|
Claims  |
|
|
We claim:
1. An electromagnetic drive assembly comprising a stationary member and a
rotatable member of a magnetizable material, one of said stationary and
rotatable members being disposed within the other of said stationary and
rotatable members, said stationary member being provided with at least two
coil means for simultaneously producing a rotating magnetic field for
driving said rotatable member and a nonrotating magnetic field for
positioning said rotatable member relative to said stationary member, each
of said coil means being supplied with a first current therethrough for
producing the rotating magnetic field and a second current through at
least a portion thereof supperimposed on the first current for producing
the nonrotating magnetic field, sensing means for sensing the spacing
between said stationary and rotatable members and providing an output
indicative thereof, and control means for varying the second current and
thereby the nonrotating field for maintaining a predetermined spacing
between said stationary and rotatable members.
2. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 1, further comprising
pole pieces for said coil means.
3. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 2, wherein each of
said pole pieces has a main axis extending in a radial direction.
4. Electromagnetic drive assembly to claim 3, wherein said pole pieces are
disposed in a stellar arrangement around said rotatable member, and a
shroud interconnects the portions of the pole pieces facing away from said
rotatable member.
5. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 4, wherein said
stationary member includes said pole pieces and said interconnecting
shroud thereby defining a core member.
6. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 4, wherein the end
faces of the pole pieces facing said rotatable member are widened with
respect to other portions of said pole pieces such that a small air gap is
provided between two adjacent pole pieces at the end faces thereof.
7. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 4, wherein said coil
means are each arranged between two pole pieces and said coil means having
the windings thereof wound around said shroud.
8. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 6, wherein said coil
means are each arranged between two pole pieces and said coil means have
the windings thereof wound around said shroud.
9. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 7, wherein said coil
means are provided with individual windings extending over 180.degree. of
said stationary member.
10. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 9, wherein said coil
means comprise six individual windings spaced 60.degree. apart.
11. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 9, wherein each of
said coil means is provided with separate connection means for individual
energization thereof.
12. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 11, wherein said
control means is provided with at least one control mode for generating
current for energizing said coil means to restore said rotatable member to
a predetermined position in response to the output of said sensing means.
13. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 12, wherein said
control means is provided with another control mode for generating
compensating signals for undesirable side effects of the actuating force.
14. Electromagnetic drive assembly to claim 12, wherein said sensing means
includes inductive sensors formed at least in part by said coil means in
addition to the driving and actuating functions provided by said coil
means.
15. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 14, wherein said
inductive sensors are formed at least in part by portions of the winding
of said coil means.
16. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 15, wherein the
current to energize the sensing means and that to provide the actuating
force are identical.
17. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 12, wherein said
sensing means includes sensors arranged within said pole pieces.
18. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 17, wherein said pole
pieces are provided with a circumferentially extending recess in the end
face thereof facing said rotatable member and said sensors include an
inductive test loop disposed within the slot and terminating in connection
means outwardly of said stationary member.
19. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 14, wherein said
rotatable member is formed of a magnetically hard material.
20. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 19, wherein said coil
means is responsive to continued rotation of said rotatable member without
said coil means being energized for driving said rotatable member for
operating in a generating mode to generate power in response to the
rotation of said rotatable member.
21. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 20, further
comprising switching means for establishing a connection path from a power
supply means to said coil means and to said control means, said switching
means being responsive to failure of said power supply means for
establishing a connection path between said coil means and said control
means for supplying power generated in the generating mode of said coil
means to said control means for purposes of positional control.
22. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 1, wherein each of
said coil means is provided with separate connection means for individual
energization thereof.
23. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 1, wherein said
control means is provided with at least one control mode for generating
current for energizing said soil means to restore said rotatable member to
a predetermined position in response to the output of said sensing means.
24. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 23, wherein said
control means is provided with another control mode for generating
compensating signals for undesirable side effects of the actuating force.
25. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 23, wherein said
sensing means includes inductive sensors formed at least in part by said
coil means in addition to the driving and actuating functions provided by
said coil means.
26. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 25, wherein said
inductive sensors are formed at least in part by portions of the windings
of said coil means.
27. Electromagnetic drive assembly to claim 2, wherein said sensing means
includes sensors arranged within said pole pieces.
28. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 27, wherein said pole
pieces are provided with a circumferentially extending recess in the end
face thereof facing said rotatable member and said sensors include an
inductive test loop disposed within the slot and terminating in connection
means outwardly of said stationary member.
29. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 1, wherein said
rotatable member is formed of a magnetically hard material.
30. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 29, wherein said coil
means is responsive to continued rotation of said rotatable member without
said coil means being energized for driving said rotatable member for
operating in a generating mode to generate power in response to the
rotation of said rotatable member.
31. Electromagnetic drive assembly control according to claim 30, further
comprising switching means for establishing a connection path from a power
supply means to said coil means and to said control means, said switching
means being responsive to failure of said power supply means for
establishing a connection path between said coil means and said control
means for supplying power generated in the generating mode of said coil
means to said control means for purposes of positional control.
32. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 31, further
comprising pole pieces for said coil means.
33. Electromagnetic drive assembly to claim 32, wherein said sensing means
includes sensors arranged within said pole pieces.
34. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 33, wherein said pole
pieces are provided with a circumferentially extending recess in the end
face thereof facing said rotatable member and said sensors include and
inductive test loop disposed within the slot and terminating in connection
means outwardly of said stationary member.
35. Electromagnetic drive assembly according to claim 26, wherein said
stationary member is an annular member and said coil means are radially
wound about said annular member. |
|
|
|
|
Claims  |
|
|
Description  |
|
|
The present invention relates to an electromagnetic drive for rotary bodies
including a stationary member having at least two coils and a revolving
member of a magnetizable material.
Rapidly spinning rotary bodies requiring magnetic bearing provisions for
the reason that mechanical or other bearings would pose difficulties in
their particular field of application generally exhibit in each bearing
plane a set of annular of other coils which utilize magnetic forces to
restore the rotary body to its intended position and dampen it. In
addition to these active bearings, a set of coils is still needed to
provide the rotating field for the drive. This arrangement is expensive
and requires considerably available space, where the latter disadvantage
makes itself felt especially in the case of airborne gyroscopes or of
pumps supported without the aid of mechanical contact in the interior of
pipe lines. Inasmuch as active magnetic bearings, unlike e.g. journal
bearings, cannot centrally locate a part, the air gaps in the drive
outside the bearing planes must necessarily have large tolerances and,
thus, are inefficient. Conditions are much the same in the case of long,
drooping shafts which likewise require generously toleranced air gaps in
the drive motor.
In a broad aspect, the present invention provides a bearing arrangement
which generally makes it possible to reduce the air gap in the drive motor
and promote its efficiency and which, more particularly, simplifies active
bearings for driven rotary bodies, reduces their size and economizes their
cost.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a bearing arrangement
where apart from the energization of the coils for driving purposes, the
coils or portions of their windings are also energized by a control means
communicating with a test system sensing the radial position of the rotary
body.
In this arrangement, the set of coils normally needed for drive purposes is
employed and there is superimposed on the driving currents, control
currents from a control means such that the coils not only supply the
drive torque, but also provide the magnetic forces to act on the rotary
body as needed to correct its position. Inasmuch as the present invention
eliminates the need for at least one set of coils and, more particularly,
for that set which previously served the sole function of correcting the
position of the rotary body, the present invention provides an improvement
to the present state of the art in terms of economy in space and cost. A
further advantage is in that the bearing, which represents the point of
minimum radial deflection, acts in exactly the plane of drive, and this
make it possible to minimize the air gaps in the drive proper without the
risk of the revolving member of the drive rubbing against the stationary
member. A still further benefit is that the heat effect from both the
drive and the positional control of the bearing acts on a common point of
the rotary member, which makes it easier to control the supply of heat to
process operations or the dissipation of heat from the bearing and drive
point.
