Abstract

An electronic pole-changing winding induction machine with eight and four poles for a 48-V starter-generator application is studied in this article. Starter-generators require high torque capability for short durations at low speed for cranking, a wide flux weakening region for regeneration, as well as high torque density, so that the machine may be integrated into a drive train with minimum change to the existing system. In this article, it is shown that when pole-changing windings are used, the axial length of the machine can be reduced compared to the baseline induction machine design, resulting in a more compact machine. The effects of shorter stack length and pole-changing windings on the performance of the induction machine are studied. Efficiency, loss, and power factor maps are calculated with analytical and finite-element methods and experimentally validated to compare the performance of the pole-changing winding induction machine with a baseline design under various operating conditions.

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