Title: ENERGY CONVERSION ONE (Course 25741)
1ENERGY CONVERSION ONE (Course 25741)
- CHAPTER SEVEN
- INDUCTION MOTORS
-
2SUMMARY
- 1. Induction Motor Construction
- 2. Basic Induction Motor Concepts
- The Development of Induced Torque in an
Induction Motor - The Concept of Rotor Slip
- The Electrical Frequency on the Rotor
- 3. The Equivalent Circuit of an Induction
Motor - The Transformer Model of an induction
Motor - The Rotor Circuit Model
- The Final Equivalent Circuit
- 4. Powers and Torque in Induction Motor
- Losses and Power-Flow diagram
- Power and Torque in an Induction Motor
- Separating the Rotor Copper Losses and
the Power Converted in an - Induction Motors Equivalent Circuit
- 5. Induction Motor Torque-Speed
Characteristics - Induced Torque from a Physical
Standpoint - The Derivation of the Induction Motor
Induced-Torque Equation - Comments on the Induction Motor Torque
Speed Curve - Maximum (Pullout) Torque in an
Induction Motor
3SUMMARY
- 7. Starting Induction Motors
- 8. Speed Control of Induction Motor
- Induction Motor Speed Control by Pole
Changing. - Speed Control by Changing the Line
Frequency. - Speed Control by Changing the Line
Voltage. - Speed Control by Changing the Rotor
Resistance. - 9. Determining Circuit Model Parameters
- The No-Load Test
- The DC Test
- The Locked-Rotor Test
- 10. Determining Circuit model parameters
- No-load test/ DC test for stator
resistance - Locked-Rotor test
- 11. Induction Generator
- induction generator operating alone/
induction - Generator application
- Induction motor ratings
4INDUCTION MOTORSINTRODUCTION
- It was shown how amortisseur windings on a
synchronous motor could develop a starting torque
without necessity of supplying an external field
current to them - Amortisseur windings work so well that a motor
could be built without syn. motors main dc field
circuit - A machine with only amortisseur winding is called
induction machine, because the rotor voltage is
induced in rotor windings rather than being
physically connected by wires
5INDUCTION MOTORSINTRODUCTION
- Cutaway diagram of typical large cage rotor
induction motor
6INDUCTION MOTORSINTRODUCTION
7INDUCTION MOTORSINTRODUCTION
- Typical wound rotors for induction motors, slip
rings bars connecting rotor windings to slip
rings can be seen
8INDUCTION MOTORSINTRODUCTION
- Cutaway of a wound-rotor induction motor
- Note brushes and slip rings are shown, also
rotor windings skewed to eliminate slot harmonics
9INDUCTION MOTORSINTRODUCTION
- Distinguishing feature no dc field current
required to run machine - Although it is possible to use an induction
machine as either motor or generator, it has many
disadvantages as a generator so is rarely used
as Gen. - INDUCTION MOTOR CONSTRUCTION
- Same physical stator as syn. machine with
different rotor construction - There are cage rotor wound rotor
10INDUCTION MOTORSCONSTRUCTION
- A cage induction rotor consists of a series of
conducting bars laid into slots carved in face of
rotor shorted at either end by large shorting
rings - This design is referred to as a cage rotor
because of conductors arrangement on rotor - A wound rotor has a complete set of 3 phase
windings that are mirror images of windings on
stator - The 3 phase of rotor windings are usually
Y-connected and end of 3 rotor wires tied to slip
rings on rotor shaft - The rotor currents accessible at stator brushes,
where they can be examined where extra
resistance can be inserted into rotor circuit - This can be used to modify torque-speed
characteristic of motor - Wound rotor motors more expensive, require more
maintenance due to wear associated with brushes
slip rings, therefore wound motor induction
motors are rarely used
11BASIC INDUCTION MOTOR CONCEPTS
- Its operation is basically same as amortisseur
windings on syn. motors - Development of Induced Torque
- Again a BS is developed, which is rotating
counter-clockwise in Figure of ? next slide - Speed of magnetic fields rotation is
nsync120fe/p - voltage induced in a rotor bar
- eind(v x B).l
- vvelocity of bar relative to magnetic field
- Bmagnetic flux density vector
- l length of conductor in magnetic field
12BASIC INDUCTION MOTOR CONCEPTS
- Development of Induced Torque
13BASIC INDUCTION MOTOR CONCEPTS
- relative move of rotor w.r.t. BS result in an
induced voltage in rotor bar - Velocity of upper rotor bars w.r.t. BS is to
right - Induced voltage in upper bars is out of page,
while induced voltage in the lower bars is into
page - This results in a current flow out of upper bars
into lower bars - Since rotor assembly is inductive, peak rotor
current flow produces a rotor magnetic field BR
14BASIC INDUCTION MOTOR CONCEPTS
- Induced torque in machine is
- Tind kBR x BS
- resulting torque is counterclockwise rotor
accelerates in this direction - There is a finite upper limit on motors speed
- If induction motors rotor were turning at syn.
