the octagonal sectional outer shape of the octagonal shaft 24. In other words, the rotation prevention is preferably achieved by stop fitting, with which substantially no gap is present, or interference fitting, with which the octagonal sectional outer shape of the octagonal shaft 24 is slightly larger than the octagonal center hole 44 of the rotor core 40. In this example, the interference fit is applied, and the insertion at S30 is effectively insertion through fitting by pressing. In the insertion through fitting by pressing, the material of the rotor shaft 20 or the rotor core 40 plastically deforms to form burrs due to the stress of fitting by pressing. To reduce the stress of fitting by pressing and receive the material that flows through the plastic deformation, roundness is provided to the apex part of the octagonal shaft 24 and the corresponding apex part of the octagon of the center hole 44 of the rotor core 40 so that a gap 90 is formed as the difference between the curvature radii of the roundness.
(48) When the octagonal shaft 24 of the rotor shaft 20 is inserted into the octagonal center hole 44 of the rotor core 40, end parts of the octagonal shaft 24 protrude out of an axial-direction end face 46 of the rotor core 40 on the one side and an axial-direction end face 48 thereof on the other side, respectively, due to the difference between the axial-direction lengths H.sub.S and H.sub.C. The end part of the octagonal shaft 24 extending out of the axial-direction end face 46 of the rotor core 40 on the one side is denoted by 24a, and the end part of the octagonal shaft 24 extending out of the axial-direction end face 48 of the rotor core 40 on the other side is denoted by 24b. The fixation between the rotor shaft 20 and the rotor core 40 (S32) is performed by forming the protruding part 80 at the end part 24a and forming the protruding part 82 at the end part 24b.
(49)
(50) The protruding part 80 is formed through a procedure as follows. First, the positions of the rotor core 40 and the rotor shaft 20 in the axial direction are set and held by using a hold jig (not illustrated) so that the end part 24a of the octagonal shaft 24 of the rotor shaft 20 protrudes by a predetermined length from the axial-direction end face 46 of the rotor core 40 on the one side. The predetermined length of the end part 24a is set experimentally or through simulation in advance based on specification of fixing force necessary between the rotor core 40 and the rotor shaft 20.
(51) While the rotor core 40 and the rotor shaft 20 are held so that the end part 24a has the predetermined length, a predetermined swaging jig 100 is disposed relative to an apex part 24c of the octagon, at which the protruding part 80 is formed. The swaging jig 100 is a swaging punch that applies predetermined pressing force to a swaging place to fix two components by swaging. The following describes an example in which the axial-direction end face 46 of the rotor core 40 on the one side and the end part 24a of the octagonal shaft 24 of the rotor shaft 20 are fixed by swaging using the swaging jig 100. The swaging fixation is performed by squashing the apex part 24c of the octagon of the end part 24a of the octagonal shaft 24 toward the axial-direction end face 46 of the rotor core 40 on the one side. The protruding part 80 is formed by squashing the apex part 24c of the octagon, and the axial-direction end face 46 of the rotor core 40 on the one side and the end part 24a of the octagonal shaft 24 of the rotor shaft 20 are fixed to each other through the protruding part 80 by swaging.
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(54) The swaging surfaces 102a and 102b are each tilted at a predetermined acute angle θ2 relative to a V-V direction orthogonal to the axial-direction end face 46 of the rotor core 40 on the one side.
(55) A height dimension h of the swaging surfaces 102a and 102b of the swaging jigs 100a and 100b in the axial direction is set to be shorter than the height dimension of the end part 24a in the axial direction. In the example illustrated in
(56) The pair of the swaging jigs 100a and 100b are moved on the surface parallel to the axial-direction end face 46 in directions illustrated with arrows parallel to the T-T direction, thereby reducing the interval between the swaging surfaces 102a and 102b. Then, when the swaging surfaces 102a and 102b reach both sides of the apex part 24c of the octagon at the end part 24a, pressing forces (F/2) in the circumferential direction are applied to the swaging jigs 100a and 100b, respectively, in facing directions.
