Abstract
Direct-drive permanent magnet (PM) synchronous generators (DDPMSGs) are gaining more and more attention and application for wind power. This paper presents a comprehensive performance comparison of an external rotor surface-mounted PM synchronous generator equipped with three commonly used winding types, i.e., integral-slot distributed winding (ISDW), fractional-slot concentrated winding (FSCW), and fractional-slot distributed winding. The tradeoff between torque and the power factor, loss distribution, current, torque, and PM demagnetization characteristics under a short-circuit fault and the steady temperature rise are investigated and compared using finite-element analyses. It is found that, generally, FSCW PM generators exhibit high rotor losses compared with ISDWs, which will lead to an overly high temperature rise. Measures such as segment PMs and the adoption of lamination steel in the rotor can reduce the rotor loss and greatly improve the machine efficiency. However, the temperature rise of FSCW machines is still higher than that of ISDW machines. The conclusion is intended to help choose the proper winding types.
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