Electrical machines
US-2016177770-A1 · Jun 23, 2016 · US
US10428682B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-10428682-B2 |
| Application number | US-201715405491-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Jan 13, 2017 |
| Priority date | Jan 13, 2017 |
| Publication date | Oct 1, 2019 |
| Grant date | Oct 1, 2019 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
A motor arrangement includes a shaft, a motor with a cage winding fixed in rotation relative to the shaft, and a generator. The generator includes a permanent magnet assembly fixed in rotation relative to the shaft. The permanent magnet assembly and the cage winding are fixed in rotation relative to one another such that the generator generates a sinusoidal AC voltage signal according to an excitation phase applied to the motor for controlling rotor distortion during cool down of a gas turbine engine.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. A motor arrangement, comprising: a shaft; a motor with a cage winding connected to the shaft; and a generator with a permanent magnet (PM) and a position/speed winding, the permanent magnet being connected to the shaft, wherein the PM is fixed in rotation relative to the cage winding, the position/speed winding being configured to output a position/speed signal in response to rotation of the PM, the position/speed signal is used to determine a control signal for controlling inversion of a supplied direct current (DC) power for generation of an excitation signal applied to the motor to cause rotation of the shaft and to provide slow rotation to a gas turbine engine rotor for controlling distortion during cool down. 2. The motor as recited in claim 1 , further comprising an enclosure housing the motor and the generator. 3. The motor as recited in claim 2 , wherein the shaft is supported for rotation within the enclosure and includes a coupling arranged outside the enclosure. 4. The motor as recited in claim 2 , further comprising a temperature sensor adhesively bonded to an interior enclosure wall and arranged between the motor and the generator. 5. The motor as recited in claim 2 , further comprising a connector extending between the enclosure interior and enclosure exterior. 6. The motor as recited in claim 5 , further comprising a position lead coupling the connector to the generator. 7. The motor as recited in claim 5 , further comprising a power lead coupling the connector to the motor. 8. The motor as recited in claim 1 , further comprising a bearing supporting the shaft on a side of the motor opposite the generator and/or on a side of the generator opposite the motor. 9. The motor as recited in claim 1 , further comprising an A-phase winding, a B-phase winding, and a C-phase winding arranged circumferentially about the cage winding. 10. The motor as recited in claim 1 , wherein the position/speed winding extends circumferentially about the PM and is separated therefrom by a cogging-limited gap. 11. The motor as recited in claim 1 , wherein the cage winding of the induction motor and the position/speed winding of the generator are coaxially arranged along the shaft for common rotation with one another. 12. A gas turbine engine, comprising: a stator; a rotor supported for rotation relative to stator about a rotation axis; the motor arrangement as recited in claim 1 ; and a controller connected to the generator to receive the position/speed signal and determine the control signal. 13. The gas turbine engine as recited in claim 12 , further comprising an inverter connected to the controller and the generator for applying power to the motor based on position of the rotor. 14. The gas turbine engine as recited in claim 13 , further comprising a DC power battery connected to the inverter for supplying the DC power. 15. The gas turbine engine as recited in claim 12 , further comprising a temperature sensor arranged within an enclosure of the motor arrangement and connected to the controller to ensure the electric motor is operating within a predetermined temperature range. 16. A method of controlling rotor distortion in a gas turbine engine, comprising: generating a position/speed signal with a permanent magnet (PM) generator in response to rotation driving rotation of a gas turbine engine; determining rotational position of the gas turbine engine rotor based on the position/speed signal; and determining a control signal as a function of the position/speed signal; controlling, as a function of the position/speed signal, inversion of a supplied direct current (DC) power for generation of an excitation signal; applied applying the excitation signal to a motor to cause rotation of the gas turbine engine rotor for controlling distortion during cool down, wherein amplitude of the position/speed signal is larger than amplitude of the excitation signal. 17. The method as recited in claim 16 , further comprising determining rotor temperature. 18. The method as recited in claim 16 , further comprising inverting the supplied DC as controlled by a control signal determined as a function of the position/speed signal.
of the alternating current (A.C.) type · CPC title
and for generating speed information · CPC title
structurally associated with turbines or similar engines · CPC title
using electric motors · CPC title
using DC to AC converters or inverters (H02P27/05 takes precedence) · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.