Title: Introduction to Engineering Electronics
1Lecture 9 Motors and Actuators
- Working At The Boundary Between EE/CSE/EPE,
Mechanical and Materials Engineering
2Magnetism
- One of the first compasses, a fish shaped iron
leaf was mentioned in the Wu Ching Tsung Yao
written in 1040 - Trinity College, Dublin
3Animal Magnetism
- A frog suspended in an intense magnetic field
all of us are paramagnetic - Much money is wasted on magnetic therapy
4Electromagnetic Revolution
- These four equations epitomize the
electromagnetic revolution. Richard Feynman
claimed that "ten thousand years from now, there
can be little doubt that the most significant
event of the 19th century will be judged as
Maxwell's discovery of the laws of
electrodynamics"
5Magnetic Attraction
- It is possible to produce motion using magnetic
attraction and/or repulsion - Either permanent magnets or electromagnets or
both can be used
6Magnetic Attraction and Repulsion
- One of the many facts we all recall from our
earliest science education
72 Minute QuizName______Sec_____Date______
- True or false, unlike magnetic poles attract and
like magnetic poles repel one another.
8 DC Motors
- The stator is the stationary outside part of a
motor. The rotor is the inner part which rotates.
In the motor animations, red represents a magnet
or winding with a north polarization, while green
represents a magnet or winding with a south
polarization. Opposite, red and green, polarities
attract.
9 DC Motors
- Just as the rotor reaches alignment, the brushes
move across the commutator contacts and energize
the next winding. In the animation the commutator
contacts are brown and the brushes are dark grey.
A yellow spark shows when the brushes switch to
the next winding.
10DC Motor Applications
- Automobiles
- Windshield Wipers
- Door locks
- Window lifts
- Antenna retractor
- Seat adjust
- Mirror adjust
- Anti-lock Braking System
- Cordless hand drill
- Electric lawnmower
- Fans
- Toys
- Electric toothbrush
- Servo Motor
11Beakmans Motor
- A simple DC motor made with a battery, two
paperclips, a rubber band and about 1 meter of
enameled wire.
12 Brushless DC Motors
- A brushless dc motor has a rotor with permanent
magnets and a stator with windings. It is
essentially a dc motor turned inside out. The
control electronics replace the function of the
commutator and energize the proper winding.
13Brushless DC Motor Applications
- Medical centrifuges, orthoscopic surgical tools,
respirators, dental surgical tools, and organ
transport pump systems - Model airplanes, cars, boats, helicopters
- Microscopes
- Tape drives and winders
- Artificial heart
14Full Stepper Motor
- This animation demonstrates the principle for a
stepper motor using full step commutation. The
rotor of a permanent magnet stepper motor
consists of permanent magnets and the stator has
two pairs of windings. Just as the rotor aligns
with one of the stator poles, the second phase is
energized. The two phases alternate on and off
and also reverse polarity. There are four steps.
One phase lags the other phase by one step. This
is equivalent to one forth of an electrical cycle
or 90.
15Half Stepper Motor
- This animation shows the stepping pattern for a
half-step stepper motor. The commutation sequence
for a half-step stepper motor has eight steps
instead of four. The main difference is that the
second phase is turned on before the first phase
is turned off. Thus, sometimes both phases are
energized at the same time. During the half-steps
the rotor is held in between the two full-step
positions. A half-step motor has twice the
resolution of a full step motor. It is very
popular for this reason.
16Stepper Motors
- This stepper motor is very simplified. The rotor
of a real stepper motor usually has many poles.
The animation has only ten poles, however a real
stepper motor might have a hundred. These are
formed using a single magnet mounted inline with
the rotor axis and two pole pieces with many
teeth. The teeth are staggered to produce many
poles. The stator poles of a real stepper motor
also has many teeth. The teeth are arranged so
that the two phases are still 90 out of phase.
This stepper motor uses permanent magnets. Some
stepper motors do not have magnets and instead
use the basic principles of a switched reluctance
motor. The stator is similar but the rotor is
composed of a iron laminates.
17More on Stepper Motors
- Note how the phases are driven so that the rotor
takes half steps
18More on Stepper Motors
- Animation shows how coils are energized for full
steps
19More on Stepper Motors
- Half step sequence of binary control numbers
- Full step sequence showing how binary numbers can
control the motor
20Stepper Motor Applications
- Film Drive
- Optical Scanner
- Printers
- ATM Machines
- I. V. Pump
- Blood Analyzer
- FAX Machines
- Thermostats
212 Minute QuizName______Sec_____Date______
- Name one mechatronic device that you own or use
on a regular basis
22Switched Reluctance Motor
- A switched reluctance or variable reluctance
motor does not contain any permanent magnets. The
stator is similar to a brushless dc motor.
