Syed Sabir Hussain Bukhari;Madad Ali Shah;Jorge Rodas;Mohit Bajaj;Jong-Suk Ro
{"title":"Novel Sub-Harmonic-Based Self-Excited Brushless Wound Rotor Synchronous Machine","authors":"Syed Sabir Hussain Bukhari;Madad Ali Shah;Jorge Rodas;Mohit Bajaj;Jong-Suk Ro","doi":"10.1109/ICJECE.2022.3200146","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This article aims to realize a self-excited wound rotor synchronous machine (WRSM) topology established while considering the subharmonic field excitation scheme. Unlike the conventional subharmonic-based brushless WRSMs that require a dual-inverter configuration, the proposed topology uses a single inverter and a dual-armature winding pattern. The employed dual-armature winding configuration involves a four-pole main armature winding (ABC) and a two-pole open winding (X). The ABC winding is supplied with a three-phase current from a single customary current source inverter (CSI), whereas the X winding carries no current due to its open winding pattern and is responsible for generating subharmonic magnetomotive force (MMF) in the air gap along with the fundamental-harmonic MMF. The fundamental-harmonic MMF is utilized to create a four-pole stator field, while the subharmonic MMF is used to induce the harmonic current in the two-pole harmonic winding of the rotor. The generated harmonic current is rectified to energize the rotor field winding and develop a four-pole rotor field. The electromagnetic interaction of the four-pole stator and rotor fields generates torque. As the proposed subharmonic-based self-excited brushless WRSM employs a single inverter for its brushless operation, this makes it cost-effective compared to the conventional dual-inverter subharmonic-based brushless WRSM topologies. The proposed self-excited brushless WRSM topology is validated through the finite-element analysis (FEA). JMAG-Designer tool is employed to carry out FEA for a four-pole, 24-slot (4p24s) machine. The quantitative relative performance evaluation of the proposed self-excited WRSM topology with the recently developed dual-inverter-controlled subharmonic-based brushless WRSM topology is presented to show its better performance in terms of average, maximum, and minimum torques and torque ripple.","PeriodicalId":100619,"journal":{"name":"IEEE Canadian Journal of Electrical and Computer Engineering","volume":"45 4","pages":"365-374"},"PeriodicalIF":2.1000,"publicationDate":"2022-10-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"3","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"IEEE Canadian Journal of Electrical and Computer Engineering","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9919420/","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"COMPUTER SCIENCE, HARDWARE & ARCHITECTURE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 3
Abstract
This article aims to realize a self-excited wound rotor synchronous machine (WRSM) topology established while considering the subharmonic field excitation scheme. Unlike the conventional subharmonic-based brushless WRSMs that require a dual-inverter configuration, the proposed topology uses a single inverter and a dual-armature winding pattern. The employed dual-armature winding configuration involves a four-pole main armature winding (ABC) and a two-pole open winding (X). The ABC winding is supplied with a three-phase current from a single customary current source inverter (CSI), whereas the X winding carries no current due to its open winding pattern and is responsible for generating subharmonic magnetomotive force (MMF) in the air gap along with the fundamental-harmonic MMF. The fundamental-harmonic MMF is utilized to create a four-pole stator field, while the subharmonic MMF is used to induce the harmonic current in the two-pole harmonic winding of the rotor. The generated harmonic current is rectified to energize the rotor field winding and develop a four-pole rotor field. The electromagnetic interaction of the four-pole stator and rotor fields generates torque. As the proposed subharmonic-based self-excited brushless WRSM employs a single inverter for its brushless operation, this makes it cost-effective compared to the conventional dual-inverter subharmonic-based brushless WRSM topologies. The proposed self-excited brushless WRSM topology is validated through the finite-element analysis (FEA). JMAG-Designer tool is employed to carry out FEA for a four-pole, 24-slot (4p24s) machine. The quantitative relative performance evaluation of the proposed self-excited WRSM topology with the recently developed dual-inverter-controlled subharmonic-based brushless WRSM topology is presented to show its better performance in terms of average, maximum, and minimum torques and torque ripple.