Injection of EMF in Rotor Circuit PDF
Injection of EMF in Rotor Circuit PDF
power is supplied through both stator and rotor. It is assumed that the machine is running at
constant torque load. The speed control of three-phase slip-ring induction motor can be done
using injected EMF in the rotor circuit. In the Schrage motor slip frequency EMF is produced
and injected into secondary winding on the stator by means of brushes.
Fig 1Equivalent circuit of induction motor with injected EMF in rotor circuit
Under steady state condition,
V1 R1I1 jX1I1 E1
V2/ R 2/ I 2/ jsX2/ I 2/ sE1
(1)
/
2
Here V is the injected EMF referred to stator. The rotor quantities are referred to
stator side. The rotor voltage referred to stator is
NK
V2/ 1 w1 V2
N2K w 2
Ignoring the voltage drop in the stator we can write
V1 E1 Constant
The expression for torque is given as
3sE1I2/ cos 12 3E1I2/ cos 12
T
constant
(2)
s r
s
Here 12 is angle between E1
and
cos 12
R 2/
R sX
/ 2
2
/ 2
2
1.0
N1K w1
sE1 constant
(3)
N2K w 2
The injected EMF is having slip frequency, however it may have different phase
difference with the rotor voltage. The machine can be made to run in sub- and supersynchronous speed apart from normal induction motor operation.
Certain industrial application requires a lower speed of operation. The use of rotor
resistance control decreases the overall efficiency. With the following cascade connections,
the recuperation of slip power is possible. The overall efficiency is higher, because slip power
R 2/ I 2/ V2/ sE1 V2
is not being wasted as resistive loss. There are two solid-state methods of speed control with
injected EMF:
o Kramers cascade
o Scherbius cascade
(a) Kramers cascade: In Kramers cascade, the slip-ring induction motor is started using
rotor resistance starter. Fig 2 shows a schematic diagram of Kramers cascade. When
machine is running, the rotor circuit EMF is rectified and connected to a separately excited
DC motor. The DC motor is connected to the main shaft of induction motor by means of
gears. By varying the field current of DC motor, the speed of shaft can be varied in subsynchronous region.
V2
VR k .VR
3 6
The referred value of V2 on stator side is,
NK
V2/ 1 w1 V2
N2K w 2
In no-load operation V2/ s0 E1 s0 V1 =constant
The voltage VR supplies power to DC motor, thus
VR k ee Ndc k ee Nr .i
N
Here transmission coefficient of the reduction gear is i dc
Nr
N1K w1
E1 kk e Nsi
e e en
N2K w 2
(4)
When e =0, or field is not excited, then the no-load slip is s0 0 . However when e
=en, then the no load slip is s0 0.5 . In the Kramers cascade, the no-load speed of
induction motor can be reduced to 50 % of the synchronous speed. The torque slip
characteristics have been shown in Fig 3. The Kramers cascade is used in drives requiring
large torque at low speeds such as cement mills and rolling mills. This has also gained
importance in the areas of variable speed wind power generations.
V2
VR k .VR
3 6
The per phase injected EMF is
V/ 1 N K
E1 2 1 w1 V2
(5)
s0 s0 N 2 K w 2
The inverter input and output voltages satisfy the relationship,
k.VI VT cos
Here VI and VT are the inverter input and output per phase voltage
The transformer voltage is
VI k T VT ,
(6)
This shows that no-load slip is proportional to cos . When firing angle =90, the
no-load slip s0=0.0. This corresponds to the natural torque slip characteristics. The maximum
recommended slip is 0.5. This slows the use of lower capacity power rectifier, inverter and
transformer. Fig 5 shows the torque slip characteristics of Scherbius control. Here slip power
less rotor loss is rectified, then converted back into the power of supply frequency and
returned to the three-phase lines through the transformer.
Scherbius control does not require DC motors. It offers higher efficiency and lower
system inertia. This has also gained importance in the areas of variable speed wind power
generations.