Does FOC for PMSM change with the number of rotor poles?
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Santiago Alfonso Ospina Botero
el 21 de Dic. de 2022
Comentada: Santiago Alfonso Ospina Botero
el 24 de Dic. de 2022
Hi,
I'm having some issues regarding FOC applied to PMSM, in particular when the rotor has more than 1 pole pair. I don't fully understand how is it possible that the FOC principle that is widely explaind for a motor of 1 pole pair, i.e stator magnetic flux orientatio being perpendicular to the rotor direct component, can be aplied in the same way to a rotor with higher number of poles. In the figure I represented PMSM with a 4 pole pair rotor. In Figure "a)" the stator flux is oriented such that there is a maximum torque and in Figure "b)" the direct and quadtrature axis of the rotor.
Based on this I deduce that if I want to apply FOC to this motor the park transformation should be modified sin the rotatory axis has a 25 º shear in it so that we can adjust the currents of the stator.
That means that the transformation should be (φ is the angle between the d and q axis):
Is this correct?
The reason for why I'm asking this is because I havent manage to find any literature that talks about this and I don't know why, I feel that I'm missing something...
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Sabin
el 23 de Dic. de 2022
In Field Oriented Control we need to apply Park transform to the stator quantities (currents, voltages, fluxes) so we obtain a model in d-q reference frame where we can use the q-axis to control the torque and d-axis to control the flux. Now in the mathematical transform we need the rotor electrical angle and electrical angle is dependent of the number of polepairs. The d and q components are 90 degrees apart. I hope this answers your question.
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