(57) In the above description, the protruding part 80 is formed at the single apex part 24c of the octagon of the end part 24a, but the protruding part 80 is formed at each of the other apex parts 24c of the end part 24a in a similar manner. Specifically, the rotor shaft 20 is inserted into the octagonal center hole of the rotor core 40, and the rotor shaft 20 extending out of the axial-direction end face 46 of the rotor core 40 on the one side is squashed by using the predetermined swaging jigs 100a and 100b. Then, the rotor shaft 20 is expanded outward beyond the outer periphery of the octagonal section along the axial-direction end face 46 of the rotor core 40 on the one side, thereby forming the protruding part 80 for fixing the axial-direction end face 46 of the rotor core 40 on the one side and the rotor shaft 20 to each other.
(58) In this manner, as illustrated in
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(60) The rotor core 40 is fixed to the rotor shaft 20 at both axial-direction end faces through the protruding parts 82 formed in this manner and the protruding parts 80 described with reference to
(61) As illustrated in
(62) Subsequently, the apex part of the end part 28b is plastically deformed by using a predetermined pair of resolver swaging jigs to form the protruding part 84 on the upper surface 72 of the resolver 70. The predetermined pair of resolver swaging jigs are substantially the same as the swaging jigs 100a and 100b used for the formation of the protruding parts 80 and 82, but the height dimension h of the swaging surfaces 102a and 102b is changed as needed in accordance with the height of the end part 28b in the axial direction. When predetermined pressing forces (F′/2) are applied to the pair of resolver swaging jigs, respectively, the apex part of the end part 28b plastically deforms to form the protruding part 84 on the upper surface 72 of the resolver 70. The resolver 70 is fixed to the rotor shaft 20 through the protruding part 84.
(63) As illustrated in
(64) In the above-described formation of the protruding parts 80, 82, and 84, the direction of the pressing force F is aligned with the circumferential direction, and the direction of material extrusion at the octagonal shafts 24 and 28 is aligned with the radial direction and the circumferential direction. This arrangement is merely exemplary for description. The direction of the pressing force F may be aligned with the radial direction and the circumferential direction in addition to the axial direction, and the direction of material extrusion may be the axial direction and the radial direction.
(65) In a first method, the direction of the pressing force F is aligned with the circumferential direction, and the direction of material extrusion is aligned with the radial direction and the circumferential direction. The first method is the same as a method used in the formation of the protruding parts 80, 82, and 84, which is described with reference to
(66) In a second method, the direction of the pressing force F is aligned with the radial direction, and the direction of material extrusion is aligned with the radial direction and the circumferential direction. In the second method, as in the first method, there is no constraint in the axial direction and thus no restriction on the length of end parts of each octagonal shaft. Accordingly, the rotor shaft 20 can omit the circular shaft and have an octagonal shape across the total length in the axial direction.
(67) In a third method, the direction of the pressing force F is aligned with the radial direction, a primary direction of material extrusion is aligned with the axial direction, and a secondary direction of material extrusion is aligned with the radial direction and the circumferential direction. In the third method, as in the first method and the second method, there is no constraint in the axial direction and thus no restriction on the length of end parts of each octagonal shaft. Accordingly, the rotor shaft 20 can omit the circular shaft and have an octagonal shape across the total length in the axial direction.
(68) In a fourth method, the direction of the pressing force F is aligned with the axial direction, the primary direction of material extrusion is aligned with the axial direction, and the secondary direction of material extrusion is aligned with the radial direction and the circumferential direction. In the fourth method, there is restriction on the length of end parts of each octagonal shaft.
(69) In
(70) In the above description, the rotor shaft 20 and the rotor core 40 are fixed to each other by directly performing the swaging processing between each of the end parts 24a, 24b, and 28b of the octagonal shafts 24 and 28 of the rotor shaft 20 and the corresponding one of the axial-direction end face 46 of the rotor core 40 on the one side and the axial-direction end face 48 thereof on the other side. Instead, a metal ring applicable to the swaging processing may be used, and the swaging processing may be performed between the metal ring and the rotor shaft 20 to fix the rotor shaft 20 and the rotor core 40 to each other through the metal ring.
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(73) Although the octagonal shaft 24 of the rotor shaft 20 has the length H.sub.S in the axial direction, the octagonal shaft 25 of the rotor shaft 21 has a length H.sub.S′ in the axial direction. The length H.sub.S′ is longer than the length H.sub.S by a thickness 2t.sub.r as the sum of the thickness t.sub.r of the metal ring 110a and the thickness t.sub.r of the metal ring 110b. In other words, the length H.sub.S′ is set to be H.sub.S+2t.sub.r.
(74) Through this setting, an end part 25a extending out of the metal ring 110a on the one side of the octagonal shaft 25 in the axial direction has an axial-direction length the same as that of the end part 24a of the rotor shaft 20. Similarly, an end part 25b extending out of the metal ring 110b on the other side of the octagonal shaft 25 in the axial direction has an axial-direction length the same as that of the end part 24b of the rotor shaft 20. Thus, the pair of the swaging jigs 100a and 100b used to form the protruding parts 80 and 82 in the rotor shaft 20 can be used to form a protruding part 86 at the end part 25a and form a protruding part 88 at the end part 25b.
(75) The protruding parts 86 and 88 sandwich both end faces of the rotor core 40 through the metal rings 110a and 110b, and accordingly, indirectly fix the rotor shaft 21 and the rotor core 40. The axial force of this fixation in the rotor 12 is expected to be smaller than the axial force of the rotor 10 in which the rotor shaft 20 and the rotor core 40 are directly fixed to each other through the protruding parts 80 and 82. To avoid this, when the protruding parts 86 and 88 are formed, a predetermined pressure is applied between the axial-direction end face 46 of the rotor core 40 on the one side and the axial-direction end face 48 on the other side to reduce a gap between the plurality of magnetic body thin plates 42 and the like so that H.sub.S′ is correctly set to be H.sub.S+2t.sub.r.
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(77) In the method of manufacturing the rotor 12, after the rotor shaft 21 is inserted into the rotor core 40 (S30), the metal rings 110a and 110b are disposed (S40). The metal ring 110a is disposed on the one side of the octagonal shaft 25 of the rotor shaft 21 in the axial direction, and the metal ring 110b is disposed on the other side of the octagonal shaft 25 in the axial direction. The disposition is performed by inserting one end side and the other end side of the octagonal shaft 25 of the rotor shaft 21 into the metal rings 110a and 110b. The insertion is performed through fitting by pressing. Subsequently, a pressure is applied between both axial-direction ends of the rotor core 40 (S42). Through the pressure application, a gap between the plurality of magnetic body thin plates 42 and the like can be reduced so that the relation between the length H.sub.S′ of the octagonal shaft 25 in the axial direction and the length H.sub.S of the octagonal shaft 25 of the rotor 10 in
(78) In the above description, the rotor shaft 20 includes the octagonal shaft 24, and the rotor core 40 includes the center hole 44 as an opening having an octagonal shape corresponding to the octagonal sectional outer shape of the octagonal shaft 24. This configuration is merely exemplary for description of means for preventing rotation of the rotor shaft 20 and the rotor core 40 relative to each other. Instead of octagonal shapes, the rotor shaft 20 may have a non-circular sectional outer shape, and the rotor core 40 may include a non-circular center hole.
(79)
(80) In the above description, the protruding parts 82, 84, 86, and 88 are each formed at an apex part of an octagon. An apex part of an octagon is located on the outer peripheral side of a circle inscribed with the octagon. For example, the protruding parts 82 and 84 are formed on the outer peripheral side of the circular shafts 22 and 26 having the diameter D0. In other words, in the rotor shaft 20 having an octagonal outer shape, positions at which the protruding parts 82 and 84 are formed each include a position farthest from the barycenter position of the section of the rotor shaft 20. Similarly, in a rotor shaft having a non-circular sectional outer shape other than an octagon, a position at which a protruding part is formed includes a position farthest from the barycenter position of a non-circular section of a rotor shaft. In the hexagon 120 illustrated in
(81) In the above description, the rotor core 40 is of an embedded magnet type in which the permanent magnets 60 are disposed in the plurality of respective magnet through-holes 50 disposed in the circumferential direction. Instead, the rotor core 40 may be of a bonded magnet type in which the plurality of permanent magnets 60 are bonded along the outer peripheral surface of the rotor core 40. Alternatively, the rotor core 40 may be of an anisotropic reluctance type in which each magnetic body thin plate 42 is provided with a plurality of slots to form anisotropy of magnetoresistance without using permanent magnets.
(82)
(83) The rotor 130 includes a rotor shaft 140, a rotor core 160, and the resolver 70. The rotor shaft 140 includes an axis body part 142 having a circular section and holding the rotor core 40, a plurality of large diameter parts 144, 146, and 148 having outer diameters different from each other, and a small diameter part 150 fitted to the center hole of the resolver 70. The axis body part 142 includes a male screw part 152 formed on the one side in the axial direction, and a key groove 154 used to prevent rotation relative to the rotor core 40.
