Chapter 6
Chapter 6
Chapter 6
1 Introduction
Virtually all electric machines, and all practical electric machines employ some form of rotating
or alternating field/current system to produce torque. While it is possible to produce a “true
DC” machine (e.g. the “Faraday Disk”), for practical reasons such machines have not reached
application and are not likely to. In the machines we have examined so far the machine is operated
from an alternating voltage source. Indeed, this is one of the principal reasons for employing AC
in power systems.
The first electric machines employed a mechanical switch, in the form of a carbon brush/commutator
system, to produce this rotating field. While the widespread use of power electronics is making
“brushless” motors (which are really just synchronous machines) more popular and common, com-
mutator machines are still economically very important. They are relatively cheap, particularly in
small sizes, and they tend to be rugged and simple.
You will find commutator machines in a very wide range of applications. The starting motor
on all automobiles is a series-connected commutator machine. Many of the other electric motors in
automobiles, from the little motors that drive the outside rear-view mirrors to the motors that drive
the windshield wipers are permanent magnet commutator machines. The large traction motors
that drive subway trains and diesel/electric locomotives are DC commutator machines (although
induction machines are making some inroads here). And many common appliances use “universal”
motors: series connected commutator motors adapted to AC.
1.1 Geometry:
Stator Yoke
Field Poles
Rotor Ω
Armature Winding
Field Winding
1
A schematic picture (“cartoon”) of a commutator type machine is shown in 1. The armature
of this machine is on the rotor (this is the part that handles the electric power), and current is fed
to the armature through the brush/commutator system. The interaction magnetic field is provided
(in this picture) by a field winding. A permanent magnet field is applicable here, and we will have
quite a lot more to say about such arrangements below.
Now, if we assume that the interaction magnetic flux density averages Br , and if there are Ca
conductors underneath the poles at any one time, and if there are m parallel paths, then we may
estimate torque produced by the machine by:
Ca
Te = RℓBr Ia
m
where R and ℓ are rotor radius and length, respectively and Ia is terminal current. Note that Ca
is not necessarily the total number of conductors, but rather the total number of active conductors
(that is, conductors underneath the pole and therefore subject to the interaction field). Now, if we
note Nf as the number of field turns per pole, the interaction field is just:
Nf If
Br = µ 0
g
leading to a simple expression for torque in terms of the two currents:
Te = GIa If
Now, note that the armature conductors are moving through the magnetic field produced by
the stator (field) poles, and we can ascribe to them an axially directed electric field:
Ez = −RΩBr
2
r r
B dl
r
v
Figure 2: Motion of a contour through a magnetic field produces flux change and electric field in
the moving contour
If the armature conductors are arranged as described above, with Ca conductors in m parallel
paths underneath the poles and with a mean active radial magnetic field of Br , we can compute a
voltage induced in the stator conductors:
Ca
Eb = RΩBr
m
Note that this is only the voltage induced by motion of the armature conductors through the
field and does not include brush or conductor resistance. If we include the expression for effective
magnetic field, we find that the back voltage is:
Eb = GΩIf
which leads us to the conclusion that newton-meters per ampere squared equals volt seconds per
ampere. This stands to reason if we examine electric power into the interaction and mechanical
power out:
Pem = Eb Ia = Te Ω
Now, a more complete model of this machine would include the effects of armature, brush and
lead resistance, so that in steady state operation:
Va = Ra Ia + GΩIf
Now, consider this machine with its armatucre connected to a voltage source and its field
operating at steady current, so that:
Va − GΩIf
Ia =
Ra
Then torque, electric power in and mechanical power out are:
Va − GΩIf
Te = GIf
Ra
Va − GΩIf
Pe = Va
Ra
Va − GΩIf
Pm = GΩIf
Ra
Now, note that these expressions define three regimes defined by rotational speed. The two
“break points” are at zero speed and at the “zero torque” speed:
Va
Ω0 =
GIf
3
Ra
+
+
Va GΩI f
-
-
Electrical
Mechanical
For 0 < Ω < Ω0 , the machine is a motor: electric power in and mechanical power out are both
positive. For higher speeds: Ω0 < Ω , the machine is a generator, with electrical power in and
mechanical power out being both negative. For speeds less than zero, electrical power in is positive
and mechanical power out is negative. There are few needs to operate machines in this regime,
short of some types of “plugging” or emergency braking in tractions systems.
1.2 Hookups:
We have just described a mode of operation of a commutator machine usually called “separately
excited”, in which field and armature circuits are controlled separately. This mode of operation is
used in some types of traction applications in which the flexibility it affords is useful. For example,
some traction applications apply voltage control in the form of “choppers” to separately excited
machines.
