Induction Motors PPT v1
Induction Motors PPT v1
Induction Motors PPT v1
A. Vania
Politecnico di Milano, Dept. of Mechanical Engineering, Milan, Italy
INDUCTION MOTORS 2
1 stator
2 rotor
3 motor shaft
4 air gap
5 rotor bars
6 rings
The both induction and synchronous motors, the AC power supplied to the motor's stator
creates a magnetic field that rotates in time with the AC oscillations. Whereas a
synchronous motor's rotor turns at the same rate as the stator field, an induction motor's
rotor rotates at a slower speed than the stator field. The induction motor stator's magnetic
field is therefore changing or rotating relative to the rotor. This induces an opposing current
in the induction motor's rotor, in effect the motor's secondary winding, when the latter is
short-circuited or closed through an external impedance. The rotating magnetic flux induces
currents in the windings of the rotor; in a manner similar to currents induced in a
transformer’s secondary winding(s). The currents in the rotor windings in turn create
magnetic fields in the rotor that react against the stator field. Due to Lenz’s law, the direction
of the magnetic field created will be such as to oppose the change in current through the
rotor windings. The cause of induced current in the rotor windings is the rotating stator
magnetic field, so to oppose the change in rotor-winding currents the rotor will start to rotate
in the direction of the rotating stator magnetic field. The rotor accelerates until the
magnitude of induced rotor current and torque balances the applied load. Since rotation at
synchronous speed would result in no induced rotor current, an induction motor always
operates slower than synchronous speed. The difference, or "slip," between actual and
synchronous speed varies from about 0.5 to 5.0% for standard Design B torque curve
induction motors. The induction machine's essential character is that it is created solely by
induction instead of being separately excited as in synchronous or DC machines or being
self-magnetized as in permanent magnet motors.
For rotor currents to be induced, the speed of the physical rotor must be lower than that of
the stator's rotating magnetic field (ns); otherwise the magnetic field would not be moving
relative to the rotor conductors and no currents would be induced. As the speed of the rotor
drops below synchronous speed, the rotation rate of the magnetic field in the rotor
increases, inducing more current in the windings and creating more torque. The ratio
between the rotation rate of the magnetic field induced in the rotor and the rotation rate of
the stator's rotating field is called slip. Under load, the speed drops and the slip increases
enough to create sufficient torque to turn the load. For this reason, induction motors are
sometimes referred to as asynchronous motors. An induction motor can be used as an
induction generator, or it can be unrolled to form a linear induction motor which can directly
generate linear motion.
An AC motor's synchronous speed, ns, is the rotation rate of the stator's magnetic field,
which is expressed in revolutions per minute as:
120 f
ns =
p
where f is the motor supply’s frequency in Hertz and p is the number of magnetic poles.
That is, for a six-pole three-phase motor with three pole-pairs set 120° apart, p equals 6 and
equals 1,000 rpm and 1,200 rpm respectively for 50 Hz and 60 Hz supply systems.
Slip, s, is defined as the difference between synchronous speed and operating speed, at
the same frequency, expressed in rpm or in percent or ratio of synchronous speed. Thus:
ns − n r
s=
ns
where ns is stator electrical speed, nr is rotor
mechanical speed. Slip, which varies from zero at
synchronous speed and 1 when the rotor is at rest,
determines the motor's torque.
Since the short-circuited rotor windings have small
resistance, a small slip induces a large current in
the rotor and produces large torque.
At full rated load, slip varies from more than 5% for
small or special purpose motors to less than 1%
for large motors. These speed variations can
cause load-sharing problems when differently
sized motors are mechanically connected.
Various methods are available to reduce slip, VFDs
often offering the best solution.
rpm
Torque characteristic curve Effect of the supply voltage on
the torque characteristic curve