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| United States Patent | 4087708 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4087708.html |
| Inventor(s) | Laing; Nikolaus (Hofener Weg 35-37, 7141 Aldingen, DT) |
| Abstract | The invention is concerned with a motor for driving a centrifugal pump. The
motor comprises a cylinder of circumferentially spaced axially disposed
stator teeth; a stack of laminations forming a magnetic return path
between the ends of the stator teeth at one end of the cylinder; a rotor
in the form of a spherical segment which together with the other ends of
the stator teeth defines a part spherical air gap at the other end of the
cylinder; and a motor casing formed of a heat and electrically conducting
non-magnetic material which radially encloses the stator teeth. The motor
further comprises segments formed of a heat and electrically conducting
non-magnetic material which are interleaved with the stator teeth and
connected in a heat conducting manner to the casing and secured thereto
against axial movement away from the rotor; the ends of the segments
adjacent the rotor also define said part-spherical air gap with said
rotor.
At least one plane surface may be provided on the inside of the casing for
supporting and making heat conducting contact with at least one of a set
of axially spaced coil windings of the motor. At least some of the
segments may support and make heat conducting contact with at least one of
the set of coil windings and the casing and segments may be an integral
structure. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4087708 |
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Casing for motors having a spherical air gap |
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| Publication Date |
May 2, 1978 |
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| Filing Date |
September 8, 1976 |
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| Priority Data |
Sep 17, 1975[DT]2541500 |
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Title Information  |
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References  |
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Public's "Guesstimation" of Royalty Value
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Market Review  |
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Technical Review  |
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Claims  |
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What I claim:
1. A motor casing for enclosing a spherical motor where the motor has a
stator comprising an annulus of axially disposed circumferential teeth,
axially spaced principal and auxiliary coil windings, a stack of
laminations forming a magnetic return and a rotor in the form of a
spherical segment which together with the stator defines a spherical air
gap; the improvement comprising in that said casing comprises a
cylindrical shaped part of a non-magnetic material having a neck portion
of reduced diameter at one end, in that said neck portion has a flange
adapted to be attached to a pump casing, in that a plurality of
circumferentially spaced segments are located within and integral with
said cylindrical shaped part to extend between the circumferentially
spaced teeth and which define a spherical surface facing the air gap, in
that said reduced neck portion forms a radially extending first plane for
engaging with and axially positioning the principal coil windings and in
that said cylindrical part has a radially extending second plane portion
for engaging with and axially positioning the auxiliary coil windings
whereby heat from said coil windings may be conducted through said
cylindrical part to said neck and flange portions.
2. A motor casing according to claim 1 wherein some of said segments
project between said principal coil windings and terminate at said second
plane.
3. A motor casing according to claim 1 having in addition a ring
concentrically positioned in the casing and holding together the axially
disposed teeth, the stack of laminations and the coil windings.
4. A motor casing according to claim 3 having in addition a screw adapted
to be electrically connected to ground and which acts to position the ring
in the casing.
5. A motor casing according to claim 1 wherein said neck portion engagingly
embraces portions of the teeth extending axially beyond the coil windings. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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The Prior Art
Motors having a part-spherical air gap do not need conventional shafts and
bearing bushes and they are therefore frequently used for driving pumps.
However, in such applications practice has shown that notwithstanding the
considerable advantages they possess in not having a conventional shaft,
they also suffer from major drawbacks. These are
1. that in two-pole arrangements magnetic leakage from the coil windings
far exceeds that occurring in comparable cylindrical motors;
2. that the soft iron teeth between the coil windings and the
part-spherical air gap cause a much greater degree of magnetic leakage
than that in comparable cylindrical motors because of the greater surface
area in each axial plane;
3. that difficulties arise in grounding the magnetic sheet iron laminations
because unlike cylinder motors they do not form an assembly that is
metallically connected to the metal casing. The contact existing between
the several laminations which constitute the iron core of the stator is
relatively unreliable;
4. that the abstraction of heat from the coil windings is difficult for the
same reasons because the coil windings which in a cylindrical motor are
received into the slots and are therefore in good thermal contact with the
iron of the stator, make little contact with the teeth in a motor having a
partspherical air gap, and also because the laminations define
wedge-shaped intervening spaces which prevent transverse electrical
conduction;
5. that the abstraction of heat from the coil windings located on that side
of the stator which is remote from the rotor presents particular
difficulties because the path length for conducting the heat from this
coil to the opposite heat dissipating side of the motor is very long, and
6. that the transmission of hydraulic pressure to the sealing membrane or
partition between stator and rotor is through the soft iron teeth in the
form of an axial thrust, whereas the comparable sealing element in a
cylinder motor, namely the encapsulating gap tube, is supported by the
stator laminations and can therefore absorb pressures of any magnitude
occurring in normal practice.
Object of the Invention
It is therefore an object of the invention to eliminate these drawbacks by
providing a casing of novel design.
Description of the Invention
The casing of a motor according to the invention consists of a non-magnetic
material that is nevertheless a good conductor of electricity. It
comprises a ring portion which embraces the coil windings, and which
therefore suppresses magnetic leakage from the coil windings. Leakage from
the coil windings is reduced to a minimum.
For reducing leakage between the soft iron stator teeth the invention
provides segments extending at right angles to the leakage flux lines.
