I have a 2-part question about electromagnetism and motors

In summary: I'm sure you're more experienced than I am when it comes to these sorts of things.Using an iron core, (2.5x10^-1). As far as commutators, from what I've seen, 2 is a pretty common number on motors the size I'm talking about putting together with many windings.I don't think there would be any problem with using two commutator segments, as long as their gaps are wider than the brushes.
  • #1
James Birt
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So, I'm working with a DC shunt wound motor and I want to calculate the actual voltage production on paper mathematically before building. I have been studying the biot-savart law and understand it to a fair degree. One of my questions is after you get your measurements in Teslas from said law do you convert that number to Webers to find the flux density? And if so what is the easiest unit conversion to understand?

Next question, what formula do you use to find out how many volts are produced after cutting through these lines of flux?

Thanks
 
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  • #2
James Birt said:
So, I'm working with a DC shunt wound motor and I want to calculate the actual voltage production on paper mathematically before building.
Hi James Birt.
smiley_sign_welcome.gif


You're constructing a motor from scratch?
 
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  • #3
Trying to, I'm a journeyman electrician and my step-dad is a mechanic with 20+ years experience. We are both working on it and have different understandings of how it works... well, fundamentally the same I guess. We are both interested in attempting it though. It is not going to be a large scale project, the motor will be relatively small with a small supply.. I'm just having slight difficulties with the math and would like to have the ability of knowing it would work before investing the time it will take to accomplish the task.
 
  • #4
You're constructing an armature using laminated steel, with slots, and a commutator, carbon brushes, and all? I'm impressed!

Something slightly larger than a slot car motor?

I hope there is someone here who can advise you further.
 
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  • #5
Yes, that size or slightly larger but you're in the ballpark. I'm just having issues determining if I'll get the right voltage output so I've been studying magnetomotive force and flux density but the math is complex... hey, speaking of the commutator, you know the gap where the brushes jump? I'm sure you do, what is the best way to tell how much the flux is disrupted during the change in cycle? An oscilloscope maybe?? Thanks, and thanks to anyone else that can shed some light on the subject.
 
  • #6
The commutator is retarded with respect to the geometric neutral plane. You manually adjust the offset angle by trial and error until arcing is minimized.

James Birt said:
...what formula do you use to find out how many volts are produced after cutting through these lines of flux?

Back EMF = (1/2) * (angular speed) * (number of turns) * (rotor radius) * (average magnetic flux) * (conductor length)
 
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  • #7
What formula do you use to find average magnetic flux?? I can get the other numbers, and thanks for the feedback I'm stuck on this.
 
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  • #8
Do you have a flux meter?
 
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  • #9
No, I do not. Did you see my first post about unit conversion? I would really like to know the math.
 
  • #10
James Birt said:
...after you get your measurements in Teslas from said law do you convert that number to Webers to find the flux density?

Measurements are data obtained from experiments.
When you apply a physical law, however, the quantity you seek drops out the bottom of an equation.

Before you proceed, review which quantity corresponds to which unit
(square brackets enclosing a physical quantity mean the unit with which said quantity is measured):

[magnetic flux] = weber
[magnetic flux density] = tesla

The formula is:
(flux density) * (flux area) = flux
 
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  • #11
Ok, I have been using the biot-savart law and that law is for magnetic fields and comes out in Tesla units. So, if the flux density is measured in Teslas then that should be the number I need. Thank you very much for clarifying this for me! I can now move forward with my calculations and hopefully construction very soon. Thank you again Mr.Lewis, I can't express to you how helpful that information is.
 
  • #12
Do you know the relative permeability of the steel you'll be using, James?

How many commutator segments are you planning?
 
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  • #13
Using an iron core, (2.5x10^-1). As far as commutators, from what I've seen, 2 is a pretty common number on motors the size I'm talking about putting together with many windings.
 
  • #14
If the relative permeability of the iron is 0.25 then it has 4 times less permeability than free space.
 
  • #15
James Birt said:
Using an iron core, (2.5x10^-1). As far as commutators, from what I've seen, 2 is a pretty common number on motors the size I'm talking about putting together with many windings.
I think there are "issues" with the use of two commutator segments, including the shorting out of the supply unless the commutator gaps are wider than the brushes. And with wide gaps the motor will sometimes need a helping hand to start it rotating.

