https://insideevs.com/news/357824/plastic-electric-motor-reduces-weight/
Plastic Electric Motor May Help EVs Reduce Weight
Jul 04, 2019  Gustavo Henrique Ruffo

[image  
https://cdn.motor1.com/images/mgl/r0XjX/s1/german-research-institute-develops-plastic-electric-motor.jpg
Rectangular flat wire replaces round wire

https://cdn.motor1.com/images/mgl/Q24rZ/s1/german-research-institute-develops-plastic-electric-motor.jpg
German Research Institute Develops Plastic Electric Motor


video
https://youtu.be/hpbdUgns320
Direktgekühlter Elektromotor aus Kunststoff
(Direct-cooled electric motor made of plastic)
]
        
Developed by the Fraunhofer Institute for Chemical Technology, it is also
cheaper to build.

Mass, aerodynamics, and powertrain efficiency are the three pillars of a
more efficient combustion engine vehicle. Although electric cars already
have the most energy-efficient engine man has ever created, it also pursues
low weight. And more aerodynamic designs, as pop-out door handles and
cameras instead of rear-view mirrors clearly demonstrate. But they also have
room for improvement. Curiously, one of these opportunities has been found
on the most unlikely element: the electric motor. What if its housing is
made of plastic in place of metal? This is what the Fraunhofer Institute for
Chemical Technology (ICT) and the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)
have recently proposed in Germany.

“An electric motor consists of a rotating rotor and a static stator. The
stator contains the copper windings that the electricity flows through – and
this is where the majority of electrical losses occur”, says Robert
Maertens, a researcher at Fraunhofer ICT. Maertens refers to the 10 percent
of losses that happen through the heat in an electric motor. This is why
electric cars are so efficient: 90 percent of the electric energy becomes
movement, while the very best combustion engines can only turn 40 percent of
the chemical energy contained in fuels to work. 

The new motor addresses the 10 percent of losses in current projects. In
order not to overheat, these motors present a metal housing that guides the
generated heat to a cooling sleeve, also made of metal. The Fraunhofer
engine uses rectangular flat wires around the stators instead of the round
wires used nowadays. That saves space for cooling channels close to the
stators. “In this optimized design, the heat losses can be dissipated
through the cooling channel inside the stator, eliminating the need to
transport the heat through the metal housing to an exterior cooling sleeve”,
says the researcher, who also points to other advantages, such as lower
thermal inertia, what means it can cool down much faster, and higher
continuous output, something that does not need any explanation. The rotor
also has a cooling solution in this project.

According to the researchers, prototypes take only four minutes to be built.
And mass-production will be relatively easy to achieve. In what relates to
the cooling process, it prevents 80 percent of the 10 percent of losses.
That alone increases the electric motor efficiency to 98 percent, but the
researchers believe they can make the 20 percent left, or 2 percent of total
losses, be lower still by optimizing the flow of coolant. If these motors
prove to be as reliable as the ones with metal housing, we will soon get
lighter, cheaper and more efficient vehicles. It is just a matter of waiting
for solid-state batteries to become a reality to have a quantum leap
regarding EVs. In all aspects.


press release
Novel cooling concept for eco-friendly mobility
Directly-cooled electric motor made from polymer materials

Making electric cars lighter also involves reducing the weight of the motor.
One way to do that is by constructing it from fiber-reinforced polymer
materials. Researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Chemical Technology
ICT are working together with the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology KIT to
develop a new cooling concept that will enable polymers to be used as motor
housing materials. And that’s not the only advantage of the new cooling
concept: it also significantly increases the power density and efficiency of
the motor compared to the state of the art.

The two key components of an electric drive train are the electric motor and
the battery. And there are three issues that play a particularly important
role when it comes to using an electric motor for eco-friendly mobility:
high power density, a compact configuration that fits snugly within the
electric vehicle, and high levels of efficiency. As part of the DEmiL
project – a German abbreviation that stands for directly-cooled electric
motor with integrated lightweight housing – researchers at Fraunhofer ICT in
Pfinztal are now working with the Institute of Vehicle System Technology
(FAST) and the Institute of Electrical Engineering (ETI) at Karlsruhe
Institute of Technology KIT to develop a novel approach that incorporates
direct cooling of the stator and rotor. “An electric motor consists of a
rotating rotor and a static stator. The stator contains the copper windings
that the electricity flows through – and this is where the majority of
electrical losses occur. The novel aspects of our new concept lie in the
stator,” says Robert Maertens, a researcher at Fraunhofer ICT.

Electric motors have a high efficiency of over 90 percent, which means that
a high proportion of the electrical energy is converted into mechanical
energy. The remaining 10 percent or so of the electrical energy is lost in
the form of heat. To prevent the motor from overheating, the heat in the
stator is currently conducted through a metal housing to a cooling sleeve
filled with cold water. In this project, the team of researchers have
replaced the round wire with rectangular flat wire that can be wound more
tightly in the stator. This creates more space for the cooling channel next
to the flat wire winding phases. “In this optimized design, the heat losses
can be dissipated through the cooling channel inside the stator, eliminating
the need to transport the heat through the metal housing to an exterior
cooling sleeve. In fact, you no longer need a cooling sleeve at all in this
concept. It offers other benefits, too, including lower thermal inertia and
higher continuous output from the motor,” says Maertens, explaining some of
the advantages of the new system. In addition, the new design incorporates a
rotor cooling solution that also allows the rotor’s heat loss to be
dissipated directly within the motor.

By dissipating the heat close to where it is generated, the project partners
were able to construct the entire motor and housing from polymer materials,
leading to further advantages. “Polymer housings are lightweight and easier
to produce than aluminum housings. They also lend themselves to complex
geometries without requiring post-processing, so we made some real savings
on overall weight and cost,” Maertens says. The metal currently required as
a heat conductor can be replaced by polymer materials, which have a low
thermal conductivity compared to metals.

The project partners chose to use fiber-reinforced, thermosetting plastics
of their project partner SBHPP that offer high temperature resistance and
high resistance to aggressive coolants. Unlike thermoplastics, thermosets do
not swell when they come into contact with chemicals.
Suitable for large series production

The polymer housing is produced in an automated injection molding process
using the phenolic molding compound Vyncolit X7700. The cycle time for
manufacturing the prototypes is currently four minutes. The stators
themselves are overmolded with a thermally conductive epoxy resin molding
compound (Sumikon EME-A730E) in a transfer molding process. The team of
researchers chose a design and manufacturing process for the electric motor
that will allow it to be mass-produced.

The team has already completed the stator assembly and experimentally
validated the cooling concept. "We used an electrical current to introduce
the amount of heat in the copper windings that would be generated in real
operation according to the simulation. We found that we can already
dissipate over 80 percent of the expected heat losses. And we already have
some promising approaches for dealing with the remaining heat losses of just
under 20 percent, for example by optimizing the flow of coolant. We are now
at the stage of assembling the rotors and will soon be able to operate the
motor on the test bench at the Institute of Electrical Engineering and
validate it in real operation,” says Maertens, summing up the project’s
current status.
[© insideevs.com]


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