In accordance with a feature of the present invention, the coils are
provided with pole pieces which enable a smaller air gap and, thus,
provide better efficiency than would be possible in their absence. Pole
pieces, more particularly, permit accurate control over the induction
process and thus enable the use of solenoid sizes and arrangements which
would be impossible otherwise. According to another feature of the present
invention, the main axes of the pole pieces point in a radial direction
which has the advantage that the arrangement lies in its good magnetic
contact and outweighs its disadvantage which lies in additional eddy
currents occurring at the edges of the pole pieces. The pole pieces
according to another feature are disposed in a stellar arrangement around
the revolving member, with those of their sides which point away from the
revolving member being interconnected by a shroud such that it is possible
to symmetrically group almost any number of coils around the revolving
member of the drive. In accordance with a further feature of the present
invention, those sides of the pole pieces which face the revolving member
are widened such that there remains but a small gap between adjacent pole
pieces. Due to the resulting, more uniform distribution of induction in
the air gap between the revolving member and the pole pieces, the magnetic
energy required thereat can be less, and thereby results in an improvement
in efficiency.
According to a feature of the present invention, each coil is arranged
between each pair of pole pieces, where the windings of the coils wind
around the shroud. While generally all types of winding known in
electrical motor work may be used in the arrangement of those windings on
the circumference of the stationary member which generate the
electromagnetic rotating field, this arrangement provides a particular
advantage in that windings around the shroud, while giving very
satisfactory efficiency, provide for minimum overall height of the coil
arrangement. In this arrangement, the number of windings varies from one
pole piece to the next in accordance with a sine function. the
simultaneous use of several staggered combinations of coils would also be
possible. This ensures that the induction process is cosine in form and
that interferences in the revolving member of the drive are a minimum.
In accordance with another feature of the present invention, the coils are
combined into individual windings each enveloping 180.degree., where more
particularly an arrangement of six individual windings spaced 60.degree.
apart is provided. In this arrangement, two diametrically opposite
individual windings at a time are combinend into a pair of coils. Three
pair of coils, while utilizing the space available for the coils,
represent the most favorable arrangement still capable of generating a
rotating field of constant amplitude and simultaneously permitting
positional control of the rotary body. For drive purposes, the three pair
of coils are energized with three currents 120.degree. apart of the same
amplitude. When positional control is needed, these currents are
superimposed with control currents which additionally excite the
individual coils and thus impose on the revolving member a radial force in
addition to the rotating field.
In accordance with a further feature of the present invention, each coil
exhibits separate connections for individual control. In this manner all
coils can be controlled individually, but simultaneously have
predetermined current portions to drive the revolving member. These
current portions are superimposed to individual or all solenoids by
control currents serving to correct deviations of the revolving member
from the desired radial position, such as DC currents where the part is
statically deflected as, say, a drooping shaft, fading currents after a
deflection has successfully been rectified, or AC currents as for
attenuating characteristic values of the revolving member or when
traversing critical speeds. A particularly beneficial means of positional
control may be to energize or excite two maximally closely adjacent coils
through which control currents are passing of the same intensity but in
opposite directions. This arrangement provides a maximum of accumulated
radial force and a minimum of rotating interference field as a result of
the control field being superimposed on the rotating field. Use can be
made, however, also of several adjacent coils for the purpose should it be
necessary to maximize the surface area of application of the actuating
force perhaps to prevent deformation of a thin-walled tubular rotating
part. In this case, it will be possible to simultaneously energize any
number, for example, three coils with control currents. This arrangement
more particularly prevents the risk of exciting natural vibrations in the
case of tubular rotors as a result of inadvertently severe concentration
of magnetic force. The last mentioned arrangement will provide an
advantage also when it is intended that the resultant action of the
magnetic actuating forces should not fall midway between two solenoids.
