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Research on inter‐turn short circuit of armature windings in the multiphase synchronous generator–rectifier system
Author(s) -
Sun Yuguang,
Wang Shanming,
Huang Ziguo,
Mu Shujun
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
the journal of engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2051-3305
DOI - 10.1049/joe.2018.0026
Subject(s) - armature (electrical engineering) , shunt generator , electromagnetic coil , permanent magnet synchronous generator , rectifier (neural networks) , control theory (sociology) , harmonics , fault (geology) , electrical engineering , computer science , voltage , engineering , stochastic neural network , control (management) , machine learning , artificial intelligence , seismology , geology , recurrent neural network , artificial neural network
The multiphase synchronous generator–rectifier system could provide an ideal DC power source for more electric aircraft (MEA). When the inter‐turn short‐circuit fault occurs in phase windings of the generator, a large short‐circuit current would be introduced inside the armature windings, which could cause severe damages to the system for overheat in the windings and irons as well as huge electromagnetic forces on the end coils. To improve the reliability of the MEA, this study researches on the inter‐turn fault of the multiphase generator–rectifier system, including the theoretical analysis, numerical simulation and experimental verification. A 12‐phase system is taken for example, and a multi‐loop mathematical model is built up to calculate all voltages and currents in the multiphase synchronous generator–rectifier system with armature inter‐turn fault. Many factors are thoroughly considered in the model, including the location and short‐turns of fault, space harmonics of air‐gap magnetic field and the changing circuit topology of the system. The mathematical model is verified by fault experiment results. Moreover, the electric characteristics of the fault are summarised, which could provide a quantitative basis for early detection of the inter‐turn faults in the multiphase generator–rectifier system.

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