• DocumentCode
    1150284
  • Title

    High-speed compulsator stator thermal management

  • Author

    Liu, H.P. ; Hahne, J.J.

  • Author_Institution
    Austin Center for Electromech., Univ. of Texas, Austin, TX, USA
  • Volume
    39
  • Issue
    1
  • fYear
    2003
  • Firstpage
    357
  • Lastpage
    361
  • Abstract
    The compulsator stator armature winding includes multiple conductor layers. Each conductor layer is made of insulation wraps and transposed aluminum litz wire bundles with epoxy potting compound between the wires and the wire bundles. For a typical pulse-duty application, based on a room-temperature electrical loss calculation, the temperature rise in the aluminum winding is approximately 30/spl deg/C per shot. Adequate active cooling must be provided such that the stator insulation can survive thermally under a certain pulse repetition rate. As a result of the low equivalent thermal conductivities of the stator winding in the transverse direction, without compromising the overall structural integrity of the winding, the coolant passages have to be allocated as close as possible to the heat sources. For a given electric gun firing mission, four different cooling configurations have been investigated and analyzed by using water ethylene glycol mixture as an active liquid coolant. In this paper, thermal analysis cooling parameters, transient stator winding temperature distributions, and hot-spot temperature histories are presented, discussed, and compared.
  • Keywords
    cooling; projectiles; pulsed power supplies; railguns; stators; temperature distribution; thermal analysis; thermal management (packaging); windings; active cooling; active liquid coolant; armature winding; compact power supply; cooling configurations; electric gun firing mission; electromagnetic railguns; epoxy potting compound; equivalent thermal conductivities; high-speed compulsator; hot-spot temperature histories; insulation wraps; multiple conductor layers; projectiles; pulse repetition rate; pulse-duty application; room-temperature electrical loss calculation; stator insulation; stator thermal management; structural integrity; temperature distributions; temperature rise; thermal analysis cooling parameters; transient stator winding; transposed aluminum litz wire bundles; water ethylene glycol mixture; wire bundles; Aluminum; Conductors; Coolants; Cooling; Stator windings; Temperature distribution; Thermal conductivity; Thermal management; Transient analysis; Wire;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Magnetics, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9464
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TMAG.2002.806414
  • Filename
    1179845