According to another feature of the present invention, the control means
exhibits one control mode which generates, from the radial position of the
rotary body as determined by the test system, the additional currents fed
to the solenoids for the purpose of restoring the rotary body to its
intended position, and an additional control mode which compensates for
undesirable side effects of the requisite actuating force. The presence
simultaneously of the rotating magnetic field for drive purposes and of
the actuating field generated by the control currents produces, above and
beyond the intended and needed actuating effect, a number of unavoidable
interferences (such as elliptically revolving forces) which are
counteracted from the start by the additional control mode. The
countereffects necessarily result from the effective actuating force and
the state of the rotating field at the moment and the control system may
be adapted to the control requirements with the necessary accuracy in a
manner known in the art.
According to a further feature of the present invention, the test or
measuring system exhibits inductive sensors formed at least in part by the
coils or parts of their windings as an addition to their normal drive and
actuating functions. The advantage offered by this arrangement is not only
that use is here made of existing parts already serving other functions
for measuring the position of the rotary body or for measuring its
distance from the individual sensor, but also that the measurement is made
in exactly the plane in which the actuating effect acts on the revolving
member. In this arrangement, the coils or parts thereof are energized by,
apart from the control and drive currents, test currents of a frequency
outside the range covered by the drive and control currents, so that the
information provided by the test currents can be segregated from the drive
and control processed by filtering, for example. The test currents may be
small in amplitude, so that the magnetic forces they cause will have no
appreciable effect on the revolving member. The test currents will permit
conclusions to be made, after filtering, as to the inductivity at the
moment and thus as to the air gap at the test point at that moment and the
filtering and evaluating means associated with the test system may be
provided in a manner known in the art.
In accordance with a further feature of the present invention, the current
needed for energizing the test system and that for achieving the actuating
force is identical. This eliminates the need for an entire current system,
considering that the control function and the test function are both
served by a single current system. While the test system invariably
requires a test current, the control system may go without current. When
symmetrically arranged combinations of coils are used for testing
(conceivably spaced 120.degree. apart), the effects of the respective
equal test currents will cancel one another when the rotary body revolves
centrally. When an actuating force is needed, the respective test current
will be increased. As a test signal, use can be made of the imbalance of
the ratios prevailing for each test point of the test voltage to the test
current.
In accordance with another feature of the present invention, the sensors
are arranged within the pole pieces such that if the pole pieces are
disposed in, e.g., a stellar arrangement, the side of the pole piece
facing the revolving member exhibits a circumferentially arranged recess
accommodating a sensor, such as an inductive test loop. Except for the use
of sensors not integral with the other solenoids, the advantages will
generally be the same as previously described. It will be appreciated,
however, that extensive decoupling such as this between the control and
drive currents on the one hand and the test currents on the other will
widely simplify and economize the filtering measures for this arrangement.
This arrangement also provides a further advantage in that owing to the
spatial extent of the solenoids, the result of the positional measurement
will not be integrating, as is necessarily was before, but in that it is
now possible to determine the exact distance of the point on the revolving
member opposite the sensor, where the sensor is in turn not wider than a
pole piece.
According to a further feature of the present invention, the revolving
member is a magnetically hard material such that when the rotating fields
are turned off, the drive will function as a generator and will yield
electrical energy. A rotary body possessing a high moment of inertia about
its spin axis and rapidly revolving at little loss owing to the action of
the magnetic active bearing could be used, after the drive has been
de-energized, as a store of energy to yield energy in the generator mode.
This store of energy can be switched to accumulate electrical current,
say, at low cost nighttime rates and yield current at daytime rates. The
use of such storage units has been limited owing to the use of mechanical
bearings. Exploitation is poor because a rotary body revolving in rigid
mechanical bearings invariably rotates about its geometric centerline, not
its centroidal axis, and departure of the centroidal axis from the
centerline causes forces of deflection which in the form of bearing forces
cause friction and consume energy. Active bearings however make it
possible to have the rotary body revolve eccentrically with no great
consumption of energy, and no wear will occur in the process. Also, in the
generator mode the control means can take its operating current from the
generator. A simple device can be employed to automatically engage a
mechanical safety bearing when a certain speed is no longer maintained,
which bearing will then sustain the rotaty body in its central position
until it has come to rest.
