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Electromagnetic actuation technologies Prof Phil Mellor Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering 2 Overview • Review developments in electromagnetic actuation – More electric aircraft – Our research experience • Back of envelope system discussion 3 Static performance capabilities Huber, J.E., Fleck, N.A., and Ashby, M.F., The selection of mechanical actuators based on performance indices. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series aMathematical Physical and Engineering Sciences, 1997. 453(1965): p. 2185-2205. 4 Why consider electrical actuation? • Benefits include – High efficiency – High reliability – Low maintenance and easy to replace – Easy to control with good dynamic response – Low infrastructure and running costs • Challenges – Realising high specific force – Fault tolerance and benign failure modes – Technology maturity: bespoke designs needed for each application 5 Technology advances • Permanent Magnets • Digital Control • Power Electronics • Sensors Source: Group Arnold Source: International Rectifier Source: SIKO GmbH Source: Texas Instruments 6 Developments in the more-electric aircraft • Rudder • Aileron • Elevator • Flaps • Slat • Landing gear • Brakes Aileron Rudder Flap Slat Elevator 7 Aircraft primary surface actuator Force (kN) 140 30 0 50 80 Speed (mm/s) 8 EHA (Electro-Hydrostatic Actuator) • • • • • The EHA consists of an hydraulic pump driven by an electric motor as part of an actuator based around an hydraulic ram. Control is achieved by running the motor at varying speeds and directions and driving a fixed volume pump Poor static load holding leads to reduced thermal performance and low speed rotation of pump can give rise to high pump wear rates Typically powered by permanent magnet synchronous machines (PMSM) with power electronic control High inertial losses due to frequent motor reversals 9 EHA actuator schematic Demanded Surface Position Accumulator Electronic control Surface Position Control Motor Control Shaft Position Feedback pump M motor P Crossport Relief Surface Position Feedback By-Pass Valve Controlled Surface Actuator Existing hydraulic technology 10 EHA on an inertia simulator pivot Resistive force EHA Inertial mass - 350kN peak force - <2Hz response 11 EMA (Electro-Mechanical Actuator) • • • • • The EMA consists of a gearbox driven by an electric motor. The resultant output may then drive a rotary to linear conversion e.g. a ballscrew or roller screw Control is achieved by running the motor at varying speeds and directions Significant static load holding will lead to reduced performance Typically powered by permanent magnet synchronous machines (PMSM) requiring power electronic control High inertial losses due to frequent motor reversals 12 Typical EMA/EHA actuator motors 25kW Brushless PM 20kW Brushless PM 40kW Brushless PM 5kW Switched Reluctance 13 Electromagnetic direct-drive actuators Advantages Disadvantages Simple construction Higher cost Good positioning accuracy No mechanical advantage Good dynamic performance More complex specification Reconfigurability Non-standardised 14 PM linear actuator topologies LINEAR MACHINES THRUST MACHINES LEVITATION MACHINES LONG ARMATURE SHORT ARMATURE LONG STROKE ATTRACTION TYPE REPULSION TYPE SHORT STROKE STATIONARY ARMATURE MOVING ARMATURE PLANAR MOTOR TUBULAR MOTOR SINGLE SIDED TRANSVERSE FLUX BRUSHED DC DOUBLE SIDED LONGITUDINAL FLUX LINEAR SYNCHRONOUS MOTOR SWITCHED RELUCTANCE LINEAR INDUCTION MOTOR PM BRUSHLESS STEPPER COMPOSITE SECONDARY SHEET SECONDARY AC LADDER STRUCTURE RELUCTANCE HYBRID DC 15 PM linear actuator topologies TUBULAR PLANAR y r z (direction of travel) x z (direction of travel) θ 16 Tubular construction + Balanced electromagnetically (single-sided planar has up to ~1000% normal force to continuous force capability) + No end windings leads to a better utilisation of copper and hence improved motor constant - Limited length and sag of tubular rod - Radial field orientation makes it difficult to laminate back iron 17 Tubular topologies - armature options (a) Slotless motor with magnetic sleeve (b) Slotless motor without magnetic sleeve (c) Conventional slotted motor (d) Longitudinal flux motor topology 18 Tubular topologies - magnetisation options (a) Axially magnetised primary (c) Ideal Halbach array (b) Radially magnetised primary (d) Discretised Halbach array 19 Air-cored or Iron-cored Air-cored No cogging force Small or zero saliency force Lower force per amp and per volume Lower mass per volume Higher acceleration (up to 100g) Lower thermal resistance Iron-cored Cogging force Saliency force Higher force per amp Higher mass per volume Lower acceleration (up to 22g) Higher thermal resistance 20 Pros and cons of tubular PM linear actuators • Good force per amp capability (>50N/A) • High peak force capability (~400%) • Zero