However, the rotor consists only of iron
laminates. The iron rotor is attracted to the
energized stator pole. The polarity of the stator
pole does not matter. Torque is produced as a
result of the attraction between the
electromagnet and the iron rotor in the same way
a magnet is attracted to a refrigerator door. An
electrically quiet motor since it has no brushes.
23Switched Reluctance Motor Applications
- Motor scooters and other electric and hybrid
vehicles - Industrial fans, blowers, pumps, mixers,
centrifuges, machine tools - Domestic appliances
24Brushless AC Motor
- A brushless ac motor is driven with ac sine wave
voltages. The permanent magnet rotor rotates
synchronous to the rotating magnetic field. The
rotating magnetic field is illustrated using a
red and green gradient. An actual simulation of
the magnetic field would show a far more complex
magnetic field.
25AC Induction Motor
- The stator windings of an ac induction motor are
distributed around the stator to produce a
roughly sinusoidal distribution. When three phase
ac voltages are applied to the stator windings, a
rotating magnetic field is produced. The rotor of
an induction motor also consists of windings or
more often a copper squirrel cage imbedded within
iron laminates. Only the iron laminates are
shown. An electric current is induced in the
rotor bars which also produce a magnetic field.
26AC Induction Motor
- The rotating magnetic field of the stator drags
the rotor around. The rotor does not quite keep
up with the the rotating magnetic field of the
stator. It falls behind or slips as the field
rotates. In this animation, for every time the
magnetic field rotates, the rotor only makes
three fourths of a turn. If you follow one of the
bright green or red rotor teeth with the mouse,
you will notice it change color as it falls
behind the rotating field. The slip has been
greatly exaggerated to enable visualization of
this concept. A real induction motor only slips a
few percent.
27Huge List of Applications from Hurst
- Aircraft Window Polarizing Drives
- Antenna Positioning and Tuning Devices
- Audio/Video Recording Instruments
- Automated Inspection Equipment
- Automated Photo Developing Equipment
- Automated Photo Slide Trimming Mounting
Equipment - Automatic Carton Marking Dating Machines
- Automatic Dying and Textile Coloring Equipment
- Automatic Food Processing Equipment
- Automatic I.V. Dispensing Equipment
- Automatic Radio Station Identification Equipment
- Automotive
- Automotive Engine Pollution Analyzers
- Baseball Pitching Machine
- Blood Agitators
- Blood Cell Analyzer
- Warning Light Flashers
- Railroad Signal Equipment
- Remote Focusing Microscopes
- Resonator Drives for Vibraphones
- ..
- Silicone Wafer Production Equipment
- Solar Collector Devices
- Sonar Range Recorders and Simulators
- Steel Mill Process Scanners
- Tape Cleaning Equipment
- Tape Input for Automatic Typewriters
- Telescope Drives
- Ultrasonic Commercial Fish Detectors
- Ultrasonic Medical Diagnostic Equipment
- Voltage Regulators
- Water and Sewage Treatment Controls
- Weather Data Collection Machines
- Welding Machines
- X-Ray Equipment
28Stepper Motor from Mechatronics
29Mechatronics Stepper Motor Continued
30Mechatronics
- Mechatronics is at the intersection between
several disciplinary areas, as represented by
these Venn diagrams
31What Is Mechatronics?
- Mechatronics is the synergistic integration of
mechanical engineering, electronics, controls,
and computers all integrated through the design
process. - EXAMPLES
- robots
- anti-lock brakes
- photocopiers
- consumer products (e.g., clothes dryers)
- disk drives
32MEMS
- Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems (MEMS) is the
integration of mechanical elements, sensors,
actuators, and electronics on a common silicon
substrate through the utilization of
microfabrication technology. While the
electronics are fabricated using integrated
circuit (IC) process sequences (e.g., CMOS,
Bipolar, or BICMOS processes), the
micromechanical components are fabricated using
compatible "micromachining" processes that
selectively etch away parts of the silicon wafer
or add new structural layers to form the
mechanical and electromechanical devices.
33MEMS Stepper Motor
- This motor is very much like the other stepper
motors mentioned above, except that it is 2D and
very small
34MEMS
- The potential complexity of the MEMS device
increases exponentially with the number of unique
process features and individual structural layers.
35MEMS Steam Engine
- Water inside of three compression cylinders is
heated by electric current and vaporizes, pushing
the piston out. Capillary forces then retract the
piston once current is removed.
