Title: Magnetic actuators
1Magnetic actuators
2Energy density
- Actuators apply forces
- Forces are related to power and energy
- Power is the time rate of change in energy
- Force is the gradient (slope) of energy (I.e.,
energy is the time integral of work and work is
the line integral of force). - Larger power from an actuator means it must have
a larged energy density.
3Electric and magnetic energy
- Electric actuators - Coulomb force
- Magnetic actuators - Lorentz force
- Magnetic actuators are more common
- Magnetic energy density is higher
- Easier to produce large magnetic fields
- Magnetic properties of materials more pronounced
- Easier to handle from a practical point of view
4Electric and magnetic energy densities
5Electric and magnetic energy densities -
comparison
- Electric energy density E105 V/m, er10?0
8.845x10??? F/m (large values)
Magnetic energy density B 1T, m1000?0
1000x4?x10?? H/m
6Electric and magnetic energy densities -
comparison
- Magnetic energy density is larger
- 3 orders of magnitudes or more
- Larger forces are attainable
- Smaller sized for actuators (larger forces per
unit volume) - Reason why we have magnetic motors and no
electric motors (even though we call them
electric) - Electric forces are used in MEMs
- Small forces at small distances
- Electric forces on the atomic levels are very
large
7Voice coil actuators
- Voice coil actuators got their name from
magnetically driven loudspeakers. - In most applications, there is no use of voice
only the similarity in operation. - Based on the interaction between the current in a
coil and the magnetic field of a permanent magnet
or another coil. - To understand this consider the basic structure
of a loudspeaker driving mechanism shown next.
8Construction of a loudspeaker
9A small square loudspeaker
10A loudspeaker coil
11Voice coil actuators
- The magnetic field in the gap is radial.
- For a current carrying loop, the force is given
by Lorenz force (F BIL) - now L is the circumference of the loop and we
assume a uniform magnetic field. - With N turns, the force is NBIL.
- The field does not have to be uniform or
- The coil does not have to be circular
12Voice coil actuators
- This is a simple configuration and is the one
used in most speakers. - The larger the current
- the larger the force
- the larger the displacement of the speakers
cone. - By reversing the current, the coil moves in the
opposite direction. - We should note a number of things
13Voice coil actuators - notes
- The force is directly proportional to current for
a given magnetic field. In this case (and in many
voice coil actuators) it is linear with current. - The larger the coil or the magnetic field, the
larger the force. - By allowing the coil to move, the displaced mass
is small (compared with other actuators) and
hence the mechanical response is quick. For this
reason, a speaker can operate, say at 15 kHz
while a motor driven actuator may take seconds to
reverse.
14Voice coil actuators - notes
- It is also possible to fix the coil and allow the
magnet to move. - The field in the actuator can be generated by an
electromagnet if necessary. - The voice coil actuator can be turned into a
sensor by simply reversing the action. - If we were to move the coil in the magnetic
field, the voltage induced in the coil will be
given by Fradays law of induction through Eq.
(PP). The speaker becomes a microphone.
15Voice coil actuators - notes
- In the absence of current, the actuator is
entirely disengaged there is no intrinsic
retaining or cogging force and no friction. - The motion is limited
- Rotational motion can also be achieved by
selection of coil and magnet configurations. - The actuator is a direct drive device.
16Voice coil actuators - notes
- From these properties, the main qualities
- Their small mass allows very high accelerations
(upwards of 50g and for very short strokes up to
300g) - Operation at high frequencies
- Ideal candidates for fast positioning (example
in positioning of read/write heads in disk
drives). - Forces achievable are modest in comparison to
other motors (up to 5000 N) and the power they
can handle is also significant.
17Voice coil actuators - Applications
- Often used where very accurate positioning at
high speeds is needed. - They have no hysteresis and minimal friction
- Extremely accurate both as linear and as angular
positioners. - No other actuator matches their response and
acceleration. - Can also be used in less critical applications,
mostly in positioning and control but also in
valve actuation, pumps and the like.
