Return to search

Integrated Rotor Air Cooling System Design in Axial Flux Permanent Magnet Machines for Aerospace Applications

A Thesis Submitted to the School of Graduate Studies in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Applied Science in Mechanical Engineering / In the wake of the rising global demand for more electric transportation, aerospace electrification is becoming a highly active research area as commercial fully electric aircrafts are becoming a reality. The transportation electrification industry is challenged to develop powerful, safe, and compact-sized machines that can replace fossil fuel powered engines in aircrafts. Axial Flux Permanent Magnets (AFPM) machines are currently being intensively developed as a great candidate for this purpose due to their inherently higher power density compared to other machine electric machines topologies. The efforts of further increasing AFPM machines power density add more thermal challenges as intensive cooling is required at a relatively small machine package to avoid machine failure. One of the most concerning failure modes in these machines is power output reduction due to overheating of the rotor-mounted permanent magnets or even complete failure due to irreversible demagnetization. This research discusses the design process of an integrated rotor air cooling system for a 100 kW AFPM machine designed for an electric aircraft propulsion system. The embedded cooling system allows the rotor to be self-cooled at a sufficient cooling rate while minimizing the impact on machine efficiency due to windage power losses. The presented design process includes several stages of cooling enhancement including the addition and fine-tuning of rotor fan blades and rotor vents design. These enhancements are done by studying the air flow over the rotor surfaces in conjunction with heat transfer through Conjugate Heat Transfer (CHT) Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) analyses. In an initial study, different rotors with different combinations of rotor cooling features are studied and their thermal performance is compared. The results show that using rotor embedded fan blades in throughflow ventilated rotor geometry offers the best performance balance, achieving sufficient rotor cooling rate within a reasonable increase of windage power loss. A parametric study is performed to improve the rotor blade geometry for a higher ratio of heat transfer to windage losses. Another study is performed where the rotor and the enclosure geometries are fine-tuned simultaneously to reduce the negative effect on rotor heat transfer imposed by the enclosure. The final geometry of the rotor enclosure assembly is generated based on the research results and the design is integrated into the final machine prototype to be tested. / Thesis / Master of Applied Science (MASc) / Axial-flux permanent magnets (AFPM) machines are gaining the transportation electrification industy attention as a greener alternative to combustion engines in aircraft propulsion systems due to their high power and torque density. The intense endeavors of the current research to further improve AFPM machines power densities brings thermal design challenges to ensure the safe operation of the machine. Rotor permanent magnets failure due to demagnetization as a result of overheating can impose a great risk to the machine operation and safety. Accordingly, special attention should be paid to rotor thermal management. This research discusses the design process of an integrated rotor air cooling system for an AFPM machine designed for an electric aircraft. The machine mechanical and thermal design parameters are used to set an initial rotor design with different rotor cooling features based on literature findings. Rotor fan blades and air vents are selected as the main rotor cooling features for the design. Several design iterations are then made to fine-tune the rotor geometry targeting low operating temperature of the permanent magnets at a low cost of windage losses. The thermal performance of the different designs is assessed and compared to each other using conjugate heat transfer (CHT) computational fluid dynamics (CFD) analyses. Safe operating temperature of the magnets is achieved at an acceptable windage losses value with the final design, and it is selected for prototyping.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/27442
Date January 2022
CreatorsZaher, Islam
ContributorsEmadi, Ali, Mechanical Engineering
Source SetsMcMaster University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

Page generated in 0.0024 seconds