TY - JOUR
T1 - Simultaneous Tuning of Rotor Shape and Phase Current of Switched Reluctance Motors for Eliminating Input Current and Torque Ripples with Reduced Copper Loss
AU - Kusumi, Takayuki
AU - Hara, Takuto
AU - Umetani, Kazuhiro
AU - Hiraki, Eiji
N1 - Funding Information:
Manuscript received December 30, 2019; revised May 13, 2020; accepted July 10, 2020. Date of publication August 11, 2020; date of current version November 19, 2020. Paper 2019-EMC-1233.R1, presented at the 2018 IEEE Energy Conversion Congress and Exposition, Portland, OR, USA, Sep. 23–27, and approved for publication in the IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INDUSTRY APPLI-CATIONS by the Electric Machines Committee of the IEEE Industry Applications Society. This work was supported in part by JSPS (JSPS KAKENHI under Grant JP15K18021). (Corresponding author: Takayuki Kusumi.) Takayuki Kusumi and Eiji Hiraki are with the Graduate School of Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University, Okayama 700-8530, Japan (e-mail: p75s6ovi@s.okayama-u.ac.jp; hiraki@okayama-u.ac.jp).
Publisher Copyright:
© 1972-2012 IEEE.
PY - 2020/11/1
Y1 - 2020/11/1
N2 - Switched reluctance motor (SRM) is recently emerging as a cost-effective but mechanically and thermally robust motor for vehicle propulsion. However, the conventional driving method of the SRM causes a large input current and torque ripples, both of which are scarcely acceptable for vehicle application. Recently, a promising driving method has been proposed that tunes the phase current to eliminate the input current and torque ripples simultaneously, although this method suffers from large copper loss when applied to the normal SRMs. To solve this problem, this article proposes simultaneous tuning of the rotor shape in combination with the recently proposed driving method, which includes only tuning of the phase current. Tuning of the rotor shape is targeted at minimizing the copper loss. Meanwhile, the stator structure is the same as the normal SRM design. The proposed approach was revealed to reduce the effective value of the phase current by 18% in simulation and by 23% in experiment compared with the recently proposed driving method, without increasing the input current and torque ripples. This result suggests the effectiveness of tuning both the rotor shape and the phase current for applying SRMs to vehicle propulsion.
AB - Switched reluctance motor (SRM) is recently emerging as a cost-effective but mechanically and thermally robust motor for vehicle propulsion. However, the conventional driving method of the SRM causes a large input current and torque ripples, both of which are scarcely acceptable for vehicle application. Recently, a promising driving method has been proposed that tunes the phase current to eliminate the input current and torque ripples simultaneously, although this method suffers from large copper loss when applied to the normal SRMs. To solve this problem, this article proposes simultaneous tuning of the rotor shape in combination with the recently proposed driving method, which includes only tuning of the phase current. Tuning of the rotor shape is targeted at minimizing the copper loss. Meanwhile, the stator structure is the same as the normal SRM design. The proposed approach was revealed to reduce the effective value of the phase current by 18% in simulation and by 23% in experiment compared with the recently proposed driving method, without increasing the input current and torque ripples. This result suggests the effectiveness of tuning both the rotor shape and the phase current for applying SRMs to vehicle propulsion.
KW - Geometrical tuning
KW - input-current ripple
KW - phase-current waveform
KW - rotor-shape
KW - switched reluctance motors (SRMs)
KW - torque ripple
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U2 - 10.1109/TIA.2020.3015446
DO - 10.1109/TIA.2020.3015446
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85095856110
SN - 0093-9994
VL - 56
SP - 6384
EP - 6398
JO - IEEE Transactions on Applications and Industry
JF - IEEE Transactions on Applications and Industry
IS - 6
M1 - 9165121
ER -