Note that the “zero torque speed” is dependent on armature voltage and on field current.
For high torque at low speed one would operate the machine with high field current and enough
armature voltage to produce the requisite current. As speed increases so does back voltage, and
field current may need to be reduced. At any steady operating speed there will be some optimum
mix of field and armature currents to produced the required torque. For braking one could (and this
is often done) re-connect the armature of the machine to a braking resistor and turn the machine
into a generator. Braking torque is controlled by field current.
A subset of the separately excited machine is the shunt connection in which armature and field
are supplied by the same source, in parallel. This connection is not widely used any more: it does
4
Ra
GΩ I f
+
V
-
not yield any meaningful ability to control speed and the simple applications to which it used to
be used are handled by induction machines.
Another connection which is still widely used is the series connection, in which the field winding
is sized so that its normal operating current level is the same as normal armature current and the
two windings are connected in series. Then:
V
Ia = If =
Ra + Rf + GΩ
5
A variation on this class of machine is the very widely used “universal motor”, in which the stator
and rotor (field and armature) of the machine are both constructed to operate with alternating
current. This means that both the field and armature are made of laminated steel. Note that such
a machine will operate just as it would have with direct current, with the only addition being the
reactive impedance of the two windings. Working with RMS quantities:
V
I =
Ra + Rf + GΩ + jω (La + Lf )
G|V |2
Te =
(Ra + Rf + GΩ)2 + (ωLa + ωLf )2
where ω is the electrical supply frequency. Note that, unlike other AC machines, the universal
motor is not limited in speed to the supply frequency. Appliance motors typically turn substantially
faster than the 3,600 RPM limit of AC motors, and this is one reason why they are so widely used:
with the high rotational speeds it is possible to produce more power per unit mass (and more power
per dollar).
1.3 Commutator:
The commutator is what makes this machine work. The brush and commutator system of this
class of motor involves quite a lot of “black art”, and there are still aspects of how they work
which are poorly understood. However, we can make some attempt to show a bit of what the
brush/commutator system does.
To start, take a look at the picture shown in Figure 7. Represented are a pair of poles (shaded)
and a pair of brushes. Conductors make a group of closed paths. Current from one of the brushes
takes two parallel paths. You can follow one of those paths around a closed loop, under each of
the two poles (remember that the poles are of opposite polarity) to the opposite brush. Open
commutator segments (most of them) do not carry current into or out of the machine.
A commutation interval occurs when the current in one coil must be reversed. (See Figure 8
In the simplest form this involves a brush bridging between two commutator segments, shorting
out that coil. The resistance of the brush causes the current to decay. When the brush leaves the
leading segment the current in the leading coil must reverse.
We will not attempt to fully understand the commutation process in this type of machine, but
we can note a few things. Resistive commutation is the process relied upon in small machines.
6
Figure 8: Commutator at Commutation
When the current in one coil must be reversed (because it has left one pole and is approaching the
other), that coil is shorted by one of the brushes. The brush resistance causes the current in the
coil to decay. Then the leading commutator segment leaves the brush the current MUST reverse
(the trailing coil has current in it), and there is often sparking.
1.4 Commutation
Stator Yoke
Field Poles
Rotor Ω
Armature Winding
Field Winding
Commutation
Interpoles
In larger machines the commutation process would involve too much sparking, which causes
brush wear, noxious gases (ozone) that promote corrosion, etc. In these cases it is common to use
separate commutation interpoles. These are separate, usually narrow or seemingly vestigal pole
pieces which carry armature current. They are arranged in such a way that the flux from the
interpole drives current in the commutated coil in the proper direction. Remember that the coil
being commutated is located physically between the active poles and the interpole is therefore in the
right spot to influence commutation. The interpole is wound with armature current (it is in series
with the main brushes). It is easy to see that the interpole must have a flux density proportional
to the current to be commutated. Since the speed with which the coil must be commutated is
proportional to rotational velocity and so is the voltage induced by the interpole, if the right
7
number of turns are put around the interpole, commutation can be made to be quite accurate.
1.5 Compensation:
Field Poles
Pole−Face
Compensation
Winding
Rotor Ω
Armature Winding
Field Winding
Commutation
Interpoles
The analysis of commutator machines often ignores armature reaction flux. Obviously these
machines DO produce armature reaction flux, in quadrature with the main field. Normally, com-
mutator machines are highly salient and the quadrature inductance is lower than direct-axis in-
ductance, but there is still flux produced. This adds to the flux density on one side of the main
poles (possibly leading to saturation). To make the flux distribution more uniform and therefore
to avoid this saturation effect of quadrature axis flux, it is common in very highly rated machines
to wind compensation coils: essentially mirror-images of the armature coils, but this time wound
in slots in the surface of the field poles. Such coils will have the same number of ampere-turns as
the armature. Normally they have the same number of turns and are connected directly in series
with the armature brushes. What they do is to almost exactly cancel the flux produced by the
armature coils, leaving only the main flux produced by the field winding. One might think of these
coils as providing a reaction torque, produced in exactly the same way as main torque is produced
by the armature. A cartoon view of this is shown in Figure 10.