normal (attraction) force • High force bandwidth • High speed operation (>5m/sec) • No backlash - bearing friction only • Accuracy (<5µm) & repeatability • Quiet 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 21 Pros and cons of tubular PM linear actuators 8 Vertical operation problematic (failure) 8 Cost 8 Cogging force (high accuracy displacement) 8 Environmental sealing 8 • Finite length (not for planar) • • • • 22 Moving secondary End stop Pipe adapter Traversing guide strips Position sensors Kevlar fibre composite Stator Winding Magnet array r z Coolant 10Hz Yarn traverse: Max acceleration >50g Max speed 2ms-1 Traversal 0.2m 23 External armature • Longitudinal flux motor • 2-phase BLAC machine • Max speed 5 ms-1 • 1.0kN pk force • 10g self acceleration • Traversal 600mm magnet coil iron sleeve 24 Electrodynamic shakers • • • • Large voice coil actuators High bandwidth Limited displacement Big and expensive 50mm displacement 90kN peak force (sine) 3m/s max velocity 25 Electromagnetic control surface actuator • 500N force • ~1.2kg, >10J/kg • 21Hz operation • +/-3mm displacement 26 Force capability Magnetic flux density B (Tesla) D σ Ampere stream Q (A/m) L Magnetic stress σ = K B Q u Achievable values: – B = 1T for a PM armature – Q = 50,000 A/m rms cont. for a liquid cooled actuator, peak values x5 cont. not uncommon σ (kPa) Induction 15 Radial field/linear PM 40 Longitudinal flux PM 60 Transverse flux PM 80-100 27 Composite realisation of transverse flux 28 The route to increased specific outputs • Novel topologies – >B: improved magnetic properties, multipole magnetisations – >Q: better winding utilisation, improved cooling • Higher operating stresses – mover mechanical integrity, use of composites • Higher operating temperatures – high temperature magnets and insulation – better understanding of thermal behaviour and loss mechanisms 29 Typical table actuator requirements Force (kN) • 6 axes with 8 actuators 40 • 50Hz maximum bandwidth • 40kN force • +/-150mm displacement • 1ms-1 peak speed • 6g acceleration 10 0 • Around 20kW rms power per actuator 0.5 Speed (m/s) 1.0 30 Moving magnet tubular actuator example • • • • • • 40kN peak, 28kN rms 0.56m2 active surface: D=0.3m, L=0.6m 40mm pole pitch with 10mm thick magnet array Magnet mass 45kg Composite carrier 25kg mass including bearings 58g self acceleration – Accel=ω2x x=0.15m ωmax=61.7rads-1; 9.8Hz – vmax=ωx=9.2ms-1 31 Possible system configuration • Key issue is dynamic energy storage • Capacitors or flywheels are possible solutions • 10 ton at 1ms-1 = 5kJ – 100V excursion on a 600V dc link = 77mF – 300rpm variation in 3000rpm flywheel = 0.53kgm2 Active rectifier (supplies losses only) x100 installed filter capacitor < inertia of a pump motor Actuator(s) 415V ac Commercial induction motor drive acting as a flywheel 32 Typical commercial power electronic drive • 8-16kHz inverter switching • 1kHz current/force control loop • 100Hz speed loop • 10Hz position loop • Same controller regardless of scale • ~100Euro/kVA (excludes actuator) 600kVA installation 33 Observations • Bespoke actuator design is required – A typical test cycle is less that 1 minute hence thermal issues may not be a problem – PM machines have a high peak to mean capability 10:1 possible, performance ultimately thermally limited • Commercial industrial power electronic equipment would be suitable. – A standard induction motor could be used for load levelling – Power draw from mains supply limited to losses 34 Piezoelectric solutions • High stress per volume/weight • Unidirectional – Back to back arrangement – Piezo element must always be in compression • Low strains – mechanical gearing required • High voltage operation • Low energy density • Stored energy in field comparable to work done (Similarly issue with electromagnetics where inertia of armature/rotor is significant) • New high strain materials on there way 35 Conclusions • A range of direct drive and geared electric actuation technologies are available • Examples exist with demonstrated performance elements that exceed typical earthquake table requirements: – x10 force capability – x5 maximum speed – x10 acceleration • Whilst an a specific actuator solution does not exist which can meet the full performance, although challenging, indications are that such a device would be feasible 36 Comparison (source: CLD Inc) Speed Accuracy Stiffness Friction Temperature Shock loading Efficiency Noise Environmental Controllability Tubular motors 100 in./sec 0.001 in. High Medium 125°C High 50% 40dB None Fully (no backlash) Mechanical 10 in./sec 0.001 in. Medium Medium 125°C Medium 40% 80dB Minimal Hydraulics 10 in./sec 0.01 in. Medium High 50°C High 25% 120dB Oil leaks/disposal Fixed move Limited move profiles (cams) profiles Backlash Pneumatic 20 in./sec 0.1 in. Low High 50°C High 25% 120dB Oily air mist Mostly bang/bang