Title :
Corrosion Model of a Rotor-Bar-Under-Fault Progress in Induction Motors
Author :
Jung, Jee-Hoon ; Kwon, Bong-Hwan
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electron. & Electr. Eng., Pohang Univ. of Sci. & Technol.
Abstract :
A corrosion model of a rotor-bar-under-fault progress in induction motors is presented for simulations of induction machines with a rotor-bar fault. A rotor-bar model is derived from the electromagnetic theory. A leakage inductance of the corrosion model of a rotor bar is calculated from the relations of magnetic energy, inductance, current, and magnetic-field intensity by Ampere´s law. The leakage inductance and resistance of a rotor bar varies when the rotor bar rusts. In addition, the skin effect is considered to establish the practical model of a rotor bar. Consequently, the variation of resistance and leakage inductance has an effect on the results of motor dynamic simulations and experiments, since a corrosive rotor bar is one model of a rotor bar in fault progress. The results of simulations and experiments are shown to be in good agreement with the spectral analysis of stator-current harmonics. From the proposed corrosion model, motor current signature analysis can detect the fault of a corrosive rotor bar as the progress of a rotor-bar fault. Computer simulations were achieved using the MATLAB Simulink with an electrical model of a 3.7-kW, three-phase, and squirrel-cage induction motor. Also, experimental results were obtained by real induction motors, which had the same specification as the electrical model used in the simulation
Keywords :
corrosion; digital simulation; fault simulation; mathematics computing; rotors; skin effect; squirrel cage motors; 3.7 kW; Ampere law; MATLAB Simulink; computer simulation; corrosion model; current harmonics; electromagnetic theory; fault detection; leakage inductance; motor current signature analysis; rotor bar; rust; skin effect; spectral analysis; squirrel-cage induction motor; Analytical models; Computational modeling; Corrosion; Electromagnetic modeling; Inductance; Induction machines; Induction motors; Mathematical model; Rotors; Skin effect; Corrosion model; induction motor; motor current signature analysis (MCSA); motor diagnosis; motor modeling; rotor-bar fault;
Journal_Title :
Industrial Electronics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TIE.2006.885133