8
force densities which permit vastly larger air gaps than conventional field windings, and this in turn
permits design flexibility which can result in even better electric machines.
These advantages come not without cost. Permanent magnet materials have special character-
istics which must be taken into account in machine design. The highest performance permanent
magnets are brittle ceramics, some have chemical sensitivities, all are sensitive to high temperatures,
most have sensitivity to demagnetizing fields, and proper machine design requires understanding
the materials well. These notes will not make you into seasoned permanent magnet machine de-
signers. They are, however, an attempt to get started, to develop some of the mathematical skills
required and to point to some of the important issues involved.
1
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
Tesla
0
-400 -300 -200 -100-0.2 0 100 200 300 400
-0.4
-0.6
-0.8
-1
Kilo Am peres/Meter
Permanent magnet materials are, at core, just materials with very wide hysteresis loops. Fig-
ure 11 is an example of something close to one of the more popular ceramic magnet materials. Note
that this hysteresis loop is so wide that you can see the effect of the permeability of free space.
It is usual to display only part of the magnetic characteristic of permanent magnet materials
(see Figure 12), the third quadrant of this picture, because that is where the material is normally
operated. Note a few important characteristics of what is called the “demagnetization curve”. The
remanent flux density Br , is the value of flux density in the material with zero magnetic field H.
The coercive field Hc is the magnetic field at which the flux density falls to zero. Shown also on
the curve are loci of constant energy product. This quantity is unfortunately named, for although
it has the same units as energy it represents real energy in only a fairly general sense. It is the
product of flux density and field intensity. As you already know, there are three commonly used
systems of units for magnetic field quantities, and these systems are often mixed up to form very
confusing units. We will try to stay away from the English system of units in which field intensity
H is measured in amperes per inch and flux density B in lines (actually, usually kilolines) per
square inch. In CGS units flux density is measured in Gauss (or kilogauss) and magnetic field
intensity in Oersteds. And in SI the unit of flux density is the Tesla, which is one Weber per square
meter, and the unit of field intensity is the Ampere per meter. Of these, only the last one, A/m is
obvious. A Weber is a volt-second. A Gauss is 10−4 Tesla. And, finally, an Oersted is that field
9
Demagnetization Curve
0.5
0.45
0.4 Br
Energy Product Loci
0.35
0.3
B, Tesla
0.25
0.2
0.15
0.1
Hc 0.05
0
-250 -200 -150 -100 -50 0
H, kA/m
intensity required to produce one Gauss in the permeability of free space. Since the permeability
of free space µ0 = 4π × 10−7 Hy/m, this means that one Oe is about 79.58 A/m. Commonly, the
energy product is cited in MgOe (Mega-Gauss-Oersted)s. One MgOe is equal to 7.958kJ/m3 . A
commonly used measure for the performance of a permanent magnet material is the maximum
energy product, the largest value of this product along the demagnetization curve.
To start to understand how these materials might be useful, consider the situation shown in
Figure 13: A piece of permanent magnet material is wrapped in a magnetic circuit with effectively
infinite permeability. Assume the thing has some (finite) depth in the direction you can’t see. Now,
if we take Ampere’s law around the path described by the dotted line,
I
~ · d~ℓ = 0
H
10
Permanent Magnet
Permanent Magnet
hm
This defines the unit permeance, essentially the ratio of the permeance facing the permanent
magnet to the internal permeance of the magnet. The problem can be, if necessary, solved graph-
ically, since the relationship between Bm and Hm is inherently nonlinear, as shown in Figure 15
“load line” analysis of a nonlinear electronic circuit.
Now, one more ‘cut’ at this problem. Note that, at least for fairly large unit permeances the
slope of the magnet characteristic is fairly constant. In fact, for most of the permanent magnets
used in machines (the one important exception is the now rarely used ALNICO alloy magnet), it
is generally acceptable to approximate the demagnitization curve with:
B ~m + M
~ m = µm H ~0
Here, the magnetization M0 is fixed. Further, for almost all of the practical magnet materials
the magnet permeability is nearly the same as that of free space (µm ≈ µ0 ). With that in mind,
consider the problem shown in Figure 16, in which the magnet fills only part of a gap in a magnetic
circuit. But here the magnet and gap areas are essentially the same. We could regard the magnet
as simply a magnetization.