Speed, then rotor bars would be stationary
relative to BS there would be no induced
voltage eind0 no rotor current BR0 ? Tind0 - Rotor will slow down, due to friction losses
- An induction motor can speed up to near-syn.
Speed, however it can never reach syn. speed
15BASIC INDUCTION MOTOR CONCEPTS
- Flowchart showing induction motor operation
-
16BASIC INDUCTION MOTOR CONCEPTS
- Note in normal operation, both BR BS rotate
together at syn. Speed nsync while rotor itself
turn at a slower s peed - Concept of Rotor Slip
- Voltage induced in rotor bar depends on relative
speed of rotor with respect to BS - Since behavior of induction motor depends on
motor voltage current, it is more logical to
talk about this relative speed - Two terms commonly used to define relative motion
of rotor BS , slip speed slip - slip speed defined as difference between syn.
Speed rotor speed nslipnsync-nm
17BASIC INDUCTION MOTOR CONCEPTS
- In which
- nslip slip speed of machine
- nsync speed of magnetic fields
- nm mechanical shaft speed of motor
- slip is relative speed expressed on a per-unit
or percentage basis snslip/nsync (x100) - s nsync-nm / nsync (x100)
- or in terms of angular velocity
- s ?sync-?m / ?sync (x100)
18BASIC INDUCTION MOTOR CONCEPTS
- If rotor turn at syn. speed ? s0
- while if rotor stationary ? s1
- all normal motor speeds fall somewhere between
those 2 limits - mechanical speed of rotor shaft can be expressed
in terms of syn. speed slip - nm (1-s)nsync or ?m(1-s)?sync
19BASIC INDUCTION MOTOR CONCEPTS
- Electrical Frequency on Rotor
- An induction motor works by inducing voltages in
rotor of machine because of that sometimes
called rotating transformer - Like a transformer, primary (stator) induces a
voltage in secondary (rotor) but - Unlike a transformer, secondary frequency is
not necessarily same as primary frequency - If rotor of motor locked so that can not move,
rotor will have the same frequency as stator
20BASIC INDUCTION MOTOR CONCEPTS
- on the other hand, if rotor turns at syn. Speed,
frequency on rotor will be zero - what will rotor frequency be for any arbitrary
rate of rotor rotation ? - at nm0 r/min, rotor frequency frfe Hz, and slip
s1 - at nmnsyn fr0 and slip is s0
- with any speed in between, rotor frequency is
directly proportional to difference between speed
of magnetic field nsync speed of rotor nm - Snsync-nm / nsync
- rotor frequency can be expressed as frs
fe
21BASIC INDUCTION MOTOR CONCEPTS
- alternative forms of last expression
- frnsync-nm / nsync . fe
- since nsync120 fe/p ?
- fr (nsync-nm)p/(120fe) fe
- fr p/120 (nsync-nm)
- Example A 208 V, 10 hp, 4 pole, 60 Hz, Y
connected induction motor has a full-load slip of
5 percent - (a) what is syn. Speed of motor?
22BASIC INDUC. MOTOR CONCEPTS.EXAMPLE
- (b) what is rotor speed of this motor at rated
load? - (c) what is rotor frequency of this motor at
rated load? - (d) what is shaft torque of this motor at rated
load?
