Design and Verification of High Power Density Electrically Excited Synchronous Machine for Traction Applications.
Doktorsavhandling, 2024

The transportation sector accounts for 28\% of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions and 16\% globally, with electric drivetrains playing a crucial role in achieving climate goals. However, the shift to electric vehicles (EVs) has heightened demand for rare-earth magnets, raising environmental and geopolitical concerns. Electrically Excited Synchronous Machines (EESMs) offer a compelling alternative to Permanent Magnet Synchronous Machines (PMSMs) by eliminating rare-earth materials while delivering high starting torque, improved power factor, and effective field weakening for greater efficiency across broader speed ranges.
Designing EESMs involves significant challenges due to active conductors in the rotor, which complicate mechanical design under high centrifugal forces and demand efficient thermal management. The high power density required for DC field generation generates substantial heat, making innovative cooling solutions essential to address mechanical losses and rotor cooling complexities.
This thesis tackles the electromagnetic, mechanical, and thermal design challenges of EESMs for vehicle and truck drivetrain. A 60~kW concept machine is designed and prototyped, and its electromagnetic and mechanical design is validated through experimental testing.
Following validation, the design scales up to a 200~kW prototype for trucks, focusing on direct oil cooling for the rotor and stator, and exploring oil splashing limitations.
Experimental testing demonstrates the cooling system ability to maintain uniform temperature distribution, keeping components within the insulation class limits for reliable operation in the continuous operating region. These advancements position EESMs as viable solutions for EV applications, addressing critical performance and sustainability challenges.

Electrically Excited Synchronous Machine (EESM)

E-motors

Oil Cooling

Electric Motors

Wound Field Synchronous Machine (WFSM).

Electric Propulsion

Electric Vehicles

Lecture Hall EF
Opponent: Prof. Nejila Parspour, University of Stuttgart (Germany).



Författare

Luca Boscaglia

Chalmers, Elektroteknik, Elkraftteknik

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Convective Heat Transfer Coefficients and Mechanical Loss Evaluation of Oil Splashing in Direct Cooled Electrically Excited Hairpin Motors

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L. Boscaglia, H. S. N. Sugumar and Y. Liu, "Design and Verification of a Direct-Cooled Hairpins Stator with Oil Jacket and End Winding Self-Impingement." IEEE Transactions on Transportation Electrification

The growing demand for sustainable electric vehicles (EVs) has underscored the need for alternatives to traditional Permanent Magnet Synchronous Machines (PMSMs), which rely on rare-earth materials with significant environmental and geopolitical challenges. Electrically Excited Synchronous Machines (EESMs) have emerged as a promising solution, utilizing electromagnets instead of permanent magnets. However, their design introduces complex challenges that this research has addressed through innovative engineering approaches.
This research has successfully designed, prototyped, and tested two EESMs: a 60-kilowatt model for cars and a 200-kilowatt version for trucks. Both designs have undergone rigorous analyses and experimental validation, demonstrating that EESMs are a sustainable, high-performance alternative for modern electric drivetrains.
EESMs incorporate active conductors within the rotor, creating distinctive electromagnetic design complexities. Achieving high efficiency across a broad speed range while maintaining a near-unity power factor has required precise flux control, involving optimized rotor geometry, winding configurations, and material properties to ensure both performance and reliability.
The mechanical design of EESMs poses further challenges due to substantial centrifugal forces on rotor windings at high speeds. To ensure structural integrity, robust materials and innovative topologies such as dovetail assembling, have been developed to withstand these stresses without compromising electromagnetic performance.
Thermal management is critical, as active rotor windings generate significant heat under high power densities. Advanced cooling strategies, including direct oil cooling for both rotor and stator, have been developed and validated. Rotor oil cooling has nearly doubled the machine continuous operation range, enabling high-power applications in trucks. Stator cooling strategies effectively cool laminations and slots while self-impinging oil at the machine terminals, eliminating the need for separate systems.
Although oil splashing has been considered, experiments have shown that mechanical losses due to oil viscosity become prohibitively high above one thousand rpm. Consequently, oil-level control mechanisms are necessary for higher speeds.

Development of efficient and environmental friendly LONG distance powertrain for heavy dUty trucks aNd coaches

Europeiska kommissionen (EU) (EC/H2020/874972), 2020-01-01 -- 2023-06-30.

Drivkrafter

Hållbar utveckling

Styrkeområden

Transport

Energi

Ämneskategorier (SSIF 2025)

Elektroteknik och elektronik

ISBN

978-91-8103-156-0

Doktorsavhandlingar vid Chalmers tekniska högskola. Ny serie: 5614

Utgivare

Chalmers

Lecture Hall EF

Online

Opponent: Prof. Nejila Parspour, University of Stuttgart (Germany).

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2025-02-03