On design methods for mechatronics : servo motor and gearhead

The number of electric powered sub-systems in road-vehicles is increasing fast. This development is primarily driven by the new and improved functionality that can be implemented with electro-mechanical sub-systems, but it is also necessary for the transition to electric and hybrid-electric drive tr...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Roos, Fredrik
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: KTH, Mekatronik 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-167
id ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-kth-167
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-kth-1672013-01-08T13:10:40ZOn design methods for mechatronics : servo motor and gearheadengRoos, FredrikKTH, MekatronikStockholm : KTH2005Applied mechanicsmechatronics design methodologyservo systemselectric motorsgearsauxiliary systemsTeknisk mekanikEngineering mechanicsTeknisk mekanikThe number of electric powered sub-systems in road-vehicles is increasing fast. This development is primarily driven by the new and improved functionality that can be implemented with electro-mechanical sub-systems, but it is also necessary for the transition to electric and hybrid-electric drive trains. An electromechanical sub-system can be implemented as a physically integrated mechatronic module: controller, power electronics, electric motor, transmission and sensors, all integrated into one component. A mechatronic module, spans, as all mechatronic systems, over several closely coupled engineering disciplines: mechanics, electronics, electro-mechanics, control theory and computer science. In order to design and optimize a mechatronic system it is therefore desirable to design the system within all domains concurrently. Optimizing each domain or component separately will not result in the optimal system design. Furthermore, the very large production volumes of automotive sub-systems increase the freedom in the mechatronics design process. Instead of being limited to the selection from off-the shelf components, application specific components may be designed. The research presented in this thesis aims at development of an integrated design and optimization methodology for mechatronic modules. The target of the methodology is the conceptual design phase, where the number of design parameters is relatively small. So far, the focus has been on design methods for the electric motor and gearhead, two of the most important components in an actuation module. The thesis presents two methods for design and optimization of motor and gearhead in mechatronic applications. One discrete method, intended for the selection of off-the-shelf components, and one method mainly intended for high volume applications where new application specific components may be designed. Both methods can handle any type of load combination, which is important in mechatronic systems, where the load seldom can be classified as pure inertial or constant speed. Furthermore, design models relating spur gear weight, size and inertia to output torque and gear ratio are presented. It is shown that a gearhead has significantly lower inertia and weight than a motor. The results indicate that it almost always is favorable from a weight and size perspective to use a gearhead. A direct drive configuration may only be lighter for very high speed applications. The main contribution of this thesis is however the motor/gear ratio sizing methods that can be applied to any electromechanical actuation system that requires rotational motion. QC 20101220Licentiate thesis, comprehensive summaryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/masterThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-167Trita-MMK, 1400-1179 ; 2005:02application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Applied mechanics
mechatronics design methodology
servo systems
electric motors
gears
auxiliary systems
Teknisk mekanik
Engineering mechanics
Teknisk mekanik
spellingShingle Applied mechanics
mechatronics design methodology
servo systems
electric motors
gears
auxiliary systems
Teknisk mekanik
Engineering mechanics
Teknisk mekanik
Roos, Fredrik
On design methods for mechatronics : servo motor and gearhead
description The number of electric powered sub-systems in road-vehicles is increasing fast. This development is primarily driven by the new and improved functionality that can be implemented with electro-mechanical sub-systems, but it is also necessary for the transition to electric and hybrid-electric drive trains. An electromechanical sub-system can be implemented as a physically integrated mechatronic module: controller, power electronics, electric motor, transmission and sensors, all integrated into one component. A mechatronic module, spans, as all mechatronic systems, over several closely coupled engineering disciplines: mechanics, electronics, electro-mechanics, control theory and computer science. In order to design and optimize a mechatronic system it is therefore desirable to design the system within all domains concurrently. Optimizing each domain or component separately will not result in the optimal system design. Furthermore, the very large production volumes of automotive sub-systems increase the freedom in the mechatronics design process. Instead of being limited to the selection from off-the shelf components, application specific components may be designed. The research presented in this thesis aims at development of an integrated design and optimization methodology for mechatronic modules. The target of the methodology is the conceptual design phase, where the number of design parameters is relatively small. So far, the focus has been on design methods for the electric motor and gearhead, two of the most important components in an actuation module. The thesis presents two methods for design and optimization of motor and gearhead in mechatronic applications. One discrete method, intended for the selection of off-the-shelf components, and one method mainly intended for high volume applications where new application specific components may be designed. Both methods can handle any type of load combination, which is important in mechatronic systems, where the load seldom can be classified as pure inertial or constant speed. Furthermore, design models relating spur gear weight, size and inertia to output torque and gear ratio are presented. It is shown that a gearhead has significantly lower inertia and weight than a motor. The results indicate that it almost always is favorable from a weight and size perspective to use a gearhead. A direct drive configuration may only be lighter for very high speed applications. The main contribution of this thesis is however the motor/gear ratio sizing methods that can be applied to any electromechanical actuation system that requires rotational motion. === QC 20101220
author Roos, Fredrik
author_facet Roos, Fredrik
author_sort Roos, Fredrik
title On design methods for mechatronics : servo motor and gearhead
title_short On design methods for mechatronics : servo motor and gearhead
title_full On design methods for mechatronics : servo motor and gearhead
title_fullStr On design methods for mechatronics : servo motor and gearhead
title_full_unstemmed On design methods for mechatronics : servo motor and gearhead
title_sort on design methods for mechatronics : servo motor and gearhead
publisher KTH, Mekatronik
publishDate 2005
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-167
work_keys_str_mv AT roosfredrik ondesignmethodsformechatronicsservomotorandgearhead
_version_ 1716510966306308096