Radial Force Shaping for Acoustic Noise Reduction in Switched Reluctance Machines

Robustness, simple construction, and low cost are some of the advantages of switched reluctance machines (SRMs). These are all desirable characteristics of an electric motor, especially in the automotive sector, where high-temperature and high-speed operation, and low cost are always in demand. Howe...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE transactions on power electronics 2019-10, Vol.34 (10), p.9866-9878
Hauptverfasser: Callegaro, Alan Dorneles, Bilgin, Berker, Emadi, Ali
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Robustness, simple construction, and low cost are some of the advantages of switched reluctance machines (SRMs). These are all desirable characteristics of an electric motor, especially in the automotive sector, where high-temperature and high-speed operation, and low cost are always in demand. However, the acoustic noise generation by conventionally controlled SRMs can prevent its use in applications where acoustic comfort is required. Acoustic noise is radiated by the stator frame when a vibration mode is excited by the respective spatial order at a forcing frequency that is close to the stator's modal natural frequency. The excitation surface wave is the radial force density waveform, which is a function of time and spatial position. In this paper, a phase radial force shaping method is proposed by using harmonic content analysis. A generic function for the radial force shape is identified, whose parameters are calculated by an optimization algorithm to minimize the torque ripple for a given average torque. From the phase radial force profile, a current reference is obtained. The proposed methodology is experimentally validated with a four-phase 8/6 SRM through acoustic noise measurements at different speed and load conditions.
ISSN:0885-8993
1941-0107
DOI:10.1109/TPEL.2019.2891050