18Voice coil actuators - Applications
- Interface with microprocessors is usually simpler
than other types of motors - Control and feedback is easily incorporated.
- Large variety of voice coil actuators available
- Most common
- Cylindrical actuator in Figure 5.38
- Rotary actuator in Figure 5.38b
- In the cylindrical linear actuator, the magnetic
field is radial as in the loudspeaker.
19Linear voice coil actuator
20Angular voice coil actuator
21Voice coil actuators - Applications
- Linear actuator
- The coil, attached to the moving, actuating shaft
moves in/out from a center position - The maximum stroke defined by the length of the
coil and the length of the cylindrical magnet. - For motion to be linearly proportional to
current, the coil must be within the uniform
magnetic field. - Ratings of these actuators are in terms of
stroke, force (in newtons), acceleration and
power.
22Motors
- Most common of all actuators
- Many types and variations.
- Will discuss some of the more salient issues
associated with their use as actuators. - Emphasis on modern, electronically controlled
motors - Will not discuss large motors
- Emphasis on DC and stepper motors
23Motors - cont.
- Motors can be used and often are, as sensors.
- Many motors can be used as generators
- can sense motion, rotation, linear an angular
position - other quantity that affects these, such as wind
speed, flow velocity and rate and many more. - Some of these sensor applications will be
discussed throughout this course - Also common is to use them as dual -
sensors/actuators
24Motors - cont.
- Most motors are magnetic devices
- operate by attraction or repulsion between
current carrying conductors or - between current carrying conductors and permanent
magnets in a manner similar to that of voice coil
actuators. - Motors include magnetic materials (mostly iron),
in addition to permanents or electromagnets - To increase and concentrate the magnetic flux
density and to increase power and available
torque at the smallest possible volume.
25Motors - classification.
- For actuation purposes, there are three types of
motors - continuous rotational motors,
- stepper motors and
- linear motors.
- Best known is the continuous rotational motor.
- Stepper motors are much more common than one
realizes - Linear motors, are not as common, - specialized
applications
26Motors - cont.
- Variations in size and power they can deliver
is staggering. - Some motors are truly tiny. Example the motors
used as vibrators in cell phones are about 6-8mm
in diameter and no more than 20mm long. - Motors delivering hundreds of MW of power are
used in the steel industry, mining etc.. - The larger are generators in power plants these
can be as large as 1000 MW or more. - But there is no fundamental difference in
operation between these devices.
27Motors - principles
- Operation principles
- All motors operate on the principle of repulsion
or attraction between magnetic poles. - In its simplest form two magnets are kept
separated vertically but the lower magnet is free
to move horizontally. - The two opposite poles attract and the lower
magnet will move to the left until it is aligned
with the upper magnet.
28Magnetic attraction and repulsion
29Principle of the motor
30Motors - principles
- Operation principle more detailed
- The magnetic field (which may be produced by a
permanent magnet or an electromagnet) is assumed
to be constant in time and space (DC). - If we apply a current to the loop as shown, and
assuming the loop is initially at an angle to the
field as shown in Figure 5.40b, a force will
exist on each of the upper and lower members of
the loop equal to BIL (Lorentz force in Eq. 11).
31Motors - principles
- Force will rotate the loop to the right one half
loop, (until the loop is perpendicular to the
magnetic field). - The Lorentz force is always perpendicular to both
the current and the magnetic field. - For a motor to operate continuously, when it
reaches this position, the current in the loop is
reversed (commutated) - The force now will continue rotating it clockwise
an additional half turn and so on.
32Motors - principles
- Force on the loop is constant (independent of
position) - Torque is position dependent latter is
T2BILrsin?, where r is the radius of the loop - Maximum torque when loop is when loop is parallel
to field - Torque and force multiplied by N.
33Motors - practical considerations
- This configuration requires commutation
- Commutation can be done mechanically or
electronically. - Figure 5.52 shows the same configuration with a
mechanical commutator and a permanent magnet
stator producing the magnetic field. - This is a simple dc motor.
