论文标题
电动机建模的耦合电磁 - 热力学方法
A coupled electromagnetic-thermomechanical approach for the modeling of electric motors
论文作者
论文摘要
在运输行业越来越高的压力,电流和电磁场的环境和可持续性考虑因素驱动的更轻,紧凑,更强大的电动机的未来发展。因此,机械,热和电磁效应之间的强耦合将出现,并且电动机设计需要一致的多物理建模方法。典型的模拟 - 大部分在电气工程文献中呈现在逐步过程中,其中麦克斯韦方程的分辨率提供了洛伦兹和磁力,随后用作牛顿运动方程的外体力。这里介绍的工作提出了电动机边界价值问题的多物理设置。使用连续力学的直接方法,使用热力学的基本原理得出了耦合电磁,热和机械场的一般框架。特别注意在小应变下但任意磁化的各向同性材料的耦合本构方程的推导。作为第一个应用,该理论用于理想化的异步电动机的分析模型层,我们为其计算电流,磁性,应力和温度场作为所应用电流和滑动参数的函数。将应力张量和身体力量载体的不同成分与由于惯性引起的纯机械对应物进行了比较,从而量化了电磁现象的显着影响。
Future developments of lighter, more compact and powerful motors-driven by environmental and sustainability considerations in the transportation industry-involve higher stresses, currents and electromagnetic fields. Strong couplings between mechanical, thermal and electromagnetic effects will consequently arise and a consistent multiphysics modeling approach is required for the motors' design. Typical simulations-the bulk of which are presented in the electrical engineering literature-involve a stepwise process, where the resolution of Maxwell's equations provides the Lorentz and magnetic forces which are subsequently used as the external body forces for the resolution of Newton's equations of motion. The work presented here proposes a multiphysics setting for the boundary value problem of electric motors. Using the direct approach of continuum mechanics, a general framework that couples the electromagnetic , thermal and mechanical fields is derived using the basic principles of thermodynamics. Particular attention is paid to the derivation of the coupled constitutive equations for isotropic materials under small strain but arbitrary magnetization. As a first application, the theory is employed for the analytical mod-eling of an idealized asynchronous motor for which we calculate the electric current, magnetic, stress and temperature fields as a function of the applied current and slip parameter. The different components of the stress tensor and body force vector are compared to their purely mechanical counterparts due to inertia, quantifying the significant influence of electromagnetic phenomena.