(84) The rotor core 160 includes a plurality of magnetic body thin plates 162, the plurality of magnet through-holes 50, and the plurality of permanent magnets 60, and also includes a center hole 164 in which the axis body part 142 of the rotor shaft 140 is inserted. The rotor core 160 further includes a stack swaging part 166 connecting the plurality of magnetic body thin plates 162 to one another. The rotor core 160 further includes end plates 170 and 172 disposed on both axial-direction ends of the rotor core 160 and used for, for example, magnetic force shielding and scattering prevention of the permanent magnets 60 disposed in the magnet through-holes 50.
(85) A nut 180 is a fastening member that sandwiches the rotor core 160 with the large diameter part 144, is meshed with the male screw part 152 formed at the axis body part 142 of the rotor shaft 140, and fixes the rotor core 160 to the rotor shaft 140. A washer 182 is a spacer disposed between the nut 180 and the end plate 170 to obtain fastening force. A resolver ring 184 is a fixation ring that sandwiches the resolver 70 with the large diameter part 148 and fixes the resolver 70.
(86)
(87) In a procedure related to formation of the rotor shaft 140, a cylindrical material is prepared (S10), and machining fabrication (S50) is performed after forging and annealing to form an outer shape including the plurality of large diameter parts 144, 146, and 148 and the small diameter part 150 described with reference to
(88) In the procedure of forming the rotor core 160, each magnetic body thin plate 162 is formed (S20), and then the plurality of magnetic body thin plates 162 are stacked by positioning the center hole 164, the magnet through-holes 50, and the outer shape thereof (S22). Then, stack swaging processing is performed to swage and fix the plurality of magnetic body thin plates 162 to each other (S60), thereby forming a stacked body (S24). Subsequently, the permanent magnets 60 are disposed in the plurality of respective magnet through-holes 50 (S26). The plurality of magnet through-holes 50 and the plurality of permanent magnets 60 are the same as those described with reference to
(89) In the procedure of forming the rotor 130 from the rotor core 160 and the rotor shaft 140, first, the rotor shaft 140 is inserted into the rotor core 160 (S30). Then, key insertion is performed by using the key groove 154 of the rotor shaft 140 to prevent rotation of the rotor shaft 140 and the rotor core 160 relative to each other (S70). Subsequently, the axial-direction end face of the rotor core 160 on the other side is pressed against the axial-direction end face of the large diameter part 144 on the one side, and the washer 182 is fitted to the axis body part 142 of the rotor shaft 140 and disposed, and then, the nut 180 is meshed with and fastened to the male screw part 152 of the axis body part 142 (S72). Accordingly, the rotor shaft 140 and the rotor core 160 are fixed to each other (S32). Subsequently, the resolver 70 is fitted to the small diameter part 150 and disposed on the axial-direction end face of the large diameter part 148 on the other side, and then the resolver ring 184 is disposed on the axial-direction end face of the resolver 70 on the other side (S74). In this state, while the resolver 70 is sandwiched between the large diameter part 148 and the resolver ring 184, the resolver ring 184 is fixed to the small diameter part 150 of the rotor shaft 140 by using appropriate fastening means (S34). Thereafter, the magnetization processing (S36) of the permanent magnet 60 is performed. When all of these processing procedures are completed, the rotor 130 illustrated in
(90) Comparison between
REFERENCE SIGNS LIST
(91) 8 cylindrical material 10, 12, 130 (rotational electric machine) rotor 20, 21, 140 rotor shaft 22, 26, 30 circular shaft 24, 25, 28 octagonal shaft 24a, 24b, 25a, 25b, 28b end part 40, 160 rotor core 42, 162 magnetic body thin plate 43, 44, 112, 164 center hole 46, 48 axial-direction end face 50, 52, 53, 54, 55 magnet through-hole 56 through-hole 60, 62, 63, 64, 65 permanent magnet 68 magnetic pole 70 resolver 72 upper surface 80, 82, 84, 86, 88 protruding part 90 gap 100a, 100b swaging jig 102a, 102b swaging surface 104a, 104b attachment hole 110, 110a, 110b metal ring 120 hexagon 122 serration 124 substantially elliptical shape 142 axis body part 144, 146, 148 large diameter part 150 small diameter part 152 male screw part 154 key groove 166 stack swaging part 170, 172 end plate 180 nut 182 washer 184 resolver ring