34DC motor with commutator
35Motors - practical considerations
- The number of coils can be increased, say, to two
as in Figure 5.53. - In this case, there are four connections on the
commutator to ensure that each coil is powered in
the appropriate sequence to ensure continuous
rotation. - In practical motors of this type, many more loops
are used spaced equally. - This increases torque and makes for smoother
operation due to commutation.
36A two coil dc motor
37Motors - practical considerations
- Most small dc motors are made in this
configuration or a modification of it. - One particular modification is to use
electromagnets and to add additional poles for
the magnetic field (also spaced equally). - Figure 5.54 shows a small motor with a single
stator pole and 8 rotating coils (note the way
they are wound). - The addition of the iron increases force and
torque.
38Rotor and stator of a universal motor
39Motors - practical considerations
- This is called a universal motor
- can operate on DC or AC and
- most common in ac operated hand tools.
- can develop a fairly large torque
- very noisy.
- Typically the stator coils are connected in
series with the rotor coils (series universal
motors) - Parallel connection is also possible.
40Motors - practical considerations
- Commutated motors are very common
- Simple, inexpensive, high torque
- Problems common in these motor
- damage to the commutator due to sparks developed
when brushes (carbon contacts) slide over the
commutator in normal operation. - Brushes wear out over time (need replacement)
41Permanent magnet dc motors
- A modification of the basic configuration above
- The magnetic field produced by a pair (or more)
of permanent magnets - A number of poles produced by windings as shown
in Figure 5.55. - These are low power, simple motors
42Small dc PM motors
43Permanent magnet dc motors
- Figure 5.55a. In this case there are three poles
on the rotor and two on the stator (seen as blue
and white) - Ensures the motor can never get stuck in a zero
force situation. - The commutator operates as previously but,
because there are three coils, one or two coils
are energized at a time (depending on rotary
position).
44Permanent magnet dc motors
- Figure 5.55b shows a similar rotor from a
somewhat larger motor - has 7 poles and the same number of contacts on
the mechanical commutator. - These motors are commonly encountered in tape
drives and in toys, as well as in cordless tools.
- They can be reversed by simply reversing the
polarity of the source.
45Some small dc motors
46Brushless dc motors
- Eliminates the mechanical commutator
- For very demanding applications, such as in disk
drives a variation of the dc motor is used in
which the commutation is done electronically. - The physical structure is often different to
allow fitting in tight spaces or incorporation on
integrated circuits. - These motors are often flat (hence the name flat
motors) and often the rotor is a mere disk. - An additional important aspect is that the coils
are stationary and the magnets rotate.
47Brushless dc motor
48Brushless dc motors
- Flat motor with 6 coils forming the stator.
- The rotor has been taken out of its bearing and
inverted to see both the coils and the structure
of the rotor. - These coils are placed directly on a printed
circuit board (note also the 3 hall elements). - The rotor, shown on the left has a ring made of 8
separate magnets - The sides facing the coil (up in this figure)
alternate in their magnetic field.
49Rotor - flat brushless motor
50Brushless dc motors
- The individual magnets can be distinguished by
the brighter lines separating them. - The operation of the motor relies on two
principles. - First, the pitch of the stator and rotor are
different. - Second, the position of the magnets are sensed
and this sensing is used both to drive the coil,
measure the speed and reverse the sense of
rotation. - By driving sequentially pairs of coils the device
can be made to rotate in one direction or the
other.
51Brushless dc motor - operation
- Initial condition sensed by the hall elements
- Sequence starts with driving coils 1 and 4
- Polarity as shown in Figure 5.57a
- Coil 1 will repel magnet 1 and attract magnet 2
- Coil 4 will repel magnet 5 and attract magnet 6.
- This will rotate the rotor (magnets) to the left
until coil 1 is centered with magnet 2 and coil 4
is centered with magnet 6.
52Sequence for the flat motor
53Brushless dc motor - operation
- Next step
- Coils 2 and 5 are driven in the same way (as
shown in Figure 5.57b. - Coil 2 will repel magnet 3 and attract magnet 4
- Coil 5 will repel magnet 7 and attract magnet 8.
