DC Machine1
DC Machine1
Sakib Hossen
Dept. of EEE
RUET
Electrical Machine
Pole: In old machines pole core are solid piece of cast iron
or cast steel. In new construction, laminated steel are used
for pole core construction.
Different Parts of a dc Machine (3)
Armature: The moving part of the dc generator is called
the armature. It consists of a shaft upon which all parts are
mounted. Armature is made of laminated sheet steel and it
houses the conductor or coils where emf (voltage) is
induced.
Different Parts of a dc Machine (4)
Commutator: Its function is to facilitate collection of
current from the armature conductor and converts it from
alternating into unidirectional in the external circuit.
Different Parts of a dc Machine (5)
Brushes: They are usually made of carbon or graphite; they
collect current from commutator and supply it to the external
circuit and placed in the magnetic neutral plane.
Working Principle
Consider a single loop DC generator (as shown in the figure), in this a single
turn loop ‘ABCD’ is rotating clockwise in a uniform magnetic field with a
constant speed. When the loop rotates, the magnetic flux linking the coil
sides ‘AB’ and ‘CD’ changes continuously. This change in flux linkage induces
an EMF in coil sides and the induced EMF in one coil side adds the induced
EMF in the other.
Working Principle
The EMF induced in a DC generator can be explained as follows
When the loop is in position-1, the generated EMF is zero because, the movement
of coil sides is parallel to the magnetic flux.
When the loop is in position-2, the coil sides are moving at an angle to the
magnetic flux and hence, a small EMF is generated.
When the loop is in position-3, the coil sides are moving at right angle to the
magnetic flux, therefore the generated EMF is maximum.
When the loop is in position-4, the coil sides are cutting the magnetic flux at an
angle, thus a reduced EMF is generated in the coil sides.
When the loop is in position-5, no flux linkage with the coil side and are moving
parallel to the magnetic flux. Therefore, no EMF is generated in the coil.
At the position-6, the coil sides move under a pole of opposite polarity and hence
the polarity of generated EMF is reversed. The maximum EMF will generate in this
direction at position-7 and zero when at position-1. This cycle repeats with
revolution of the coil.
=Flux/pole in Weber
Z=Total number of armature conductor
P=No. of poles
n=Armature rotation in revolution per minute (rpm)
a=No. of parallel paths
Induced Torque of a real Motor
(Art. 8.5)
Torque induced in a single conductor:
=Flux/pole in Weber
Z=Total number of armature conductor
P=No. of poles
IA=Armature (Motor) current in A
a=No. of parallel paths
Types of dc Generators (1)
(Art. 9.11~9.17)
Generators are classified according to the way in
which their field circuits are excited : (a) Separately
excited generators and (b) Self-excited generators.
Open Circuit
Characteristic (OCC)
Separately Excited Generator(2)
Terminal Characteristic (Art. 9.12)
Separately Excited Generator (3)
Control of terminal voltage
(Art. 9.12)
Vc
Ic
If IA increases
1) For a fixed IF , read IA RA (difference between OCC and Field-resistance line; find
IA.
2) Calculate IL from IL=IA-IF.
3) For a fixed IF , field-resistance line with gives the terminal voltage VT.
4) At IL=0, the intersection of field-resistance line and OCC gives VT.
5) The minimum IL is obtained from Vres/RA.
HW
The magnetization characteristic of a dc generator is given as
follows:
IF(A): 0 0.4 0.8 2 5 6 8 10 12 14
EA(V) 20 22.5 25 82.5 200 232.5 275 300 320 335
The shunt field resistance is 24.5 . What will be the no load
voltage if the generator is used as a shunt generator? If the
generator is used as separately excited with its field supplied
from a 120V dc source, what will be its no load voltage?
2. Shunt dc motors
3. Series dc motors
4. Compound dc motors
Normal operating
range
Terminal Characteristics of Shunt
motors (2)
Terminal Characteristics of Shunt
motors (3)
Speed control of Shunt motors (1)
Armature
voltage speed
control
Shunt motor: Speed control
1) Increasing the armature voltage VA increases the armature current (IA =
(VA - EA)/RA);
2) Increasing armature current IA increases the induced torque ind (ind =
KIA);
3) Increased induced torque ind is now larger than the load torque load
and, therefore, the speed increases;
4) Increasing speed increases the internal generated voltage (EA = K);
5) Increasing EA decreases the armature current IA…
6) Decreasing IA decreases the induced torque until ind = load at a higher
speed .
Shunt motor: Speed
control
Armature resistance control:
Base speed
Since the field current is constant (both field resistance and VT are
constant) and since there are no armature reaction (due to compensating
windings), we conclude that the flux in the motor is constant. The speed
and the internal generated voltages at different loads are related as
Therefore:
Therefore:
Methods are:
Long Shunt
Short Shunt
Cumulative Compound motors (3)
R4= R3*35/55=1.033.
R34=1.623-1.033=0.59
R5= R4*35/55=0.6574.
R45=1.033-0.6574=0.3756
R6= R5*35/55=0.418.
R56=0.6574-0.418=0.2394
Starting of dc motor (2)
1. Copper losses;
2. Brush losses;
3. Mechanical losses;
4. Core losses;
5. Stray load losses.
DC machine efficiency calculations
To find the copper losses, we need to know the
currents in the motor and two resistances. In practice,
the armature resistance can be found by blocking the
rotor and apply a small DC voltage to the armature
terminals, such that the armature current will equal to
its rated value. The ratio of the applied voltage to the
armature current is approximately RA.
The field resistance is determined by supplying the
rated voltage to the field circuit and measuring the
resulting field current. The field voltage to field
current ratio equals to the field resistance.
DC machine efficiency calculations
Brush drop losses are frequently lumped together with
copper losses. If treated separately, brush drop losses
are a product of the brush voltage drop VBD and the
armature current IA.
The core and mechanical losses are usually determined
together. If the machine is running freely as a motor at no
load and at the rated speed, the current IA is very small
and the armature copper losses are negligible. Therefore,
if the field copper losses are subtracted from the input
power of the motor, the remainder will be the mechanical
and core losses. These two losses are also called the no-
load rotational losses. As long as the motor’s speed
remains approximately the same, the no-load rotational
losses are a good estimate of mechanical and core
losses in the machine under load.
Efficiency of DC Motor
Efficiency of a dc machine is
A 8-pole, 25 kW, 120-V dc generator has a duplex lap
Lap-wound armature which has 64 coils with 16 turns
Per
A dccoil. Its rated
machine hasspeed
8-poleisand
2400 rpm. current of 100 A.
a rated
(a) How much flux per pole is required to produce
How much current will flow in each path at rated con- the
rated voltage
ditions at no load
if the armature is conditions?
(a) simplex lap wound; (b) du-
(b) What
plex is current
lap wound; andper
(c)path at the
simplex rated
wave load? and (d)
wound,
(c) What is the
duplex wave wound. induced torque at the rated load?
(d) If the resistance of this winding is 0.011 /turn,
what is the armature resistance of the machine?
Problem 9.22
Answer: 975.45 rpm
Efficiency of Dc Generator
Efficiency of Dc Generator
Efficiency of Dc Generator
Knowledge Test-1
Q1: What type of magnetic material hard or soft is
used for dc machine design?