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Design of Compact Bearingless Disc Drive Systems

Inflating costs and emerging applications are spawning interests toward smaller and faster electric drives. The challenges of miniaturization make magnetic bearings more appealing, as they provide intrinsic high-speed capability and need virtually zero-maintenance. These advantages come at the cost...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Peralta, Patricio, Araujo, Douglas Martins, Perriard, Yves
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/tia.2020.3008368
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2759061
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author Peralta, Patricio
Araujo, Douglas Martins
Perriard, Yves
author_facet Peralta, Patricio
Araujo, Douglas Martins
Perriard, Yves
author_sort Peralta, Patricio
collection CERN
description Inflating costs and emerging applications are spawning interests toward smaller and faster electric drives. The challenges of miniaturization make magnetic bearings more appealing, as they provide intrinsic high-speed capability and need virtually zero-maintenance. These advantages come at the cost of more sensors, which require a seamless integration especially at small geometrical scale. In the magnetic levitation domain, slice drives are particularly interesting, given their stabilizing passive characteristics that simplify the control of levitation and render the system simpler. These drives are already suitable for compressor applications, where control of all degrees of freedom is not necessary. In this article, the design process for a bearingless disc drive with a high degree of system integration is proposed. Two motor topologies, namely slotted and slotless drives, are rated by their passive stability, active properties, and power losses. Two sensor systems, fundamental for magnetic bearing commissioning, are proposed. They are simple to industrialize and offer a low footprint, thus not interfering with the drive design process. Ultimately, an optimization example is presented. For the presented scenario, drives with intermediate rotor size are the optimal contenders. Specifically among them, the slotless variant proves the best, given lower electrical losses and lighter mass compared to the slotted variant. However, the slotted becomes interesting if a stiffer magnetic bearing is needed.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
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publishDate 2020
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spelling oai-inspirehep.net-18521052021-05-11T13:18:28Zdoi:10.1109/tia.2020.3008368http://cds.cern.ch/record/2759061engPeralta, PatricioAraujo, Douglas MartinsPerriard, YvesDesign of Compact Bearingless Disc Drive SystemsDetectors and Experimental TechniquesInflating costs and emerging applications are spawning interests toward smaller and faster electric drives. The challenges of miniaturization make magnetic bearings more appealing, as they provide intrinsic high-speed capability and need virtually zero-maintenance. These advantages come at the cost of more sensors, which require a seamless integration especially at small geometrical scale. In the magnetic levitation domain, slice drives are particularly interesting, given their stabilizing passive characteristics that simplify the control of levitation and render the system simpler. These drives are already suitable for compressor applications, where control of all degrees of freedom is not necessary. In this article, the design process for a bearingless disc drive with a high degree of system integration is proposed. Two motor topologies, namely slotted and slotless drives, are rated by their passive stability, active properties, and power losses. Two sensor systems, fundamental for magnetic bearing commissioning, are proposed. They are simple to industrialize and offer a low footprint, thus not interfering with the drive design process. Ultimately, an optimization example is presented. For the presented scenario, drives with intermediate rotor size are the optimal contenders. Specifically among them, the slotless variant proves the best, given lower electrical losses and lighter mass compared to the slotted variant. However, the slotted becomes interesting if a stiffer magnetic bearing is needed.oai:inspirehep.net:18521052020
spellingShingle Detectors and Experimental Techniques
Peralta, Patricio
Araujo, Douglas Martins
Perriard, Yves
Design of Compact Bearingless Disc Drive Systems
title Design of Compact Bearingless Disc Drive Systems
title_full Design of Compact Bearingless Disc Drive Systems
title_fullStr Design of Compact Bearingless Disc Drive Systems
title_full_unstemmed Design of Compact Bearingless Disc Drive Systems
title_short Design of Compact Bearingless Disc Drive Systems
title_sort design of compact bearingless disc drive systems
topic Detectors and Experimental Techniques
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/tia.2020.3008368
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2759061
work_keys_str_mv AT peraltapatricio designofcompactbearinglessdiscdrivesystems
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AT perriardyves designofcompactbearinglessdiscdrivesystems