Lower Cost Motor for Electric Vehicles
- IP Title
- VARIABLE MAGNETOMOTIVE FORCE ROTARY ELECTRIC MACHINE AND CONTROL DEVICE FOR VARIABLE MAGNETOMOTIVE FORCE ROTARY ELECTRIC MACHINE
- Technology Benefits
- Needs less or no rare earth/permanent magnet material Less sensitive to demagnetization Improved stability Higher torque production capability Variable flux characteristics superior to existing designs Lower loss operation
- Technology Application
- Improved IPM for hybrid/electric vehicles Installed in two or all four wheels
- Detailed Technology Description
- A class of electric machine called an interior permanent magnet (IPM) can be used as a motor inside the wheel rotor of electric or hybrid-electric vehicles to power the wheels. One of the largest costs in an IPM machine is the thick, high-coercivity magnets. This material cost has doubled in recent years. To enable a lower cost motor, UW–Madison researchers have pioneered a design that uses a Flux Intensified (FI) control approach, rather than the conventional Flux Weakened (FW) approach. Their design uses less permanent magnet material and, unlike typical FW systems which are made to run at high speed and low torque, is applicable to new vehicles that run at low/modest speeds but require higher torque.Building on their work, the researchers have developed an improved FI-IPM machine and control method. The new design employs thin, low-coercivity magnets and allows re-magnetization using the stator winding and system power control. Magnetic force is reduced, and voltage is limited in high-rotation zones in which normal motors require flux weakening control. Re-magnetization is performed in zones that require low rotation and high torque, and the desired magnetic flux is obtained in the magnets.
- Application Date
- Dec 18, 2014
- Application No.
- 9,577,484
- Others
-
For more information about the researchers’ cost-saving motor innovations, see WARF reference number P120243US01.
- *Abstract
-
The Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF) is seeking commercial partners interested in developing a variable flux intensified motor design that obtains stable torque without expensive permanent magnet material.
- *IP Issue Date
- Feb 21, 2017
- *IP Publication Date
- May 21, 2015
- *Principal Investigator
-
Name: Robert Lorenz
Department:
Name: Natee Limsuwan
Department:
Name: Takashi Kato
Department:
- Country/Region
- USA

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