In accordance with a further feature of the present invention, a reversing
device automaticaly switches the current generated during the generator
mode to the control means in the event of power failure. For switch-over,
use could be made of, e.g., a relay device. Sensitive systems, such as
rapidly spinning rotors, will not survive a power failure when active
bearings are their only means of support. This is why active bearings are
normally complemented with mechanical emergency bearings. However, a
bearing arrangement according to the present invention will provide its
own bearing current as long as the rotor is in sufficiently rapid
rotation, so that it will not crash or need careful deceleration to stand
still in the event of power failure or when the main supply is cut off for
repair.
These and further objects, features and advantages of the present invention
will become more obvious from the following description when taken in
connection with the accompanying drawings which show, for purposes of
illustration only, several embodiments in accordance with the present
invention, and wherein
FIG. 1 is a cross-sectional view of an electromagnetic drive arrangement in
accordance with the present invention;
FIG. 2 is an end view illustrating pole pieces in a stellar arrangement;
FIG. 3 is a schematic equivalent circuit diagram of the arrangement of FIG.
2;
FIG. 4 is a schematic equivalent circuit diagram similar to FIG. 3 showing
only the equivalent circuit diagram of two adjacent solenoids;
FIG. 5 illustrates a single pole piece of a core member in accordance with
the present invention having a slot for accommodating an inductive test
group therein;
FIG. 6 is a schematic arrangement of the drive, control and testing system
for an electromagnetic drive in accordance with the present invention
wherein power is supplied from the mains; and
FIG. 7 is a schematic diagram of the arrangement similar to FIG. 6
illustrating the connections in the generating mode of the electromagnetic
drive.
Referring now to the drawings wherein like reference numerals designate
like parts throughout the several views, there is shown in FIG. 1 a
cross-sectional view of the drive arrangement of the present ivention
including a core 1 having three pole pieces 1 interconnected by shroud 3
and surrounding a rotating member 4. Two of the three pole pieces are
surrounded by a coil 5, 6, respectively. For driving purposes, the coils
are supplied with out-of-phase currents for controlling the positioning of
the rotating member 4, additional currents are superimposed on the driving
currents with the resultant actuating effect being exercised upon the
revolving member. The pole piece 2 have a main axis extending in the
radial direction and as shown in FIG. 1, have the end faces thereof
adjacent the rotating member 4, widened with respect to other portions of
the pole pieces such that a small gap 7 is provided between the widened
portions of the adjacent pole pieces.
FIG. 2 is an end view illustrating a core 10 having 24 pole pieces 12
interconnected by a shroud 13 and surrounding the revolving member 4. Two
coils 5 and 6 are arranged on the core so as to each embrace 180.degree.
while the nubmer of windings varies from one pole piece to the next in
accordance with a sine function. The lines of magnetic force 7 associated
with the coil 5 are indicted by reference numeral 7 whereby coils 5 and 6
form a pair of coils on the core member. Due to the stellar arrangement of
the pole pieces around the revolving member and the interconnection of the
portions thereof facing away from the revolving member with the shroud 13,
it is possible to symmetrically group almost any number of coils about the
revolving member of the drive of the present invention.
FIG. 3 is a schematic equivalent circuit diagram of the arrangement of FIG.
2 wherein in addition to the pair of coils 5 and 6 and spaced 120.degree.
apart from such coils are two further pair of coils 15, 16 and 17, 18.
Inasmuch as this is a schematic representation, it should be noted that
each coil extends over 180.degree., which in the case of six coils as
illustrated in FIG. 3, each coil overlaps the adjacent coil by
120.degree.. The effective ranges of the various coils are confined from
one another as illustrated by the dashed lines 19.
