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Design Considerations for High Surface-Speed and High-Load Switched Reluctance Machines

This thesis investigates and determines the design considerations to be addressed when designing switched reluctance machines (SRMs) operating at high surface-speeds and high-loads. A new method is introduced to the traditional machine design procedure that captures all of the mechanical, thermal and electro-magnetic considerations for such electric machines.
This method is applicable to any motor design; however, is most suitable for machines with rotors that sustain mechanical stresses near the rotor core material limits.
The method begins by using common application specifications to identify the maximum diameter and length of a rotor through a series of structural analyses.
Maximizing rotor diameter and axial length enables designers to evaluate a machine's theoretical mechanical and electro-magnetic performance limits.
The design method is structured such that the designer must use theoretical limits as a constraint for assessing future design decisions which ultimately influence machine cost and performance.

The proposed design method is applied to a case study example typical of a large electric vehicle traction machine, a 22,000rpm, 150 kW switched reluctance machine, while attempting to adhere with design practices commensurate with automotive mass manufacturing.
To achieve this, a parallel connected 12/8 pole topology was finally developed.
The thesis research suggest that a 440 MPa yield strength, 0.27mm thickness lamination with 30 turn stator coils is sufficient to meet the specification requirements within a prescribed power electronic converter voltage and current constraints, while satisfying material mechanical and thermal considerations.
Detailed analysis of AC effects, performance characteristics, thermodynamics, noise and vibration is presented to simultaneously demonstrate and validate the proposed machine design and design method. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/22047
Date January 2017
CreatorsFairall, Earl
ContributorsEmadi, Ali, Schofield, Nigel, Mechanical Engineering
Source SetsMcMaster University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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