Chapter 6
Chapter 6
Chapter 6
Ahmed Kalas 1
SPECIAL OF
ELECTRICAL MACHINES
LINEAR ELECTRICAL MACHINES
LINEAR ELECTRICAL
MACHINES
Chapter (6)
INTRODUCTION
3
technology
Dr. Ahmed Kalas
Main Types of Linear Motors
(according to electrical machines)
5
Slip S=
Thrust (F) N = =
17
E
ffect of the exit edge loss on the speed-thrust curve of a LIM.
Dr. Ahmed Kalas
Linear Synchronous Motor (LSM)
Field winding
19
The long stators of the LSM located on the guideway form the active
track. The reactive forces of propulsion and vehicle levitation act on
the stator cores. Its supporting structure is required to have enough
strength to handle repeated loading of this force, and the stator coils
need to be isolated from ground. Dimensions of the stators are
determined by the highest performance requirement of the systems.
Advantages
Vehicle drive power is supplied by the long-stator, winding
attached to the guideway. Because the stator winding and
power conditioning equipment is located wayside, the vehicle
should be generally lighter. This permits the operation at high-
speed (up to 500 kph has been demonstrated) because the
vehicle does not bear the weight of the high-power primary
propulsion components needed to obtain these speeds, nor
does the electric power need to be transferred to the vehicle.
The power-rating capability of the motor can be tailored to the
requirements of the specific section of route such as regions of
high grade or at the station forhigh acceleration.
Dr. Ahmed Kalas
Linear Synchronous Motor (LSM)
Field winding
30
Disadvantages
One disadvantage of the LSM drive is that it requires data for
the exact position of the on-board magnets to ensure that the
vehicle is synchronous with the traveling wave generated by
the stator winding in the guideway. A very reliable and precise
vehicle position and velocity sensing system is essential. This
information must be transmitted to the converter station to
generate the traveling magnetic field at the appropriate
magnitude and frequency. Compared to the simple reaction rail
of the LIM, the active track structure of the LSM is very
complicated. It requires continuous installation of stator coils in
the guideway and wayside
Dr. Ahmed Kalas
Linear Synchronous Motor (LSM)
Field winding
32
Cost
Low production volume (relative to demand)
High price of magnets
Linear encoders (feedback) are much more expensive than rotary encoders,
cost increases with length
Higher Bandwidth Drives and Controls
Lower force per package size
Heating issues
Forcer is usually attached to load I2R losses are directly coupled to load
No (minimal) Friction
No automatic brake
Dr. Ahmed Kalas
35 THE END