As shown in FIG. 4 which is a partial equivalent circuit diagram similar to
FIG. 3 only the equivalent circuits of two adjacent coils 5 and 15, the
two coils are energized with out-of-phase current which generate the
rotating field for driving purposes and additionally with a same but
opppositely control current I.sub.S. The control current creates, at point
20, a locality of maximum intensity of the magnetic field, and, at an
opposite point 21, a locality of minimum intensity of magnetic field. As
such, there is provided a resultant actuating action along the dashed line
passing through the points 20 and 21 which serves for controlling the
position of the rotating member 4 as required. It is noted that in this
representation, the rotating field for driving purposes and interaction
between the two fields has been ignored. However, for driving purposes,
the three pair of coils are energized with three currents 120.degree.
apart and of the same amplitude with the driving currents being
superimposed with control currents which additionally excite the
individual coils and thus impose on the revolving member a radial force in
addition to the rotating field. Each coil preferably exhibits separate
connections for individual control such that all the coils can be
controlled individually while simultaneously having predetermined current
portions for driving the revolving member with these current portions
being superimposed in individual or all coils by control currents serving
two correct deviations of the revolving member from the desired radial
position.
In order to detect the radial position of the revolving member, inductive
sensors may be formed at least in part by the coils or parts of such
windings as an addition to their normal drive and actuating functions. In
this manner, the coils or parts thereof are energized, apart from the
control and driving currents, test currents of a frequency outside the
range covered by the drive and control currents, so that information
provided by the test currents can be separated from the drive and control
processes for example by filtering and evaluating means. In accordance
with the detection of the position of the revolving member, the control
currents are generated. As shown in FIG. 5 which illustrates a single pole
piece of the 24-pole core 10 of FIG. 2, there is provided at the end face
or tip thereof a circumferentially disposed slot 23 accommodating an
inductive test loop 24. The test loop 24 terminates in two connections 25
outside the 24-pole piece core 10. In this arrangement, the magnetic field
lines of the control and drive process in the material of the pole piece
are orthogonal to the normals of the surface elements of the test loop 13.
By utilizing a test loop or sensor 13, the necessity for extensive
decoupling such as between the control and drive currents and the test
currents is simplified and it is possible to determine the exact distance
of the point on the revolving member opposite the sensor or test loop 24.
As shown in FIG. 6 which is a block diagram of an arrangement in accordance
with the present invention, the rotating member 4 is surrounded by coils
33 and test loops or sensors 24, only one of each being illustrated,
disposed in a core (not shown). A power supply, for example the mains
supply 35 provides power via relays 36 to the appropriate portions of the
system of the present invention. In particular, power is fed from the
power supply 35 to energizing coils 37 of the relays 36 so as to maintain
the contacts thereof in the position shown for feeding power to the coil
33 via the connection line 38. Additionally, power is fed to a
conventional type of amplifier 39 of the control system via a connection
line 40. The signals sent by the sensor 24 are provided via the output
connections 25 to a conventional type of measuring and sensing transducer
device 41 providing an output indicative of the radial position of the
rotating member 4 to a conventional type of control device 42 and the
amplifier 39 which supplies current of the appropriate value to the coil
33 as a superimposed current on the driving current for effecting radial
position of the rotating member 4.
The rotating member is preferably formed of a magnetically hard material
such that when the rotating or driving fields are turned off, the
electromagnetic drive functions as a generator and will yield electrical
energy. Thus, a rotary body such as the rotating member 4 possessing a
high moment of inertia about its spin axis and rapidly revolving a little
loss owing to the action of the magnetic active bearing may be utilized
after the electromagnetic drive has been de-energized in a generating
mode. As shown in FIG. 7, in the case of, for example, a failure of the
power supply 35, the coils 37 of the relays 36 are de-energized such that
the contacts of the relays move to the position shown providing an
interconnecting path between the connections 38 and 40 via the connection
line 43. In this manner, power generated in the coils 33 by the movement
of the rotor or rotating member 4 is directly supplied to the amplifier 39
for energizing the control system which again may be utilized to feed
current to the coil 33 for positioning of the rotating member 4. In this
manner, positioning of the rotor can be maintained for increasing the
length of rotation in the generating mode.
Obviously, many modifications and variations of the present invention are
possible in the light of the above teachings. It should therefore be
understood that within the scope of the appended claims, the invention may
be practiced otherwise than as specifically described.
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
|
Description  |
|