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Electrical
Motor -DC Course |
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A DC motor is designed to run on DC electric
power. Two examples of pure DC designs are Michael
Faraday's homopolar motor (which is uncommon), and
the ball bearing motor, which is (so far) a
novelty. By far the most common DC motor types are
the brushed and brushless types, which use
internal and external commutation respectively to
create an oscillating AC current from the DC
source -- so they are not purely DC machines in a
strict sense.
The classic DC motor design generates an
oscillating current in a wound rotor with a split
ring commutator, and either a wound or permanent
magnet stator. A rotor consists of a coil wound
around a rotor which is then powered by any type
of battery.
Many of the limitations of the classic commutator
DC motor are due to the need for brushes to press
against the commutator. This creates friction. At
higher speeds, brushes have increasing difficulty
in maintaining contact. Brushes may bounce off the
irregularities in the commutator surface, creating
sparks. This limits the maximum speed of the
machine. The current density per unit area of the
brushes limits the output of the motor. The
imperfect electric contact also causes electrical
noise. Brushes eventually wear out and require
replacement, and the commutator itself is subject
to wear and maintenance. The commutator assembly
on a large machine is a costly element, requiring
precision assembly of many parts.
Brushless DC motors
Some of the problems of the brushed DC motor are
eliminated in the brushless design. In this motor,
the mechanical "rotating switch" or commutator/brushgear
assembly is replaced by an external electronic
switch synchronised to the rotor's position.
Brushless motors are typically 85-90% efficient,
whereas DC motors with brushgear are typically
75-80% efficient.
Midway between ordinary DC motors and stepper
motors lies the realm of the brushless DC motor.
Built in a fashion very similar to stepper motors,
these often use a permanent magnet external rotor,
three phases of driving coils, one or more Hall
effect sensors to sense the position of the rotor,
and the associated drive electronics. The coils
are activated, one phase after the other, by the
drive electronics as cued by the signals from the
Hall effect sensors. In effect, they act as
three-phase synchronous motors containing their
own variable-frequency drive electronics. A
specialized class of brushless DC motor
controllers utilize EMF feedback through the main
phase connections instead of Hall effect sensors
to determine position and velocity. These motors
are used extensively in electric radio-controlled
vehicles. When configured with the magnets on the
outside, these are referred to by modelists as
outrunner motors.
Brushless DC motors are commonly used where
precise speed control is necessary, as in computer
disk drives or in video cassette recorders, the
spindles within CD, CD-ROM (etc.) drives, and
mechanisms within office products such as fans,
laser printers and photocopiers. They have several
advantages over conventional motors:
* Compared to AC fans using shaded-pole motors,
they are very efficient, running much cooler than
the equivalent AC motors. This cool operation
leads to much-improved life of the fan's bearings.
* Without a commutator to wear out, the life of a
DC brushless motor can be significantly longer
compared to a DC motor using brushes and a
commutator. Commutation also tends to cause a
great deal of electrical and RF noise; without a
commutator or brushes, a brushless motor may be
used in electrically sensitive devices like audio
equipment or computers.
* The same Hall effect sensors that provide the
commutation can also provide a convenient
tachometer signal for closed-loop control
(servo-controlled) applications. In fans, the
tachometer signal can be used to derive a "fan OK"
signal.
* The motor can be easily synchronized to an
internal or external clock, leading to precise
speed control.
* Brushless motors have no chance of sparking,
unlike brushed motors, making them better suited
to environments with volatile chemicals and fuels.
* Brushless motors are usually used in small
equipment such as computers and are generally used
to get rid of unwanted heat.
* They are also very quiet motors which is an
advantage if being used in equipment that is
affected by vibrations.
Modern DC brushless motors range in power from a
fraction of a watt to many kilowatts. Larger
brushless motors up to about 100 kW rating are
used in electric vehicles. They also find
significant use in high-performance electric model
aircraft.
