{"title":"Discussion on “exciter instability”","authors":"R. Doherty","doi":"10.1109/JoAIEE.1922.6593239","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"W. A. Hillebrand: A rather startling instance of an oscillation such as Mr. Doherty has just described, came within my observation some three years ago. There was a two-pull electro magnet for a Paulson high-frequency arc converter, the magnet weighing approximately 30 tons, and they had only 5-kilowatts of arc converters at the station. Now the magnet itself was perhaps the most powerful that was ever delivered, and it was excited by a 250-kw., 500-volt d-c. generator, direct connected to a 2400-volt induction motor. Now what happened was that the power went off. The energy stored in the magnetic field was sufficient to stop the motor-generator set, reversing it. This reversal of rotation of the motor generator demagnetized the magnet, magnetizing it in the opposite direction, and again brought the set to rest. That is, there was a highly damped oscillation of very low frequency lasting for a cycle and a half. We ran saturation curves under various conditions, and finally after the last run the current was cut off, and I think some three or four minutes after the machine was completely disconnected, while we were stripping it, we still got an arc, showing the current was still flowing. That is, it took several minutes, due to the very slow decay before the current came to zero.","PeriodicalId":268640,"journal":{"name":"Journal of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers","volume":"1 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1922-12-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1109/JoAIEE.1922.6593239","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
W. A. Hillebrand: A rather startling instance of an oscillation such as Mr. Doherty has just described, came within my observation some three years ago. There was a two-pull electro magnet for a Paulson high-frequency arc converter, the magnet weighing approximately 30 tons, and they had only 5-kilowatts of arc converters at the station. Now the magnet itself was perhaps the most powerful that was ever delivered, and it was excited by a 250-kw., 500-volt d-c. generator, direct connected to a 2400-volt induction motor. Now what happened was that the power went off. The energy stored in the magnetic field was sufficient to stop the motor-generator set, reversing it. This reversal of rotation of the motor generator demagnetized the magnet, magnetizing it in the opposite direction, and again brought the set to rest. That is, there was a highly damped oscillation of very low frequency lasting for a cycle and a half. We ran saturation curves under various conditions, and finally after the last run the current was cut off, and I think some three or four minutes after the machine was completely disconnected, while we were stripping it, we still got an arc, showing the current was still flowing. That is, it took several minutes, due to the very slow decay before the current came to zero.
W. A.希勒布兰德:大约三年前,我观察到多尔蒂先生刚才描述的那种相当惊人的振荡现象。保尔森高频电弧转换器有一个双拉电磁铁,磁铁重约30吨,他们在空间站只有5千瓦的电弧转换器。磁铁本身可能是有史以来最强大的,它被250千瓦的功率激发。, 500伏直流。发电机,直接连接到2400伏感应电机。现在发生的事情是停电了。储存在磁场中的能量足以使电机发电机组停止运转,使其倒转。电机发电机的这种反向旋转使磁体退磁,使其在相反的方向磁化,并再次使该装置休息。也就是说,有一个非常低频率的高阻尼振荡持续了一个半周期。我们在各种条件下运行饱和曲线,最后在最后一次运行后电流被切断,我想在机器完全断开后的三到四分钟,当我们剥离它时,我们仍然得到一个弧,表明电流仍然在流动。也就是说,这需要几分钟,因为在电流达到零之前衰减非常缓慢。