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Electric traction motor spray cooling : empirical model development and experimental validation
Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2023-06-01
Sprache
English
Institut
Volume
9
Issue
2
Start Page
2185
End Page
2194
Citation
IEEE Transactions on Transportation Electrification 9 (2): 2185-2194 (2023-06-01)
Publisher DOI
Scopus ID
Publisher
IEEE
Peer Reviewed
true
The growing interest in electric vehicles leads to new developments of efficient electric traction motors with high power density. Since a large part of the losses in an electric motor can occur in the windings, it is important to cool the windings to reduce the temperature and protect the winding insulation from thermal aging. Oil spray cooling systems are becoming more and more relevant for cooling the windings. In this work, an approach for heat transfer modeling of electric traction motors (power classes #2-4 with 60 to 180kW) with hairpin end windings is developed and tested. The model is developed with a testing rig for different flat jet spray nozzle arrangements for a hairpin electric traction motor. The model approach showed a good agreement with the measured temperatures of the end windings in the testing rig. A transient thermal simulation of the testing rig confirms the good agreement. In a second step the model approach is transferred to another electric traction motor with a different spray cooling system. The simulation results of the second electric traction motor also show good agreement with thermal quasi-static operating points and transient measurements at low and medium speed. At high speeds the deviations increased. Possible causes for this behavior are discussed.
Subjects
Cooling
Heat transfer
Testing
Windings
Stator windings
Traction motors
Temperature measurement
Traction motor drives
Electric machines
Road vehicle propulsion
Road vehicle electric propulsion
Motor drives
Heat treatment
DDC Class
600: Technik
620: Ingenieurwissenschaften