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Abstract

Varying ohmic loss in the winding of electrical machines, which are operated at various operating points, results in temperature changes during operation. Particularly, when the temperature is varying dynamically, the insulation system suffers from repeated thermalmechanical stress, since the thermal expansion coefficients of the insulating materials and copper conductors are different. For the appropriate design of an insulation system, the effect of thermal-mechanical stress must be known. In the present work, motorettes are subjected to repeated thermal cycles. The expected lifetime is estimated and compared to the lifetime which is achieved by applying a lifetime-model which only considers thermal aging while ignoring thermal-mechanical stress effects. In addition, the hotspot temperature is simulated, the lifetime at the hotspot is estimated as theworst case. As expected, the results indicate that the thermal-mechanical stress plays a significant role during dynamic thermal aging of the winding insulation system. To better understand the thermal-mechanical stress effect, the resulting thermal-mechanical stress in a single wire is analyzed by the finite element method. A preliminary analysis of the aging mechanism of materials due to cyclic thermal-mechanical stress is performed with the theory of material fatigue.
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Bibliography

[1] Stone G.C., Boulter E.A., Culbert I., Dhirani H., Electrical insulation for rotating machines: design, evaluation, aging, testing, and repair, John Wiley & Sons (2004).
[2] Rothe R., Hameyer K., Life expectancy calculation for electric vehicle traction motors regarding dynamic temperature and driving cycles, 2011 IEEE International Electric Machines and Drives Conference (IEMDC), Niagara Falls, ON, Canada, pp. 1306–1309 (2011).
[3] Huang Z., Modeling and testing of insulation degradation due to dynamic thermal loading of electrical machines, Licentiate Thesis, Lund University, Lund (2017).
[4] Chen W., Nelson C., Thermal stress in bonded joints, IBM Journal of Research and Development, vol. 23, no. 2, pp. 179–188 (1979).
[5] Arrhenius S., On the heat of dissociation and the influence of temperature on the degree of dissociation of the electrolytes, Zeitschrift für Physikalische Chemie (in German, Über die Dissociationswärme und den Einfluss der Temperatur auf den Dissociationsgrad der Elektrolyte), vol. 4, no. 1, pp. 96–116 (1889).
[6] Dakin T.W., Electrical insulation deterioration treated as a chemical rate phenomenon, Transactions of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, vol. 67, no. 1, pp. 113–122 (1948).
[7] Ruf A., Pauli F., Schröder M., Hameyer K., Lifetime modelling of non-partial discharge resistant insulation systems of electrical machines in dynamic load collectives, e & i Elektrotechnik und Informationstechnik (in German, Lebensdauermodellierung von nicht-teilentladungsresistenten isoliersystemen elektrischer maschinen in dynamischen lastkollektiven), vol. 135, no. 2, pp. 131–144 (2018).
[8] Pauli F., Schröder M., Hameyer K., Design and evaluation methodology for insulation systems of low voltage drives with preformed coils, 2019 9th International Electric Drives Production Conference (EDPC), Esslingen, Germany, pp. 1–7 (2019).
[9] Madonna V., Giangrande P., Lusuardi L., Cavallini A., Gerada C., Galea M., Thermal overload and insulation aging of short duty cycle, aerospace motors, IEEE Transactions on Industrial Electronics, vol. 67, no. 4, pp. 2618–2629 (2019).
[10] Sciascera C., Galea M., Giangrande P., Gerada C., Lifetime consumption and degradation analysis of the winding insulation of electrical machines, 2016 8th IET International Conference on Power Electronics, Machines and Drives (PEMD), Glasgow, UK, pp. 1–5 (2016).
[11] IEC 60505, Evaluation and qualification of electrical insulation systems (2011).
[12] Ruf A., Paustenbach J., Franck D., Hameyer K., A methodology to identify electrical ageing of winding insulation systems, 2017 IEEE International Electric Machines and Drives Conference (IEMDC), Miami, FL, USA, pp. 1–7 (2017).
[13] Pauli F., Ruf A., Hameyer K., Low voltage winding insulation systems under the influence of high du/dt slew rate inverter voltage, Archives of Electrical Engineering, vol. 69, no. 1, pp. 187–202 (2020).
[14] IEC 60034–18–41, Rotating electrical machines – Part 18–41: Partial discharge free electrical insulation system (Type I) used in rotating electrical machines fed from voltage converters – Qualification and quality control tests (2014).
[15] Nikolova G., Ivanova J., Interfacial shear and peeling stresses in a two-plate structure subjected to monotonically increasing thermal loading, Journal of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics, vol. 51 (2013).
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Authors and Affiliations

Liguo Yang
1
ORCID: ORCID
Florian Pauli
1
Kay Hameyer
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Institute of Electrical Machines (IEM), RWTH Aachen University, Schinkelstraße 4, 52062 Aachen, Germany
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Abstract

Based on the theory of heat transfer, the influence of expansion joints on the temperature and stress distribution of ladle lining is discussed. In view of the current expansion joint, the mathematical model of heat transfer and the three dimensional finite element model of ladle lining brick are established. By analyzing the temperature and stress distribution of ladle lining brick when the expansion joints are in different sizes, the thermal mechanical stress caused by the severe temperature difference can be reduced by the suitable expansion joint of the lining brick during the ladle baking and working process. The analysis results showed that the thermal mechanical stress which is caused by thermal expansion can be released through the 2 mm expansion joint, which is set in the building process. So we can effectively reduce the thermal mechanical stress of the ladle lining, and there is no risk of steel leakage, thus the service life of ladle can be effectively prolonged.
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Authors and Affiliations

H. Liu
W. Chang
G. Li
J. Kong
Y. Sun
G. Jiang

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