A distributed multi-level current modeling method for design analysis and optimization of permanent magnet electromechanical actuators

This thesis has been motivated by the growing needs for multi-degree of freedom (M-DOF) electromagnetic actuators capable of smooth and accurate multi-dimensional driving motions. Because high coercive rare-earth permanent-magnets (PMs) are widely available at low cost, their uses for developing co...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lim, Jung Youl
Other Authors: Lee, Kok-Meng
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2015
Subjects:
DMC
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/53990
id ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-53990
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-539902015-09-29T03:29:23ZA distributed multi-level current modeling method for design analysis and optimization of permanent magnet electromechanical actuatorsLim, Jung YoulElectromagnetic fieldElectromagnetic motorEletromechanical actuatorMulti-DOF actuatorActuator optimizationPM-based actuatorDMCLayout optimizationThis thesis has been motivated by the growing needs for multi-degree of freedom (M-DOF) electromagnetic actuators capable of smooth and accurate multi-dimensional driving motions. Because high coercive rare-earth permanent-magnets (PMs) are widely available at low cost, their uses for developing compact, energy-efficient M-DOF actuators have been widely researched. To facilitate design analysis and optimization, this thesis research seeks to develop a general method based on distributed source models to characterize M-DOF PM-based actuators and optimize their designs to achieve high torque-to-weight performance with compact structures To achieve the above stated objective, a new method that is referred to here as distributed multi-level current (DMC) utilizes geometrically defined point sources has been developed to model electromagnetic components and phenomena, which include PMs, electromagnets (EMs), iron paths and induced eddy current. Unlike existing numerical methods (such as FEM, FDM, or MLM) which solve for the magnetic fields from Maxwell’s equations and boundary conditions, the DMC-based method develops closed-form solutions to the magnetic field and force problems on the basis of electromagnetic point currents in a multi-level structure while allowing trade-off between computational speed and accuracy. Since the multi-level currents can be directly defined at the geometrically decomposed volumes and surfaces of the components (such as electric conductors and magnetic materials) that make up of the electromagnetic system, the DMC model has been effectively incorporated in topology optimization to maximize the torque-to-weight ratio of an electromechanical actuator. To demonstrate the above advantages, the DMC optimization has been employed to optimize the several designs ranging from conventional single-axis actuators, 2-DOF linear-rotary motors to 3-DOF spherical motors. The DMC modeling method has been experimentally validated and compared against published data. While the DMC model offers an efficient means for the design analysis and optimization of electromechanical systems with improved computational accuracy and speed, it can be extended to a broad spectrum of emerging and creative applications involving electromagnetic systems.Georgia Institute of TechnologyLee, Kok-Meng2015-09-21T15:51:21Z2015-09-22T05:30:07Z2014-082014-05-07August 20142015-09-21T15:51:21ZDissertationapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/53990en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Electromagnetic field
Electromagnetic motor
Eletromechanical actuator
Multi-DOF actuator
Actuator optimization
PM-based actuator
DMC
Layout optimization
spellingShingle Electromagnetic field
Electromagnetic motor
Eletromechanical actuator
Multi-DOF actuator
Actuator optimization
PM-based actuator
DMC
Layout optimization
Lim, Jung Youl
A distributed multi-level current modeling method for design analysis and optimization of permanent magnet electromechanical actuators
description This thesis has been motivated by the growing needs for multi-degree of freedom (M-DOF) electromagnetic actuators capable of smooth and accurate multi-dimensional driving motions. Because high coercive rare-earth permanent-magnets (PMs) are widely available at low cost, their uses for developing compact, energy-efficient M-DOF actuators have been widely researched. To facilitate design analysis and optimization, this thesis research seeks to develop a general method based on distributed source models to characterize M-DOF PM-based actuators and optimize their designs to achieve high torque-to-weight performance with compact structures To achieve the above stated objective, a new method that is referred to here as distributed multi-level current (DMC) utilizes geometrically defined point sources has been developed to model electromagnetic components and phenomena, which include PMs, electromagnets (EMs), iron paths and induced eddy current. Unlike existing numerical methods (such as FEM, FDM, or MLM) which solve for the magnetic fields from Maxwell’s equations and boundary conditions, the DMC-based method develops closed-form solutions to the magnetic field and force problems on the basis of electromagnetic point currents in a multi-level structure while allowing trade-off between computational speed and accuracy. Since the multi-level currents can be directly defined at the geometrically decomposed volumes and surfaces of the components (such as electric conductors and magnetic materials) that make up of the electromagnetic system, the DMC model has been effectively incorporated in topology optimization to maximize the torque-to-weight ratio of an electromechanical actuator. To demonstrate the above advantages, the DMC optimization has been employed to optimize the several designs ranging from conventional single-axis actuators, 2-DOF linear-rotary motors to 3-DOF spherical motors. The DMC modeling method has been experimentally validated and compared against published data. While the DMC model offers an efficient means for the design analysis and optimization of electromechanical systems with improved computational accuracy and speed, it can be extended to a broad spectrum of emerging and creative applications involving electromagnetic systems.
author2 Lee, Kok-Meng
author_facet Lee, Kok-Meng
Lim, Jung Youl
author Lim, Jung Youl
author_sort Lim, Jung Youl
title A distributed multi-level current modeling method for design analysis and optimization of permanent magnet electromechanical actuators
title_short A distributed multi-level current modeling method for design analysis and optimization of permanent magnet electromechanical actuators
title_full A distributed multi-level current modeling method for design analysis and optimization of permanent magnet electromechanical actuators
title_fullStr A distributed multi-level current modeling method for design analysis and optimization of permanent magnet electromechanical actuators
title_full_unstemmed A distributed multi-level current modeling method for design analysis and optimization of permanent magnet electromechanical actuators
title_sort distributed multi-level current modeling method for design analysis and optimization of permanent magnet electromechanical actuators
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/53990
work_keys_str_mv AT limjungyoul adistributedmultilevelcurrentmodelingmethodfordesignanalysisandoptimizationofpermanentmagnetelectromechanicalactuators
AT limjungyoul distributedmultilevelcurrentmodelingmethodfordesignanalysisandoptimizationofpermanentmagnetelectromechanicalactuators
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