23BASIC INDUCTION MOTOR CONCEPTS
- SOLUTION
- (a) nsync120 fe/p120x60/41800 r/min
- (b) nm(1-s) nsync (1-0.05)(1800)1710
r/min - (c) frs fe 0.95 x 603 Hz
- or frp/120 (nsync-nm)4/120 (1800-1710)3
Hz - (d) Tload Pout/?m
- 10 x 746/1710 x 2p x 1/60 41.7 N.m
- shaft load torque in English units
Tload5252 P/n - where T is in lb-feet , P in hp, and nm
r/min - Tload5252 x 10 / (1710) 30.7 lb . ft
24EQUIVALENT CIRCUIT OF AN INDUCTION MOTOR
- Basis of an induction motor is on induction of
voltage current in its rotor (Transformer
Action) - equivalent circuit of an induction motor is very
similar to equivalent circuit of a transformer - induction motor is called a singly excited
machine (opposed to doubly excited syn.
machine) - since power is supplied to only stator
circuit
25EQUIVALENT CIRCUIT OF AN INDUCTION MOTOR
- Since an induction motor does not have an
independent field circuit, its model will not
contain an internal voltage source such as
internal generated voltage EA in a syn. Machine - The equivalent circuit of induction motor can be
derived from a knowledge of transformers and
from what already know about variation of rotor
frequency with speed in induction motors - The induction motor model developed by starting
with transformer model, and then realizing
variable rotor frequency other induction motor
effects
26EQUIVALENT CIRCUIT OF AN INDUCTION MOTOR
- Transformer Model of an Induction Motor
- Per-phase equivalent circuit of an induction
motor
27TRANSFORMER MODEL ofINDUCTION MOTOR
- As shown there is certain resistance self
inductance in primary (stator) windings which
must be represented in equivalent circuit of
machine - Stator resistance called R1 stator leakage
reactance called X1 - These appear right at input to machine model
- Flux in machine is the integral of applied
voltage E1 - Curve of magneto-motive force versus flux,
(magnetization curve) compared to similar curve
for power transformer (next slide)
28TRANSFORMER MODEL ofINDUCTION MOTOR
- Magnetization curve of induction motor
29TRANSFORMER MODEL ofINDUCTION MOTOR
- Note slope of induction motors magneto-motive
force-flux curve is much shallower than curve of
a good transformer - because there is an air gap in an induction motor
which greatly increase reluctance of flux path
therefore reduces coupling between primary
secondary windings - Higher reluctance caused by air gap means a
higher magnetizing reactance XM in equivalent
circuit will have a much smaller value (larger
susceptance BM) than its value in an ordinary
transformer
30TRANSFORMER MODEL ofINDUCTION MOTOR
- Primary internal stator voltage E1 coupled to
secondary ER by an ideal transformer with an
effective turns ratio aeff - Effective turns ratio aeff easy to determined for
a wound-rotor motor - ratio of conductors per phase on stator to
conductors per phase on rotor, modified by any
pitch distribution factor differences - It is rather difficult to determine aeff clearly
in cage of a case rotor motor because there are
no distinct windings on cage rotor
31TRANSFORMER MODEL ofINDUCTION MOTOR
- In either case there is an effective turns ratio
for motor - Voltage ER produced in rotor in turn produces a
current flow in shorted rotor (or secondary)
circuit of machine - Primary impedance magnetization current of
induction motor are very similar to corresponding
components in a transformer equivalent circuit - Induction motor equivalent circuit differs from
transformer equivalent circuit primarily in
effects of varying rotor frequency on rotor
voltage ER and secondarily in rotor resistance RR
and jXR
32ROTOR CIRCUIT MODEL
- A voltage induced in rotor windings when 3 phase
voltage applied to stator windings - The greater the relative motion between rotor
stator magnetic fields, the greater the resulting
rotor voltage rotor frequency - The largest relative motion occurs when rotor is
stationary, called locked-rotor or blocked-rotor
condition - So largest voltage rotor frequency are induced
in rotor at that condition (locked rotor)
33ROTOR CIRCUIT MODEL
- Smallest voltage (0 V) and frequency (0 Hz) occur
when rotor moves at same speed as stator magnetic
field (having no relative motion) - magnitude frequency of induced voltage in
rotor at any speed between these extremes is
proportional to the slip of motor - If magnitude of induced rotor voltage at
locked-rotor is ER0 magnitude at any slip -
ERs ER0 - frequency of induced voltage frsfe
- rotor has both resistance reactance RR a
constant (except for ski effect) , reactance
affected in a complicated way by slip
34ROTOR CIRCUIT MODEL
- reactance of an induction motor rotor depends on
inductance of rotor frequency of voltage and
current in rotor - XR?r LR 2p fr LR (realizing frsfr) ?
XR2psfeLRs XR0 (XR0blocked-rotor reactance) - Resulted equivalent circuit of rotor