Stepper Motor Basics
Stepper Motor Basics
Stepper Motor Basics
com i
The Step Motor Specialists
STEPPER MOTOR
BASICS
A guide to understanding the fundamentals of
stepper technology and its common applications.
A step motor is a brushless DC electric motor that moves in A stepper motor consists of a permanent magnet sandwiched
precise angles, called steps, by converting a series of electrical between the two rotor halves (causing axial polarity), which make
pulses into rotational motion. They will not produce continuous up the spinning part of the motor, placed into a stator housing
motion from a continuous input voltage, and it will stay at a where the stator coils of wire make up the different motor phases.
particular position as long as the power is “on”. Step motors are Lin stepper motors have two phases, where each phase has four
controlled with the use of discrete electrical pulse signals. Each coils. The phase is magnetized where the A and A- phases (or B
pulse will rotate the step motor shaft by a fixed angle called a and B-)are magnetized at the same time, so that both A phases are
“step”. Lin Engineering step motors have several different step magnetized as one pole, and both A- phases are magnetized as
angles to choose from (0.45°, 0.9°, 1.8°). the opposite pole because the winding direction of the A phase is
opposite the winding direction of the A- phase.
If the pulses are carried out in a specified sequence, the motor will
spin continuously; the speed can be controlled by the rate at which
the pulses are sent. These natural step angles allow a step motor
to be accurately positioned without the accumulation of error. The Magnet
step motor produces output torque from the interaction between Rotor Section
the magnetic field in the rotor and in the stator. The magnetic field Rotor Section
strength is proportional to the amount of current applied to the
windings as well as the amount of turns in the windings. Front Endcap
The rotor is connected to the motor shaft, which gives the output teeth. The rotor is now moved one step angle to the next detent
rotation and torque of the motor when voltage and current pulses position. This “on and off” current flow causes the rotor to rotate
are applied to the motor windings. The bearings on either side of one precise step angle, and this movement is repeated with each
the rotor allow for smooth rotation with little friction and wearing. input pulse.
The bearings are placed into their designated spaces in the front
and rear endcaps, which allow for concentricity of the rotor inside
the stator. Perfect alignment of the rotor and the stator is very
important because the airgap between them, where the motor
torque is generated, must be equal on all sides and is only a few
nanometers wide - thinner than a strand of hair.
Bipolar Series:
Wire Connection Diagrams Bipolar series winding has two coils per phase that are wires
4 Lead 6 Lead 6 Lead
together in series. The series windings allow a higher torque
Bipolar Connection Unipolar Connection Bipolar (Series) Connection output at lower speeds because the number of turns, which is
proportional to torque, is effectively doubled. The series winding
has four times the inductance value of a single half-coil or parallel
winding, twice the resistance of a half-coil winding, and requires
half the current of a parallel winding to match its ampere-turns.
CURRENT WAVEFORMS
PHASE A 64x Microstep Waveform
Most step motors step 1.8° per full step. (Lin step motors are also Current
available in 0.9° and 0.45° step angles). If a motor is driven in the
full step mode (using a 1.8° as an example), the current waveform 100%
of one of the phases will look like the following: Time
0%
100%
PHASE A Full Step Waveform
Current Phase current increments are so small,
the waveform become sinusoidal.
100%
Time
0%
100%
Time
0%
100%
Taking a Closer Look: step motor designs. Typical 0.9° motors contain either 8 poles
or 16 poles within their respective stators.
8 POLES vs. 12 POLES In the Figures 1a and 1b below, you can see that the angle
between each pole on the 8-Pole design is 45°. The 16-Pole
Hybrid 2-Phase Stepper Motors can be constructed in a variety of design has a 22.5° angle. As a motor steps, it is holding in one
ways internally. Although there are a number of different position where the stator pole is aligned with the rotor. It then
components within a stepper motor that have a large impact moves to the next pole to align with the rotor. From one pole to
on performance, it can be argued that the most important the next, if the air gap is slightly smaller or larger, you will see this
component is the stator. variation in the form of inconsistent step accuracy, vibration and
resonance, and inconsistency in torque.
The stator can be designed in such a way where there are 8 poles,
12 poles or even 16 poles. The poles are where the wires are Notice in Figure 1a, that g1 and g2 can potentially be very
wound around, essentially resulting in the windings of the motor. different compared to Figure 1b. The closer your poles are, it
The mechanical difference between the three types of stator minimizes the variation differences from step to step. However,
designs is their relative air gap between the rotor and stator. The
air gap between the rotor and stator is always nonconcentric. 22.5º
45º
No step motor manufacturer can produce a perfect outside g’1 g’1
diameter of the rotor (rotor OD) and inside diameter of the g’2
How is this done? Let’s discuss the number of teeth on the stator.
In a 0.9° stepper, there are 100 teeth on the rotor. Therefore, the
number of stator teeth must be less than 100. Each extra tooth that
you can squeeze into the stator design will give you more torque,
inherent in the design, regardless of winding space.
This technical article describes the most accurate way to describe Micro-stepping is controlled by the motor’s current ratio of the
step error that is most meaningful to the step motor user. The phases from the motor driver. The current ratio table is built based
traditional way to specify step accuracy is in the form of a on a sinusoidal torque curve of step motors. See Graph 1 for a
percentage by taking the full step error divided by the visual understanding of how microstepping works in regards to
fundamental step angle of the motor. Let’s understand this and the input current to the two motor phases.
see how we can convince the industry to measure in terms of
actual step error in degrees or better yet, in arc-minutes. A motor that does not have a sinusoidal torque curve cannot
follow the micro-stepping position. Since not every motor can
The traditional method of using percentage error stems from produce a sinusoidal torque curve and the current ratio cannot be
applications that frequently used motors at full-stepping in order perfect from electronics control, a step motor cannot maintain the
to generate the best torque. However, in today’s industry, most same accuracy as full stepping when compared to micro-stepping.
applications operate at ½ stepping or micro-stepping. Step
accuracy during full stepping no longer serves the purpose for Laboratory studies show that the step error may double or
today’s needs. quadruple from full stepping to 1/64 stepping. A motor with good
step accuracy at full stepping does not automatically provide
good step accuracy at micro-stepping. Assuming that a perfect
micro-stepping motor can keep the absolute step error regard-
Driver’s Output Current into the Motor Phases
less of the number of micro-stepping, 5% step error of a full step
for 64x Microstepping on a 1.8 Motor becomes 10% of a ½ step and 20% of a ¼ step. The percentage of
Motor’s Full Step Position
the micro-step size will be up to 100% or more at a high number
where A has zero current of micro-stepping. Therefore, reporting the step error at the % of
Input Current
Accuracy Versus Resolution Microstepping has been clearly defined as full-stepping, ½ stepping
Step Error
and ¼ stepping in the industry. Rather than saying 1/8 stepping or
finer stepping, most engineers started saying 8 micro-stepping or
-5% +5%
more micro-stepping. Here is the table for a clear communication:
Full Step
-10% +10%
Stepping Modes
1/2 Step Full Stepping = 1 Microstepping
-20% +20% 1/2 Stepping = 2 Microstepping
1/4 Stepping = 4 Microstepping
-40% +40%
1/4 Step
1/8 Stepping = 8 Microstepping
1/10 Stepping = 10 Microstepping
-80% +80% 1/8 Step 1/16 Stepping = 16 Microstepping
1/32 Stepping = 32 Microstepping
1/16 Step
1/64 Stepping = 64 Microstepping
-160% +160%
1/128 Stepping = 128 Microstepping
1/256 Stepping = 256 Microstepping
1/32 Step
True Position The step errors can range from ±1.5 arc-minutes up to ±5 arc-min-
utes for size 17, 0.9-degree motors, and from ±3 arc-minutes up to
based on 1/64 stepping (1 arc-minute is 1/60th of a degree). Be- ±12 arc-minutes for 1.8-degree motors during micro-stepping. Lin
cause anything higher than 1/64 stepping has very little impact to motors perform the best in both the 0.9-degree and the 1.8-degree
the application in terms of smooth motion & noise. Meanwhile, a arenas. It is because we design a sinusoidal torque motor. This is
motor with good step accuracy at 1/64 stepping automatically pro- one of the reasons that Lin’s 0.9-degree motors are the most popu-
vide good step accuracy at larger stepping than 1/64. lar in precision motion applications.
As a step motor user, we do care about the absolute step error An accurately superior motor is also mechanically more efficient. Vi-
based on our operating mode. Specifying step error as the % of bration, from inaccurate stepping wastes energy and results in a net
full-step is meaningless, because the percentage of error gets much loss of power from the electro-mechanical system. High accuracy
worse at higher micro-stepping. Lin’s 0.9° step motor specifies +/- motors deliver more energy to the load than more powerful but less
1.5 arc-minutes error at 1/64 stepping. It has +/- 0.4 arc-minute accurate motors.
error at full step and +/- 0.6 arc-min error at half-stepping. 0.4 arc-
minute translates to 0.37% of 1.8° or 0.72% of 0.9°. It is much better The next time you see step error defined as a percentage, first be
than the industry standard of 1.5% of 1.8°, which is considered good sure you know how it is defined. Is it a percentage of the full step or
for most step motor manufacturers. It is the time for Lin to share at a certain microstepping? Furthermore, what’s the actual error in
with everyone about what truly good step accuracy is. degrees? The most effective way to call out step error is in
arc-minutes (or degrees), and to specify the error at a specific step
resolution, like 16x or 64x microstepping.
REFERENCES:
Step Accuracy: A measure of a step motor’s maximum devia-tion from it’s
desired or indicated position. Step accuracy is noncumulative or the
deviation found in any number of steps is no greater than the maximum
deviation for a single step.
10
10 = 60 arc-minutes
3600
WHY LIN?
Over the past decade, Lin Engineering has gained a tremendous
amount of market share and earned a reputation as the
“Leader in Step Motor Technology.”
High Torque and Extreme Torque Get high accuracy, low resonance, and
stepper motors that will help you quiet performance from these stepper High Performance
avoid stalling and skipping steps. motors.
• Highest torque output
• High accuracy = no skipping steps
• Reduced vibration and resonance
Reliable Quality
Stepper motors specifically designed Small stepper motors perfect for
to weather extreme environments applications with compact space and • Consistent Performance
like high/low temperatures, clean size constraints. • 4.5 Sigma System
rooms, dust and water. • ISO 9001 Certified
• Continuous Improvement
Contact:
16245 Vineyard Blvd.,
Morgan Hill, CA 95037
Tel. (408) 919-0200
Fax: (408) 919-0201
Email: sales@linengineering.com
Website: www.linengineering.com