AC Motors Lesson
AC Motors Lesson
AC Motors Lesson
1. 2.
3. 4. 5.
At the end of Session 1 you will be able to: State the two types of AC motors State the advantages and disadvantages of induction motors Stipulate where induction are used identify the construction features of the stator and the rotors used in the induction motor Correlate the 3-phase current to the flux position and hence the rotor position in a 3phase induction motor
Introduction
1. Synchronous motor the magnetic field current is supplied by a separate DC power source; 2. Induction motor the magnetic field current is supplied by magnetic induction (transformer action) into their field windings.
/rotor winding
2. Wound rotor (WRIM): Rotor winding is wound by wires. The winding terminals can be connected to external circuits through slip rings and brushes. Easy to control speed, more expensive.
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Principle of Operation
Torque producing mechanism
C 0 A 0
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Principle of Operation
Torque producing mechanism
C
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Principle of Operation
Torque producing mechanism
A 0 C 0
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Principle of Operation
Torque producing mechanism
A
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Principle of Operation
Torque producing mechanism
A 0 B 0
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Principle of Operation
Torque producing mechanism
A B
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Principle of Operation
Torque producing mechanism
B
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19
20
21
22
23
SPIM
The Centrifugal Switch
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25
26
27
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Now to activity 2
L1
L2
N
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Slip
Slip is associated with synchronous speed. If the motor turned at the same RPM as the magnetic field, there would be no relative motion between the rotor and the field. Therefore, no current would be induced into the rotor, and no magnetic field would exist.
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Session 4:
Synchronous motors
just as a DC generator can be used as a DC motor, so AC generators (or alternators) can be used as synchronous AC motors three phase motors use three sets of stator coils
the rotating magnetic field drags the rotor around with it
Synchronous machines are AC machines that have a field circuit supplied by an external DC source. In a synchronous motor, a 3-phase set of stator currents produces a rotating magnetic field causing the rotor magnetic field to align with it. The rotor magnetic field is produced by a DC current applied to the rotor winding.
Field windings are the windings producing the main magnetic field (rotor windings for synchronous machines);
armature windings are the windings where the main voltage is induced (stator windings for synchronous machines).
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Synchronous rotor
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Slip rings are metal rings completely encircling the shaft of a machine but insulated from it. One end of a DC rotor winding is connected to each of the two slip rings on the machines shaft. Graphite-like carbon brushes connected to DC terminals ride on each slip ring supplying DC voltage to field windings regardless the position or speed of the rotor.
DC for excitation low starting torque: suited for low load applications
clocks, turn tables
Can improve power factor: suited for high electricity use systems
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Motor Starter
M
L1
C.B. M
MOT OR
L2
M
L3
120V a.c.
C.B.
95
Pilot lamp
O/L
STOP 96
START M
A1 13 14 A2
M.
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U1,W2
U2,V1
V2,W1
Star
Delta
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