11
− µ 0℘u
Permanent Magnet
In the region of the magnet and the air-gap, Ampere’s Law and Gauss’ law can be written:
∇×H ~ = 0
∇ · µ0 ~m + M
H ~0 = 0
~g = 0
∇ · µ0 H
Now, if in the magnet the magnetization is constant, the divergence of H in the magnet is zero.
Because there is no current here, H is curl free, so that everywhere:
~ = −∇ψ
H
∇2 ψ = 0
That is, magnetic field can be expressed as the gradient of a scalar potential which satisfies
Laplace’s equation. It is also pretty clear that, if we can assign the scalar potential to have a value
of zero anywhere on the surface of the magnetic circuit it will be zero over all of the magnetic
circuit (i.e. at both the top of the gap and the bottom of the magnet). Finally, note that we can’t
actually assume that the scalar potential satisfies Laplace’s equation everywhere in the problem.
In fact the divergence of M is zero everywhere except at the top surface of the magnet where it is
singular! In fact, we can note that there is a (some would say fictitious) magnetic charge density:
~
ρm = −∇ · M
12
At the top of the magnet there is a discontinuous change in M and so the equivalent of a
magnetic surface charge. Using Hg to note the magnetic field above the magnet and Hm to note
the magnetic field in the magnet,
µ0 Hg = µ0 (Hm + M0 )
σm = M0 = Hg − Hm
and then to satisfy the potential condition, if hm is the height of the magnet and g is the gap:
gHg = −hm Hm
Solving,
hm
Hg = M0
hm + g
Now, one more observation could be made. We would produce the same air-gap flux density
if we regard the permanent magnet as having a surface current around the periphery equal to the
magnetization intensity. That is, if the surface current runs around the magnet:
Kφ = M0
F = Kφ hm
and then since the magnetic field is just the MMF divided by the total gap:
F hm
Hg = = M0
hm + g hm + g
The real utility of permanent magnets comes about from the relatively large magnetizations:
numbers of a few to several thousand amperes per meter are common, and these would translate
into enormous current densities in magnets of ordinary size.
13
Back Iron
h
m
g
Rotor
Permanent
Magnets
A book on this topic by James Ireland suggests values for the two “fudge factors”:
We may further estimate the ratio of areas of the gap and magnet by:
Ag R + g2
=
Am R + g + h2m
Now, there are a bunch of approximations and hand wavings in this expression, but it seems to
work, at least for the kind of machines contemplated.
A second correction is required to correct the effective length for electrical interaction. The
reason for this is that the magnets produce fringing fields, as if they were longer than the actual
”stack length” of the rotor (sometimes they actually are). This is purely empirical, and Ireland
gives a value for effective length for voltage generation of:
ℓ∗
ℓeff =
fℓ
where ℓ∗ = ℓ + 2N R , and the empirical coefficient
A hm
N ≈ log 1 + B
B R
where
hm
B = 7.4 − 9.0
R
A = 0.9
14
3.1.1 Voltage:
It is, in this case, simplest to consider voltage generated in a single wire first. If the machine is
running at angular velocity Ω, speed voltage is, while the wire is under a magnet,
vs = ΩRℓBr
Now, if the magnets have angular extent θm the voltage induced in a wire will have a waveform
as shown in Figure 18: It is pulse-like and has the same shape as the magnetic field of the magnets.
vs
π
Ωt
θm
The voltage produced by a coil is actually made up of two waveforms of exactly this form, but
separated in time by the ”coil throw” angle. Then the total voltage waveform produced will be
the sum of the two waveforms. If the coil thrown angle is larger than the magnet angle, the two
voltage waveforms add to look like this: There are actually two coil-side waveforms that add with
a slight phase shift.
vc
0m
0m
Figure 19: Voltage Induced in a Coil
If, on the other hand, the coil thrown is smaller than the magnet angle, the picture is the same,
only the width of the pulses is that of the coil rather than the magnet. In either case the average
voltage generated by a coil is:
θ∗
v = ΩRℓNs Bd
π
where θ ∗ is the lesser of the coil throw or magnet angles and Ns is the number of series turns in
the coil. This gives us the opportunity to develop the number of “active” turns:
Ca θ∗ C θ∗
= Ns = tot
m π m π
15
Here, Ca is the number of active conductors, Ctot is the total number of conductors and m is the
number of parallel paths. The motor coefficient is then:
Rℓeff Ctot Bd θ ∗
K=
m π
(dw is wire diameter, σw is wire conductivity and ℓt is length of one half-turn). This length depends
on how the machine is wound, but a good first-order guess might be something like this:
ℓt ≈ ℓ + πR
16