Analysis Of Power Loss Of Permanent Magnet Synchronous Motors In More-Electric-Aircraft Considering The Impact Of Temperature

2018 IEEE/ASME INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ADVANCED INTELLIGENT MECHATRONICS (AIM)(2018)

Cited 2|Views13
No score
Abstract
The permanent-magnet synchronous motor (PMSM) is playing an increasingly important role in the development process of more-electric aircrafts and all-electric aircrafts. The working performance and the temperature level of PMSMs are closely interacted and interact on each other. In this paper, loss models of the PMSM were derived based on the electromagnetic induction principles and taking consideration of the influence of temperature on the permanent magnet characteristics and other material properties of the motor. A simplified thermal network was developed to estimate the temperature distribution of the PMSM. Taking a typical small-size PMSM as an example, the impacts of temperature on the losses and working efficiency of the motor were analyzed under different working states and various convection cooling intensities. Results indicate that the higher temperature will lead to a larger thermal loss and a lower working efficiency of the PMSM which can be improved with a better cooling management system. The temperature was a non-negligible factor for the loss estimation during the design process of a PMSM.
More
Translated text
Key words
lower working efficiency,loss estimation,permanent magnet synchronous motors,more-electric-aircraft,permanent-magnet synchronous motor,development process,more-electric aircrafts,all-electric aircrafts,working performance,loss models,electromagnetic induction principles,power loss analysis,motor material properties,convection cooling intensities,cooling management system,larger thermal loss,higher temperature,typical small-size PMSM,temperature distribution,permanent magnet characteristics
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined