Electrical Power and Machines Lecture 5 <Dr Ahmed El-Shenawy> <Dr Hadi El Helw> DC Motor theory of operation • In a dc motor, the stator poles are supplied by dc excitation current, which produces a dc magnetic field. • The rotor is supplied by dc current through the brushes, commutator and coils. • The interaction of the magnetic field and rotor current generates a force that drives the motor 2 IL IF IL IF Ia Ia RF RF Ra Ra Vt Vt Ea Ea Ea = KaφW Generator Vt = Ea – IaRa Driving e.m.f Motor Back e.m.f Vt = Ea + IaRa Starting of DC motor VS = Ea + Ia R At Starting Ea is zero (back e.m.f = 0), so Ia = VS/R , and since R is very small then Ia is very big. Consequently a DC motor should never be started at rated voltage and an external resistance must be added and acts as temporarily starting resistance that is removed as soon as the armature has attained its normal speed, then Ia = VS/(Ra+RS) Ia Ra RF VS Ea + - XF RS>>>>Ra Speed Regulation (SR): is a measure of the change in speed from no load to full load As Ia increases, Ea decreases thus N decreases SR % = 100(NNL -NFL)/NNL = 100(WNL - WFL )/WNL Series Motor: SR is high (variable speed motor) Shunt Motor: SR is very low (constant speed motor) P CU =I 2 a R a +I 2 F R F Power Flow Diagram Pin = VSIL Pd =TdWm= EaIa P0 = TS Wm = Pr P co re M +P ag Efficiency “η” η %= (P0 /Pin) ×100 Separately Excited and DC shunt Motors IF = VF /RF IL= Ia +IF Ia = IL Ia IF =Vt /RF Ra Ra RF RF Vt = Ea +IaRa Vt = Ea +IaRa VF Ea Ea Separately Excited Shunt Td Td = K Ia = Ka φp Ia Ia For a Shunt Motor Ea = Vt – IaRa = Ka φP W Then W Vt I a Ra I R WNL a a K a P K a P W If Ra is very small then WNL W=W NL, consequently a shunt motor is a constant speed motor Ia Torque-Speed Characteristics Td K a P I a ..............I a W Td ....................(1) K a P Vt I R a a ..................(2) K a P K a P By substituting by (1) in (2) then Td Pd K a PVt K a2 P2 Td W Ra Ra 0.5 WNL W Example A 125 V shunt motor has an armature resistance of 0.2 Ω and a shunt field resistance of 45 Ω. If the load current is 50 A, find both Ea and Pd IL= Ia +IF Solution Ia IF =Vt /RF Ra RF Vt = Ea +IaRa IF = Vt /RF = 125/45 = 2.78 A Ea Ia = IL-IF = 50 -2.78 = 47.22 A Ea = Vt- IaRa = 125-47.22×0.2 = 115.55 V Pd = Ea Ia = 115.55×47.22 = 5456.43 watts Shunt Series Motor I a = IF = I L RS RF Vt = Ea+ Ia (Ra +RF) Ia φP = KF IF = KF Ia IF IL Ra Ea = Ka φPW = Ka KF Ia W Td = Ka φP Ia = KaKFI2a VS ……….(1) + - Ea W Ea V I R t a ..........( 2) Ka K F I a Ka K F I a •Speed of a series motor is inversely Td W proportional to Ia • A Series motor has a wide range of speed variation Ia Ia Vt K a K FW R Td K a K F I a2 K a K FVt 2 ( K a K FW R ) 2 As Td α 1/W2 the series motor has a very high starting torque and that makes it suitable for electrical vehicles, electric traction applications and drilling Speed control V I R W t a Ka K F I a Td • As R increases W decreases • As φP increases W decreases (field control) • Using a variable DC voltage source makes W increases as Vt increases Speed Example A series motor has a combined series and armature resistance of 0.85 Ω, runs at 1000 rpm and draws 20A from a 250 V source, calculate: 1.The rotational speed if a 3.75 Ω resistor is connected in series with the motor 2.The developed power and developed torque at both speeds Solution 1. Ea1 = Vt –Ia (R +RS) = 250-20×0.85= 233 V, Ea2 = 250-20×(0.85+3.75) = 158 V, as Ea = KaφPW, then (Ea1/Ea2) = (N1/N2) then N2= 158×1000/233 = 678.1 rpm or W2 = 678.11×2×3.14/60 = 71 rad /sec 2. Pd1= Ea1Ia = 233×20 = 4660 w, Pd2= Ea2Ia = 158×20= 3160 w Td1= Pd1/ W1 = 4660/104.72 = 44.5 N.m Td2 = Pd2/ W2 = 3160/71 = 44.5 N.m