36MEMS
- Rotary motor
- Steam Engine (single piston)
37MEMS Gear Trains
- Six gear planar train at various speeds
- Close up of six gear train
38Power MEMS
- 80 Watt gas microturbine designed and built at
MIT for MEMS power applications
39Integrated MEMS
- This six-degrees-of-freedom micro-inertial
measurement system combines microelectronic
circuitry top right with a couple of - micromechanical elements an accelerometer
center right and gyroscope bottom right.
40Integrated MEMS
- Types of micromechanical devices that might be
used in integrated microsystems of the future
shown clockwise from right include this gear,
pop-up mirror, mirror assembly, and hinge. The
gear is part of an assembly that has demonstrated
torque ratios of up to 3 million to 1. The
silicon mirror is fabricated flat on the silicon
wafer, then "popped up" to its raised position
using the gear assembly.
41Integrated MEMS
- Sample collection regions for concentration,
microseparation channels, sensor arrays for
detection, and an exit region are illustrated in
schematic of the chemical analysis section of a
micro-chemlab. Chemicals are detected measuring
the response of surface acoustic-wave devices to
a chemical's presence. The photograph is of an
array of micromachined 3-µm silicon posts in a
microchannel being studied as a tool for
enhancing electrokinetically driven liquid
separations.
42MEMS Displays
- Iridigm Display -- The iMoD element uses
interference to create color in the same way that
structural color works in nature. Microscopic
structures on butterfly wings and peacock
feathers cause light to interfere with itself,
creating the shimmering iridescent colors that we
see in these creatures. (Used in PDAs)
43MEMS Displays
- The iMoD element is a simple MEMS device that is
composed of two conductive plates. One is a thin
film stack on a glass substrate, the other is a
metallic membrane suspended over it. There is a
gap between the two that is filled with air. The
iMoD element has two stable states. When no
voltage is applied, the plates are separated, and
light hitting the substrate is reflected as shown
above. When a small voltage is applied, the
plates are pulled together by electrostatic
attraction and the light is absorbed, turning the
element black.
44MEMS Displays
- iMoD elements are minuscule, typically 25-60
microns on a side (400-1,000 dots per inch).
Therefore, many iMoD elements are ganged and
driven together as a pixel, or sub-pixel in a
color display. The color of the iMoD element is
determined by the size of the gap between the
plates. As shown, the blue iMoD has the smallest
gap and the red has the largest. To create a flat
panel display, a large array of iMoD elements are
fabricated in the desired format (i.e. 5" full
color VGA) and packaged. Finally, driver chips
are attached at the edge to complete the display.
45References
- Motor Operation Principles from Motorola
- Basic Stepper Motor Concepts
- MEMS Clearinghouse
- Mechatronics at Rensselaer
- Mechatronics.org
- Beakmans Motor Electronic Instrumentation and
Fields and Waves I
462 Minute QuizName______Sec_____Date______
- Which engineering majors are some interest to
you? Electrical, Computer Systems, Electric
Power, Nuclear, Mechanical, Aeronautical,
Biomedical, Civil, Industrial Management,
Materials, Chemical, Environmental, Engineering
Physics
47Primary Course Goal for IEE
- Assure that each EE and CSE student has a minimum
of 20 hours of practical electronics and
instrumentation experience before they begin
taking disciplinary courses. - For students with no experience 20 hours
successfully completing labs - For students with some experience 20 hours
completing labs, expanding their knowledge base
and helping those with less experience - For students outside of EE and CSE provide a
working knowledge of electronics
482 Minute QuizANSWERS
- True or false, unlike magnetic poles attract and
like magnetic poles repel one another. TRUE - Name one mechatronic device that you own or use
on a regular basis- CD PLAYER, DISHWASHER - Which engineering majors are some interest to
you? Electrical, Computer Systems, Electric
Power, Nuclear, Mechanical, Aeronautical,
Biomedical, Civil, Industrial Management,
Materials, Chemical, Environmental, Engineering
Physics - ELECTRICAL-THE ONLY ONE
49Where Will You See This Material Again?
- Mechatronics MANE-4490 Mechatronics, MANE-4250
Mechatronic Systems Design, MANE 6960 Sensors
Actuators in Mechatronics - Motor Drives ECSE/EPOW-4080 Semiconductor Power
Electronics and EPOW-4090 Power Electronics Lab - Motor Control ENGR-2350 Introduction to Embedded
Control - Concentration in Power Electronics EPOW-4080 and
MANE-4490