This gives a substantial reduction of magnetic leakage at the teeth to the
level of the usual leakage from the crests of the teeth in a cylindrical
motor. An annular portion embracing the teeth between coil winding and
rotor suppresses the leakage flux lines which extend outwards from the end
faces. This also reduces the effects of the drawback listed above under
point 2.
In order to afford protection against accidental electrical shock the
proposed motor casing is closed on the side remote from the rotor by an
insulating member and provided with an earthing terminal. This eliminates
the drawback of point 3.
The removal of heat from the coil windings adjacent the rotor is effected
in that the axial surfaces of the coil windings extending towards the
rotor bear against a flat peripheral portion of the motor casing and on
the segments, thereby ensuring the transmission of heat to the pump
chamber. For cooling the auxiliary coil winding the invention provides
indentations in the casing wall terminating in flat faces against which
some of the auxiliary coil windings bear. Moreover, some segments are
extended as far as the plane between the two coil windings, permitting the
heat generation in the auxiliary coil windings to be likewise abstracted
to the pump chamber. This eliminates the drawback of point 4.
In order to take up the hydrostatic forces which act on the sealing
membrane or partition in the air gap the invention avails itself of radial
segments whose ends define a part-spherical surface. They may be the same
segments provided for suppressing magnetic leakage from the teeth. They
are embraced by a thick-walled ring part of the housing which ensures the
abstraction of heat from the coil windings and from the teeth to the pump
casing, and which simultaneously prevents distortion of the casing by the
action of the hydrostatic thrust on the spherically cup-shaped partition.
Brief Description of the Drawings
FIG. 1 is a section of a pump and motor casing,
FIG. 2a is a separate section of the motor casing taken on the line A -- A
in FIG. 2b,
FIG. 2b is a view of the motor casing from underneath, i.e. from the right
hand side in FIG. 2a, and FIG. 2c is a section taken on the line B -- B in
FIG. 2a.
Description of the Preferred Embodiment
The stator teeth 1, the laminations 2 which form a magnetic return path,
and the rotor 3 together constitute the magnetic circuit. The principal
coil windings 4 are located at the end nearest the rotor, whereas the
auxilliary coil winding 5 are at the further end. For suppressing magnetic
leakage from the coil windings the cylindrical part 6 of the casing which
consists of a non-magnetic metal, preferably aluminium, embraces both coil
windings. A flat peripheral face 7 formed by the neck portion comprises a
first radially extending plane portion which cools the coil windings 4
nearest the rotor, whereas cooling of the upper coil windings 5 is
effected by faces 8 on opposite sides forming a second radially extending
plane. Moreover, the cylindrical part 19 of the casing embraces the length
of both sets of coil windings 4 and 5 and thus also serves to dissipate
heat and to suppress magnetic leakage in the neighbourhood of the coil
windings 4 and 5. Leakage at the stator teeth is suppressed partly by an
annular region 9 which closely embraces the teeth. The heat flux from the
coil windings passes partly through the teeth 1 but for its greater part
through the casing 6, 19, 9 into the reinforcing ring 10 which makes good
thermal contact with the pump casing 12 at the joint 11. This annular
region 9 together with the ring 10 forms a flange with lugs 13 for bolting
the motor to the pump casing 12 by screws 18. At the end remote from the
rotor the teeth 1 and the laminations 2 are held together by a plastic
ring 14. Embedded in this plastics ring is a contact member 15 into which
a screw 16 projects for reliably elecrically connecting the casing 6 to a
ground terminal 15 and at the same time axially locating the plastics ring
14 and hence the entire stator 1, 2, 4 and 5. Segments 20 extend into the
gaps between the teeth 1 and simultaneously suppress magnetic leakage from
the teeth 1 and support the hydrostatically loaded partition 17, besides
serving to remove heat from the coil windings 4. Extensions 21 of some of
the segments which are integral with the annular region 9 pass through the
coil windings 4 as far as the plane between coil winding 4 and 5, and thus
assist in removing dissipative heat from the coil windings 5. FIGS. 2a and
2c illustrate the same casing as that shown in FIG. 1. In these drawings
the segments 20 between the teeth 1 below coil windings 4 for suppressing
the leakage flux are also visible. The extensions 21 project between the
coil windings 4 as far as the plane between coil windings 4 and 5. This
plane coincides with the plane of face 8 so that the coil windings 5 are
provided with a good heat conducting connection to the liquid contacting
region of the pump. The neck 9 serves not only for suppressing leakage
flux and for the creation of a heat dissipating face 8 but also permits
the holes 22 in the flange to be located as closely as possible to the
centre axis 23 so that in conjunction with webs 24 the strength of the
structure for a given expenditure in material is high and the loads at a
given hydraulic pressure are low, in accordance with the smaller diameter.
The ground screw 16 projects through an opening 25. The teeth 1 extend
between the segments 20 to the partition 17. If the partition 17 were
supported exclusively by the stator teeth 1 the static pressure in the
pump casing 12 might dislocate the stator 1, 2, 4 and 5 and cause the
destruction of the motor. The leakage suppressing segments 20 and 21
transmit this hydraulic force to part 9 of the casing and through ring 10
to the flange 22 thus permitting the casing to absorb the axial hydraulic
thrust.
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