My guess is that a motor claimed to be built for "inverter duty" will have magnetics construction features that minimise iron losses, and allow it to support currents at high frequency. Some motors actually have deliberately chosen lower inductance coils that will not limit the risetime of switching waveforms.
The use of these inverters can risk high harmonic currents and EMC interference from distorting the supply waveform, so often come with a weighty filter although the better ones minimize the filtering needs by clever power factor correction stages. A 22kW motor is something that the supplier will have lots of data on, and should be able to provide you with lots of ways to figure how to use it.
I had excess capacity in the provided motors, so I took the lazy way known as "Autotuning" This is a short test run with the shaft not connected to any gearbox or load. Some parameters are given, such as the voltage available for driving it, and the maximum rated current, and the number of poles, etc. The "tuning" test determines things like the motor line-to-line resistance, the motor leak inductance, the motor iron saturation coefficient, the motor field rotation slip, and a truly astonishing array of other stuff.
Once this basic stuff is known, you can do test runs to optimize the motor performance. It can make alarming, but harmless sounds as you take it into instability, but once done, it becomes possible to make the shaft turn real slow at full torque, set ramp rates, and manage active braking, with a few uncontrolled currents finally making into a braking resistor. For me, now that this new stuff has come along, A.C. motor control is the mode of choice for cost and flexibility reasons.
The list of parameters, compensations, control modes, and configurations runs into hundreds. Also, there is a certain amount of supplier lock-in in the way they tend to make their parameter sets relate to their control gear. Do explore the set-up and programming instructions and help manuals for more than one product. It gives a feel for what features are supported as standard.
I know I got there without tangling with motor equations. It was a pragmatic approach, but I appreciated it could be done without risking the motors. There are just so many safety lockouts.