Abstract

In this article, a radial-electromagnetic-force-harmonic-oriented design methodology is proposed to suppress motor vibration. In the proposed methodology, the radial electromagnetic force harmonics innovatively act as the effective bridge between structural field and vibration performance. And avoiding low-order and large-amplitude radial electromagnetic force harmonics is the premise of designing low-vibration PM motors. For extensive investigation, a 36-slot/8-pole IPM motor with different winding configurations and variable rotor parameters is chosen as a design example. Then, vibration suppression methods of lowest-nonzero-spatial-order-shifting in the stator system and dominant-harmonic-amplitude-reduction in the rotor system are proposed. Next, the performances of the IPM motor are simulated for validating the proposed methodology. Finally, a prototype motor is fabricated and experimented. Both theoretical derivation and test results are presented to verify the validity of the motor and the proposed design methodology.

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