Induction Machines - Asynchronous Machines
Induction Machines - Asynchronous Machines
shaft
cage winding
the three-phase windings are displaced from each other by 120 degrees in space a phase coil produces a sinusoidally distributed mmf wave centered on the axis of the coil alternating current in each coil produces a pulsating mmf wave mmf waves are displaced by 120 degrees in space from each other resultant mmf wave is rotating along the air gap with constant peak
at time t0
at time t1
ia = I m Im ib = 2 Im ic = 2
ia = 0,
3 3 ib = I m , Fb = Fmax 2 2 3 3 ic = I m , Fc = Fmax 2 2
Fa = 0
3 F = Fmax 2
3 F = Fmax 2
it moves around the air gap one revolution per period
120 f 2 n = f 60 = p p
reversal of the phase sequence of the currents change the direction of rotation
Fa ( ) = Nia cos
Fb ( ) = Nib cos( 120)
Induced Voltages
sinusoidal flux density distribution in space
B( ) = Bmax cos
p =
/2
/2
B( )lr d = 2 Bmax lr
flux linkage
a ( t ) = N p cos t
induced voltage
p =
( B
2
= 2lrBm cos t
Induced Voltages
N p
2
2 f N p = 4.44 fN p = 2
K w 0.85 0.95
Erms = 4.44 fN ph p K w
E1 = 4.44 f 1 N 1 p K W1 E2 = 4.44 f 1 N 2 p K W2
E1 N 1 K W1 N 1 = E2 N 2 K W2 N 2
+ Continuous variation of the output voltage + No sliding electric connections - High leakage inductances - High magnetizing current - high cost
E1 = Vin V0 = E1 + E 2
Running operation
rotor circuit is closed induced voltages produce rotor currents that interacts with air gap field to produce torque rotor starts to rotate relative speed decreases - induced voltage decreases torque balance
slip
ns n s= ns
and
Running operation
motoring
generating
plugging
a three-phase wound-rotor induction machine the cage winding can be represented by an equivalent three-phase winding
in steady-state the produced magnetic fields rotate at the synchronous speed resultant air gap field will induce voltages in both stator and rotor windings supply frequency f1 in stator; slip frequency f2 in rotor form of the equivalent circuit appears to be identical to that of a transformer
Equivalent circuit similar to transformer primary Magnetizing current can be 20 50 % of stator current (1 5 % in transformer) X1 larger than in transformer due to airgap and distributed windings
I2 =
sE2 R2 + jsX 2
2 P2 = I 2 R2
E2 I2 = ( R2 / s ) + jX 2
although the amplitude and phase are the same the frequency is different !
P=
2 I2
R2 P2 = s s
N1 a= N2
E2 = E1 = aE2 I2 I2 = a
R2 = a 2 R2 X2 = a2 X2
P = Pag =
2 I2
R2 R2 2 = I 2 R2 + (1 s ) = P2 + Pmech s s
2 P2 = I 2 R2 = sPag
2 Pmech = I 2
R2 (1 s ) = (1 s )Pag s
Pag : P2 : Pmech = 1 : s : 1 s
a fraction s is dissipated in rotor resistance P2 the fraction (1-s) is converted into mechanical power Pmech
Vth =
Xm
2 R1 + ( X1 + Xm )2
V 1/2 1
Xm V1 = K thV1 X1 + Xm
Zth
Rth
Xm 2 R1 = K th R1 X1 + Xm
Xth
X1
no-load test at nominal voltage and frequency, no load blocked rotor test at nominal current, reduced voltage and frequency, rotor blocked DC-resistance measurement no-load power blocked rotor core losses + windage and friction losses reactances
the equivalent circuit is used to predict performances characteristics at steady state: efficiency power factor current starting torque maximum (pull-out) torque, etc
2 I2
R2 (1 s ) s
mech
2 n = 60
nsyn
syn
120 f 4 f 1 = 2 = p60 p
mech = (1 s ) syn =
2 I2
60
2 (1 s )
Tmech syn =
Tmech = 1
R2 = Pag s
1
syn
Pag =
syn
2 I2
R2 1 2 R2 I2 = s syn s
Tmech =
syn
R2 ( Rth + R2 / s )2 + ( X th + X 2 )2 s
2 Vth
Tmech
torque is proportional to the square of the voltage total torque is obtained by multiplying the per phase torque by the number of phases
syn
R2 ( X th + X 2 )2 s Tmech
2 Vth
2 1 Vth s syn R2
dT =0 ds
2 1/2
Tmax =
sTmax
2 Vth
1 2 syn
2 Vth X th + X 2
R2 X th + X 2
maximum torque independent from rotor resistance corresponding speed depends on rotor resistance effect of rotor resistance on torque characteristics
R1 small
Tmax = T
( R2 / s )2 + ( R2 / sTmax )2 2( R2 / sTmax )
2
s sTmax
2 sTmax + s 2
2 sTmax s
1 sTmax s = + 2 s sTmax
R Z1 = R1 + jX 1 + X m // 2 + jX 2 s = Z1 1
V1 I1 = = I + I 2 Z1
power factor
PF = cos 1
Power flow
motoring
generating
large rotor resistance - poor efficiency - large nominal slip + large starting torque + small starting current in wound-rotor external resistance can be connected to the rotor windings through the slip rings
rotor frequency changes with speed effective rotor resistance changes with frequency if the shape of rotor bars is adequate (skin effect)
two rotor cages each with its own end ring outer cage with small cross section and high resistivity material inner cage with larger cross section and low resistivity material at standstill most of rotor current flows in outer cage large resistance at small slip (full-load) current flows in both cages smaller resistance equivalent circuit formed by additional branches in the rotor
Speed Control
speed is determined by supply frequency, number of pole-pairs and slip
n=
f p 2
(1 s)
pole changing synchronous speed can be changed in discrete steps motor is more expensive normally speed changed in ratio 2:1 cage induction machine only
line voltage control torque is proportional to the square of the terminal voltage increased slip inefficient operation method is used with fans and pumps
auto transformer
solid-state controller
n=
f p 2
Speed Control
E p f
V p f
below the nominal speed voltage-frequency proportion is kept constant to avoid saturation constant flux / torque above the nominal speed voltage is kept constant to avoid electric breakdown constant voltage / power
efficiency ?
open loop
closed loop
open loop
closed loop