- Again, the magnets are forced to rotate left
until coil 2 is centered with magnet 4 and coil 5
with magnet 8. (Figure 5.57c.)
54Brushless dc motor - operation
- Third step
- Coils 3 and 6 are driven.
- Rotation to the left is obtained until the coils
and magnets are as in Figure 5.57d. - This is identical to Figure 5.57a - repeats.
- The 3 seps are called phases. This is a 3 phase
operation and can be done digitally - all it
requires is to ascertain the location of the
magnets and drive the opposite coils according to
the sequence above. - By reversing the coils currents, the north (N)
poles are operating against the magnets and
rotation is in opposite direction.
55Brushless dc motor - operation
- The common choice in most digital devices
- disk drives
- CD drives
- video recorder heads,
- tape drives and many others
- Controlled very easily and its control is
essentially digital. (sometimes geared, mostly
direct drive) - speed is controlled by timing the three phases at
will. - There are many variations in terms of the actual
construction, shape and number of magnets and
coils, etc.
56A CD drive motor
57A floppy drive motor
58AC motors
- There is a large variety of ac motors
- The most common of the conventional motors is the
induction motor in its many variants. - The induction motor may be understood by first
returning to Figure 5.51 but now the magnetic
flux density is an ac field. - The rotating coil is shorted (no external
current) - The ac field and the coil act as a transformer
and an ac current is induced in the coil because
it is shorted.
59AC motors
- According to Lentzs law, the current in the coil
must produce an opposing field which then forces
the coil to rotate. - There is no commutation, continuous rotation is
achieved by rotating the field. - By using the phases of the ac power supply a
rotating field is produced. - This is shown schematically in Figure 5.59 for a
three phase ac motor (a magnet is shown for the
rotor but the shorted coil acts exactly as a
magnet).
60Principle of the rotating field
61Induction motors - notes
- Induction machines are common in appliances
- very quiet, efficient
- rotate at constant speeds which depend on the
frequency of the field and number of poles. - Also used in control devices where constant speed
is important. (example clocks) - Control of induction motors is much more involved
than dc motors. - Other types of motors exist.
62A small induction motor
63Stepper motors
- Actuation requires control of a motor
- exact and repeatable positioning
- requires some means of feedback,
- counting rotations,
- sensing position etc.
- Motors which incorporate these means are called
servomotors - They have been, to a large extent, replaced by
stepper motors.
64Stepper motors
- A stepper motor is an incremental rotation or
motion motor. - They are often viewed as digital motors, in the
sense that each increment is fixed in size and
increments are generated by a train of pulses. - Very simple to control
- Usually relatively small, low power motors
65Stepper motors - operation
- Start with a simple PM motor
- 2 phase stepper motor and uses a permanent magnet
as the rotor. - This allows simple description of the operation.
- The rotor can be made to rotate in steps by
proper driving the two coils which in turn define
the magnetic poles of the stator.
66A 2 phase stepper motor - principle
67Stepper motors - operation
- By driving the two vertical coils, the magnet is
held vertically. - If both coils are driven as in Figure 5.62b, the
rotor will be at rest at 45?, rotating to the
right. - This is called a half step and is the minimum
rotation or step possible in a stepper motor. - The rotor remains fixed until the phases are
changed.
682-phase stepper motor
69Stepper motors - operation
- If now the vertical coil is de-energized, but the
horizontal coil is kept energized, the magnet
rotates an additional quarter turn to the
position in Figure 5.62c. - In the next step, the current in the vertical
coil is negative, in the horizontal coil it is
positive and the situation in Figure 5.62d is
obtained. - Finally, by reversing the vertical coil current
and setting the horizontal coil to zero (no
current) a full rotation has been completed.
702-phase stepper motor
712-phase stepper motor
72Stepper motors - operation
- This simple motor steps at 45?
- Requires 8 steps to rotate a full turn.
- To rotate in the opposite direction the sequence
must be reversed as shown in Table 5.6. - Half steps or full steps (90 ?) can be used
73Sequence for rotation
74Stepper motors - notes
- The size of the step (number of steps) depends on
number of coils and number of poles in the rotor.
