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Thermal and Mechanical Design of a High-Speed Power Dense Radial Flux Surface Mounted PM Motor

With the growing need to meet aggressive emissions targets in the aerospace industry
in the coming decades, the electrification of propulsion systems has become an area
of great research and commercial interest. In order to achieve full electrification of
larger commercial aircraft, it is critical to improve power and energy densities of
components within the propulsion system. The power densities of electric motors are
steadily rising to meet this requirement. Among the various motor designs available,
the high-speed radial flux permanent magnet motor is presented as an architecture
capable of achieving high efficiencies and power densities. Increasing power densities,
however, poses challenges for the thermal management system as higher losses need
to be dissipated from a relatively small machine package. One of the failure modes
specific to permanent magnet motors is the demagnetization of the magnets in the
rotor at higher temperatures which leads to a loss in performance. Therefore it is
critical that the thermal management system of the rotor must effectively dissipate
the losses generated in the magnets and other components within the rotor.
This thesis discusses the mechanical and thermal design of a 150 kW high-speed radial
flux surface mounted permanent magnet motor for aerospace propulsion applications.
The thesis first introduces the current landscape of aerospace electrification, focusing
specifically on electric and hybrid propulsion architectures, currently available electric
motors for aerospace propulsion, and ongoing aircraft electrification projects. A review
is then provided of the current state-of-the-art in rotor cooling designs for high-speed
speed radial flux motors for traction applications before introducing the design of
the motor proposed in this thesis. The discussion of the mechanical design provides
a high level overview of the design, manufacturing, and assembly of the stator and
rotating assemblies while the thermal design provides a brief overview of the stator
cooling design and a deep dive on the rotor cooling design. Computational Fluid
Dynamics (CFD) is used along with the Taguchi method for robust design to optimize
the rotor cooling design for minimizing the magnet temperatures. Analysis for the
optimized rotor cooling discussed is provided before providing recommendations for
future work. / Thesis / Master of Applied Science (MASc)

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/29769
Date January 2024
CreatorsNoronha, Kenneth
ContributorsEmadi, Ali, Mechanical Engineering
Source SetsMcMaster University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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