Coreless DC motors
Nothing in the design of any of the motors
described above requires that the iron (steel)
portions of the rotor actually rotate; torque is
exerted only on the windings of the
electromagnets. Taking advantage of this fact is
the coreless DC motor, a specialized form of a
brush or brushless DC motor. Optimized for rapid
acceleration, these motors have a rotor that is
constructed without any iron core. The rotor can
take the form of a winding-filled cylinder inside
the stator magnets, a basket surrounding the
stator magnets, or a flat pancake (possibly formed
on a printed wiring board) running between upper
and lower stator magnets. The windings are
typically stabilized by being impregnated with
Electrical epoxy potting systems. Filled epoxies
that have moderate mixed viscosity and a long gel
time. These systems are highlighted by low
shrinkage and low exotherm. Typically UL 1446
recognized as a potting compound for use up to
180C (Class H) UL File No. E 210549.
Because the rotor is much lighter in weight (mass)
than a conventional rotor formed from copper
windings on steel laminations, the rotor can
accelerate much more rapidly, often achieving a
mechanical time constant under 1 ms. This is
especially true if the windings use aluminum
rather than the heavier copper. But because there
is no metal mass in the rotor to act as a heat
sink, even small coreless motors must often be
cooled by forced air.
These motors were commonly used to drive the
capstan(s) of magnetic tape drives and are still
widely used in high-performance servo-controlled
systems, like radio-controlled vehicles/aircraft,
humanoid robotic systems, industrial automation,
medical devices, etc.
Universal motors
A variant of the wound field DC motor is the
universal motor. The name derives from the fact
that it may use AC or DC supply current, although
in practice they are nearly always used with AC
supplies. The principle is that in a wound field
DC motor the current in both the field and the
armature (and hence the resultant magnetic fields)
will alternate (reverse polarity) at the same
time, and hence the mechanical force generated is
always in the same direction. In practice, the
motor must be specially designed to cope with the
AC current (impedance must be taken into account,
as must the pulsating force), and the resultant
motor is generally less efficient than an
equivalent pure DC motor. Operating at normal
power line frequencies, the maximum output of
universal motors is limited and motors exceeding
one kilowatt are rare. But universal motors also
form the basis of the traditional railway traction
motor in electric railways. In this application,
to keep their electrical efficiency high, they
were operated from very low frequency AC supplies,
with 25 Hz and 16 2/3 hertz operation being
common. Because they are universal motors,
locomotives using this design were also commonly
capable of operating from a third rail powered by
DC.
The advantage of the universal motor is that AC
supplies may be used on motors which have the
typical characteristics of DC motors, specifically
high starting torque and very compact design if
high running speeds are used. The negative aspect
is the maintenance and short life problems caused
by the commutator. As a result such motors are
usually used in AC devices such as food mixers and
power tools which are used only intermittently.
Continuous speed control of a universal motor
running on AC is very easily accomplished using a
thyristor circuit, while stepped speed control can
be accomplished using multiple taps on the field
coil. Household blenders that advertise many
speeds frequently combine a field coil with
several taps and a diode that can be inserted in
series with the motor (causing the motor to run on
half-wave rectified AC).
Universal motors can rotate at relatively high
revolutions per minute (rpm). This makes them
useful for appliances such as blenders, vacuum
cleaners, and hair dryers where high-speed
operation is desired. Many vacuum cleaner and weed
trimmer motors exceed 10,000 rpm, Dremel and other
similar miniature grinders will often exceed
30,000 rpm. Motor damage may occur due to
overspeed (rpm in excess of design specifications)
if the unit is operated with no significant load.
On larger motors, sudden loss of load is to be
avoided, and the possibility of such an occurrence
is incorporated into the motor's protection and
control schemes. Often, a small fan blade attached
to the armature acts as an artificial load to
limit the motor speed to a safe value, as well as
provide cooling airflow to the armature and field
windings.
With the very low cost of semiconductor
rectifiers, some applications that would have
previously used a universal motor now use a pure
DC motor, sometimes with a permanent magnet field.
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