• DocumentCode
    151361
  • Title

    A methodology for predicting the thermal behaviour of modular-wound electrical machines

  • Author

    Baker, J.L. ; Wrobel, Rafal ; Drury, D. ; Mellor, Phil H.

  • Author_Institution
    Electr. Energy Manage. Group, Univ. of Bristol, Bristol, UK
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    14-18 Sept. 2014
  • Firstpage
    5176
  • Lastpage
    5183
  • Abstract
    A methodology is proposed whereby performing a series of tests on a stator/winding subassembly can estimate the thermal envelope of a modular-wound single-layer machine topology. Concentrated windings offer many advantages, such as reduced manufacturing costs, improved thermal performance and readily lend themselves to fault-tolerant designs. Single-layer modular windings have inherent magnetic, thermal and physical isolation, which means they are applicable to a segmented stator design, which further reduces the manufacturing cost. Commonly used design methods rely on prototyping and testing a complete machine to inform decisions on how the next revision is to be improved. Such an approach can provide valuable insight into machine design nuances; however, it can be costly and time consuming. A benefit of modular single-layer wound machines is that the overall winding loss can be extrapolated from testing a single stator/winding module/section. The experimental approach has been supplemented with two- and three-dimensional (2D and 3D) finite element analyses (FEAs). The FEAs have been used to predict both the electromagnetic and thermal performance of representative stator/winding variants. The methodology has been employed to give some insight into the thermal behaviour of a fractional-slot, high-speed traction motor. Initial results have confirmed that the interface thermal resistance between stator/winding/housing sub-regions is the main limiting factor for the conductive heat dissipation. Furthermore, impact of conductor placement within the stator slot on the winding loss at ac operation is investigated. Two winding variants are considered: `standard´ and `slot-wedge´ showing that the later winding design provides improved machine performance over entire torque-speed envelope. The theoretical findings have been validated experimentally showing good correlation.
  • Keywords
    electric machines; finite element analysis; machine windings; stators; traction motors; FEA; concentrated windings; conductive heat dissipation; electromagnetic performance; fault-tolerant designs; fractional-slot high-speed traction motor; magnetic isolation; manufacturing costs reduction; modular single-layer wound machines; modular-wound electrical machines; modular-wound single-layer machine topology; physical isolation; segmented stator design; stator slot; stator-winding subassembly; stator-winding-housing subregions; thermal behaviour; thermal isolation; thermal performance; torque-speed envelope; Conductors; Iron; Materials; Standards; Stator windings; Windings;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Energy Conversion Congress and Exposition (ECCE), 2014 IEEE
  • Conference_Location
    Pittsburgh, PA
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ECCE.2014.6954111
  • Filename
    6954111