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A brushless exciter design for a hybrid permanent magnet generator applied to series hybrid electric vehicles

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Conference
  • Session
  • Tuesday, 08 April 2014
  • 00:00
  • Duration: 12 mins
  • Publication date: 08 Apr 2014
  • Location: IETTV_Room, IETTV_Venue, Manchester, United Kingdom
  • Part of event 7th International Conference on Power, Electronics, Machines & Drives (PEMD 2014)

About the session

This presentation discusses the design of a brushless exciter for a hybrid permanent magnet (HPM) generator for application in series hybrid electric vehicles (SHEV). The brushless exciter has a 36-pole stator winding and multi-phase rotor configuration that supplies the HPM wound field (WF) rotor via a rotating rectifier. The brushless exciter rotor components are all assembled on the same shaft as the HPM generator rotor. The HPM machine is engine-mounted and has to accommodate a through-shaft. This forms one of the constraints on the HPM generator and brushless exciter design. Moreover, to minimize the component count, the brushless exciter design is constrained to use the same laminations as those used in the HPM generator. A multi-phase design approach is used for the brushless exciter rotor that, together with an uncontrolled passive rectifier, delivers a high-quality DC output to the HPM WF. This eliminates the necessity for passive smoothing of the rectified DC output and hence improves the reliability of the system. The dynamic behaviour of the brushless exciter is analysed to examine the response and effectiveness of the proposed design.

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  • OB

    Omid Beik

    McMaster University, PhD student

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