4.4 Article

Superconducting Synchronous Motor Development for Airplane Applications-Mechanical and Electrical Design of a Prototype 100 kW Motor

Journal

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TASC.2023.3242629

Keywords

Synchronous motors; Stator windings; Rotors; Windings; Superconducting magnets; Superconducting coils; Permanent magnet motors; High-temperature superconductors (HTS); HTS coils for rotor; superconducting motors for airplanes; flux pumps

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A 100 kW, 4500 RPM synchronous superconducting motor is being developed at the Paihau-Robinson Research Institute. It features superconducting excitation field coils, contactless superconducting dynamo exciter, EM shield, and a unique single-layer winding design. The motor aims to evaluate different technologies and achieve a 3.0 MW machine with superconducting armature and field windings, offering smaller size, lower mass, and higher efficiency compared to permanent magnet motors in the same power range.
A 100 kW, 4500 RPM synchronous superconducting motor is being built at the Paihau-Robinson Research Institute, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. The motor has superconducting excitation field coils on the rotor and a conventional stator winding. To minimize mass the motor is an air-core type, meaning no ferromagnetic materials are employed inside the motor. Some of the salient features of this motor include: 1) field winding coils employing REBCO CORC conductor; 2) field coils powered with a contactless superconducting dynamo exciter; 3) an EM shield on the rotor for protecting the field coils from high frequency magnetic fields due to stator harmonics and the switching of the drive electronics; 4) a unique single-layer winding design for the stator winding, where the stator coils are made with copper Litz wire and are liquid-cooled. This paper describes the electrical design and 3D simulation of the motor including the superconducting dynamo, and highlights stator and rotor coil developments that will be validated in the prototype. Sensitivity to critical design parameters has been assessed in simulation and initial sub-system prototypes manufactured for testing. Preliminary design is projecting this motor diameter and axial length as 360 mm and 550 mm respectively, with an efficiency of 96.4% at the rated load. These numbers may be comparable with permanent magnet motors of similar rating, but this motor is being built to serve as a test-bed for evaluating different technologies for rotor and stator components. The ultimate goal for this program is a 3.0 MW machine with superconducting armature and field windings. In comparison with the permanent magnet motor in 2.5--3.0 MW range, the superconducting motors are expected to be 4 to 5 times smaller in size and mass with efficiency exceeding 99%.

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