- Full stepping (90? in this case) is accomplished
using only one of the stator coils (single phase) - More coils and more poles in the rotor will
produce smaller steps. - The number of poles in the rotor and in the
stator must be different (fewer/more poles in the
rotor) - The magnetic field in the rotor can be generated
by permanent magnets or by coils or by variable
reluctance
75Variable reluctance stepper motor
- The permanent magnet in the rotor is replaced
with a piece of iron (non magnetized). - The operation indicated above is still valid
since the magnetic field produced by the stator
coils will magnetize the iron (i.e. a magnet will
attract a piece of iron). - This simplifies matters considerably since now
the rotor is much simpler to make. - This type of stepper motor is called a variable
reluctance stepping motor
76Variable reluctance stepper motor
- VR is a common way of producing stepper motors.
- A practical motor is shown in Figure 5.64.
77VR stepper motor - operation
- Coils marked as 2 are first energized.
- This moves the rotor one step to the left.
- Coils marked as 3 are next energized, moving one
step to the left and so on. - Opposite direction is obtained by inverting the
sequence (driving coil No. 3 first then 2 and so
on).
78VR stepper motor - operation
- Steping size
- Assuming there are ns stator poles and nr rotor
poles (teeth in this case). The stator and rotor
pitches are defined as
Stepping size is given as an angle
79VR stepper motor - operation
- Example 12 poles in stator, 8 in rotor
The stepper motor steps at 15? increments A
three phase stepper motor The number of poles in
the stator is larger than in the rotor. The
opposite is just as valid.
80VR stepper motor - practical construction
- The rotor is made of nr teeth as above and the
stator is made of a fixed number of poles, say 8,
- Each pole is toothed as shown in Fig. 5.64.
- In this case there are more teeth in the rotor
(50) than in the stator (40). - This produces a step of 1.8? (360/40-360/50).
- The motor in this figure is a 4 phase motor.
81A practical 1.8? stepper motor
82VR stepper motor - notes
- Variable reluctance stepping motors are simpler
and less expensive to produce. - However, when not powered, their rotor is free to
move and hence they cannot hold their position. - Permanent magnet stepper motors have some holding
power and will maintain their position under
power off conditions.
83Multiple stack stepper motors
- Multiple rotors on a single shaft
- Decrease the step size
- Called multiple stack motors
- Now the pitch varies between stacks
- The driving sequence is more complicated than in
a single stack motor. - Usually, the stator and each rotor has the same
number of teeth but the two rotors are shifted
one half tooth apart.
84Multiple stack stepper motors
- An example of an 8 pole (stator), double stack
motor is shown in Figure 5.65. - This motor has 50 teeth on each rotor and 50
teeth on the stator. (rotors are magnetized) - The rotors are magnetized and the motor shown has
a 1.8? step. - This particular motor was used to position the
heads in an older floppy drive. - In all other respects - same as single stack
motors
85Double stack, 1.8 ? stepper motor
86Stepper motors - notes
- Stepper motors come in all sizes from tiny to
very large and - Currently the choice motors for accurate
positioning and driving. - More expensive and lower powered than other
motors such as DC motors. - The extra cost is usually justified by their
simple control and accuracy and by the fact that
they can be driven from digital controllers.
87Stepper motors - notes
- Application
- Industrial control
- Consumer products such as printers, scanners and
cameras. - In these applications, the ability of the motor
to step through a predictable sequence with
accurate, repeatable steps, is used for fast
positioning. - The motors have typically low inertia, allowing
them to respond quickly in both directions.
88Stepper motors - examples
89Linear motors
- A linear motor, either continuous motion or
stepper motor can be viewed as a rotary motor
that has been cut and flattened so that the rotor
can now slide linearly over the stator. The rotor
now becomes a slider or a translator.