A motor with two-segment commutator would make a great demonstration machine, though. Are you intending your machine to do useful work, or just serve as a functional demo?
 
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  • #16
No, I need the motor to function... what would you advise? I'm sure you've worked with them before, I have worked with them enough to understand their function but not enough to easily understand their construction. I know the gap in the commutator can cause interference in the magnetic flux and smaller magnets can be used to offset that particular variable but if I could avoid having to do that all together I would rather. Is there a better way?
 
  • #17
I think you'll find what you need from further web searches---more details about practical motor design. It's outside my area, I'm afraid.

Are you sure you want a shunt motor, as it seems to me that a permanent magnet motor would, in principle, be simpler. (Though home-building an efficient motor with permanent magnets may not be a realistic proposition.)
 
  • #18
James Birt said:
Using an iron core, (2.5x10^-1).
that's good iron.
0.25/μ0 = almost 200,000 relative permeabilityIf you want a working, useable motor...
Before making one from scratch
i'd suggest you fellows take apart an old DC generator or motor and take careful physical measurements .
Study how its armature is wound. , and the field coils.
Figure out how they arrived at number of turns on field
and trace the wires around the armature. Junkyards are full of old cars. Most are too new to have a generator
but a DC motor and generator have no practical difference
and there are fans motors, windshield wiper motors, electric seat and electric window motors

and of course starter motors. Converting a starter from series to shunt field would be a good exercise for you guys
and you'll learn nearly as much , maybe more because you won't get discouraged machining that tedious copper segmented commutator
Old Chrysler starters (early 60's) had two fields - a series field to provide extreme torque for those big B block V8's and a shunt field to limit RPM in case the Bendix drive gear fails to engage.

Here's a video of a guy replacing fields in a generator...

http://www.bing.com/videos/search?q...033C9AECEAA50410C9D0033C9AECEAA50&FORM=VRDGAR

Read up on magnetic circuit
learn what are meaning and units of
magnetomotive force MMF , Ampere-turns
flux Φ , Webers
Reluctance ℝ Amp-turns per Weber

e = blvsinθ, voltage induced in a wire = b(Flux Density) X l(ength of wire) X v(elocity) X sin(angle between Velocity and Flux)
http://ibphysicsstuff.wikidot.com/electromagnetic-induction

old jim
 
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  • #19
I misunderstood what you were asking, it will have only one commutator.. thought about self-excited but may be unnecisary. I'll take a look at some other motors and see what makes em tick.. that's an excellent idea. I have plans for the one I want to put together though, but getting a better understanding of existing ones does seem like the most logical starting point. I'll check out those videos in the morning and get back to you. Thank you all for your input, it's been very very helpful.
 
  • #20
And the iron I want to use is 95% pure, but it also depends on cost if I go with it or not. The magnetic permeability isn't hard to figure out though.
 
  • #21
James Birt said:
And the iron I want to use is 95% pure, but it also depends on cost if I go with it or not. The magnetic permeability isn't hard to figure out though.

A motor must have an air gap and that will dominate your magnetic circuit
so don't obsess over exotic ultra-permeable iron, for any reasonable sized motor the bulk of your MMF will be expended in the air gap.
 
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  • #22
I was assuming that's why the distance in the biot-savart law exists as to know the gap factor.. wouldn't making the MMF stronger at the source give you a stronger field in the gap? Or will it dissipate at the same rate regardless of the initial force?
 
  • #23
David Lewis said:
The commutator is retarded with respect to the geometric neutral plane. You manually adjust the offset angle by trial and error until arcing is minimized.
Back EMF = (1/2) * (angular speed) * (number of turns) * (rotor radius) * (average magnetic flux) * (conductor length)
Copper resistance at cold and hot not taken into account and friction losses are practical variants apart from room temp.. which can alter the calculations I think.
 