90PM linear motor - operation
- The slider or translator (equivalent to the
rotor) may have as many poles as we wish 4 are
shown - Starting from the initial condition in Figure
5.68a, the sliding poles are driven as shown and
are therefore attracted to the right. - As they pass past the stator poles, they are
commutated and the polarities change, forcing
motion to the right. - This is merely a commutated DC machine. Motion to
the left requires the opposite sequence.
91PM linear motor - operation
92VR linear motor
- This motor is equivalent to the rotary motor in
Figure 5.50. - The pitch is measured in units of length (so many
mm per step). - In this sequence, we assume that the stator poles
are driven and that the rotor is a mere toothed
iron piece (variable reluctance motor). - The sequence is as follows
93VR linear motor
94VR linear motor
- Starting with Figure 5.68a, poles marked as 1 are
driven alternately as N and S as shown. - The slider moves to the right until teeth 1 are
aligned with poles 1. (Figure 5.68b). - Now poles 3 are driven as previously and the
slider again moves to the right until teeth 2 are
alighed with poles 3 (Figure 5.68c). - Finally, poles 2 are driven in which the cycle
completes and the relation of the slider and the
stator is now as at the beginning of the
sequence.
95VR linear motor
- The same can be accomplished with permanent
magnet poles in the rotor. - From Figure 5.68, it should be noted that the
pitch of the stator and slider are different -
for every 4 poles in the stator there are 3 teeth
in the slider. - Each step equals the pitch of the stator (i.e. in
each step a tooth moves either from the middle
between two poles to the center of the pole or
vice versa). - By changing the number of teeth, one can change
this pitch.
96VR linear motor
- In the motor described here, the sequence is
1-3-2 for motion to the right. - Moving in the opposite direction is accomplished
by reversing the sequence above to (2-3-1) - In many linear stepping motors, it is more
practical to drive the slider rather than the
stator since the stator may be very long while
the slider is usually small.
97VR (PM) linear motor - 8 pole/4 teeth stator
98VR (PM) linear motor - assempled
99Magnetic solenoid actuators and magnetic valves
- Magnetic solenoid actuators are electromagnets
designed to affect linear motion - Exploit the force an electromagnet can generate
on a ferromagnetic material. - Principle a coil generates a magnetic field
everywhere, including in the gap between the
fixed and movable iron pieced. - We shall call the movable piece a plunger.
100Magnetic solenoid actuator - principle
101Magnetic solenoid actuator - principles
- Force exerted on the plunger is
B the magnetic flux density in the gap,
generated by the coil S the cross-sectional
area of the plunger ?0 is the permeability of
free space. Force exerted on the plunger is
102Magnetic solenoid actuator
- The plunger tends to close the gap
- This motion is the linear motion generated by the
magnetic valve actuator. - A more practical construction is Figure 5.70b
- This generates an axial field in the plunger but
also closes the external field so that the total
magnetic field available at the plunger is larger
- A modification of the linear plunger is the
rotary or angular solenoid actuator.
103Magnetic solenoid actuator
- In this form, the device is used as a simple
go/nogo actuator. - When energized, the gap is closed and when
de-energized it is open. - This type of device is often used for electrical
release of latches on doors and as a means of
opening/closing fluid or gas valves. - Two examples of linear solenoid actuators and an
angular actuator are shown next.
104Magnetic solenoid actuators
105Angular solenoid actuator
106Magnetic solenoid actuator
- The basic solenoid actuator is often used as the
moving mechanism in valves. - A basic configuration is shown in Figure 5.73.
- These valves are quite common in control of both
fluids and gases and exist in a variety of sizes,
construction and power levels. - Can be found in industrial processes but also in
consumer appliances such as washing machines,
dishwashers and refrigerators as well as in cars
and a variety of other products.
107Solenoid valve actuator
108Magnetic solenoid actuator
- The actuating rod (plunger) in this case acts
against a spring - By properly driving the current through the
solenoid its motion can be controlled as to speed
and force exerted. - Similar constructions can operate and control
almost anything that requires linear (or
rotational) motion. - The travel of the actuating rods is relatively
small, of the order of 10-20mm.
109A fluid valve - magnetically actuated