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  • #24
James Birt said:
wouldn't making the MMF stronger at the source give you a stronger field in the gap?
yes, I'm glad you see that...
and the smaller the gap the easier to establish good flux density

the "source" you mention is the field winding (or field magnet in a permanent magnet motor).
Its MMF 'pushes" flux around the magnetic circuit which is mostly iron but with a small air gap for mechanical clearance.
Flux passes easily through iron but not so easily through air.
upload_2016-8-10_22-14-52.png

rotor not shown
source http://www.rfcafe.com/references/El...ty-basic-navy-training-courses-chapter-14.htm
near top of that page is a link to table of contents for that wonderful old Navy training manual,
http://www.rfcafe.com/references/El...ity-basic-navy-training-courses.htm#Copyright
 
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  • #25
So yes, using a higher grade of iron would help strengthen the magnetic field, if I'm understanding you correctly. I haven't checked the links yet, it's late... But now that you have my gears turning I may just stay up a bit and give them a look, haha. And knowing the gap between the stator and the rotor will be a key number in calculating the potential output.
I was pretty sure the flux would have more trouble in air, I think the magnetic permiability or air is something like 1.26x10^-7 or maybe ^-6, I would have to check again to be completely sure.
 
  • #26
M L N Rao said:
Copper resistance at cold and hot not taken into account and friction losses are practical variants apart from room temp.. which can alter the calculations I think.

Please correct me but I assumed the amount of voltage induced in a conductor is not affected by the conductor's resistance. (Only when current flows does resistance have an effect.) And the speed at which a conductor is moving is not affected by how much friction the rotor needed to overcome to attain that speed.
 
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  • #27
James Birt said:
What formula do you use to find average magnetic flux?? I can get the other numbers, and thanks for the feedback I'm stuck on this.
the basic flux formula for a closed, uniform, magnetic circuit is
Φ = μμ0NIA/length
Φ = flux
μ and μ0 are permeability
N = number of turns
I = current
A = area of path
length is of path
a search on that formula will turn up tutorials

for you motor,
The easiest approach is to turn it around, assume flux you want and solve the formula for MMF

your magnetic path is not uniform but it is closed.
So break it up into segments . Look at that sketch in post 24.
Air gap is two segments, rotor is one, each pole piece is a segment, and the round yoke is yet another.
Each segment has its own area, permeability, and length.
So for each segment of your closed loop magnetic circuit,
calculate the MMF required to magnetize that segment to desired flux then add them up.

It's easy in principle. If you're as neat and orderly with your arithmetic as you doubtless are in your milling machine setup you'll have no difficulty.

Let us know what % of your MMF is consumed in each segment of your proposed design? Then for fun, halve relative permeability of the iron and see how much that changes.. Then halve the air gap and see how much it changes. In my day we did that by slide rule, you'll no doubt use a spreadsheet.

Will your iron tolerate B of 1 Tesla ?

Have fun - motors are fascinating. DC motors are my favorite.

It's all F=QVcrossB

old jim
 
  • #28
I was under the impression that the electrical resistance would be in the electrical calculations, the armature resistance would be in the motor or RPM calculations and for the magnetism I would only have to concern myself with reluctance. Is that not correct? As per the thread David is referring to.

And good ole' Jim. I'm using old fashion pen and paper... with a scientific calculator of course. I do understand my first step here in calculation is the easy part even though I'm having trouble and what should work in theory doesn't always work in application but that will most likely be because of some variable I didn't account for... it's hard to say till I actually build and field test, but once I'm comfortable with the calculation I will be. And thanks to you and David I'm approaching a comfort zone.
 
  • #29
The material for your armature core is not selected solely on the basis of permeability. You would also like retentivity to be as low as possible because the core carries alternating magnetic flux.
 
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  • #30
So, low magnetic retention to be considered also?
 
  • #31
Yes. It takes more energy to demagnetize the core than you spent magnetizing it, so every time you demagnetize and reverse the polarity of flux in a ferromagnetic material, some energy will be lost to magnetic hysteresis.
 
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  • #32
I didn't even think of that, back to the drawing board.. Thank you again, always something insightful!
 
  • #33
this guy's videos might help you get started

you'll need headphones, his accent i find difficult but i do like the first presentation.

 
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  • #34
I listened, but that presentation is not in English and trying to read subtitles and watch the examples is confusing.
 
  • #35
James Birt said:
that presentation is not in English
Oops sorry about that
i thought it was my old ears on this terrible laptop speaker !

will look for a proper one...

for starters try



and
 
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