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Thanks Jaime!
If it is a permanent magnet machine, then you can export it for Flux 2D, and then you can make a computation versur rotor position for a given supply (Ia, -Ib/2, -Ic/2) and then you can plot a static torque, so you can have the maximum torque for a given current supply.
For permanent magnet machine, there is no 1 phase equivalent circuit in Flux, you can have the maps of Ld & Lq vs Iq & Iq as well as other quantities.
Best regards
Very helpful idea..Thanks very much Farid.
Another quick question if you don´t mind. Why is it we need to inject (Ia=I, Ib=-I/2, Ic=-I/2) so to get static torque? I guess with those currents, the rotor aligns to phase A and doesn´t move.. but, will you get the same using (Ia=I, Ib=-I, Ic=-I)?
Thanks very much for your help. Really appreciate it.
Jaime
Hello Jaime;
I used Ia=I, Ib=-0.5*I, Ic= -0.5*I, this assuming that the current are sinus, so for time = 0, you have this set of currents.
But may be if you have square wave current, it is not the case, but the method still the same, you have to use in magneto static a set of current for time = 0 and turn the rotor to get the static torque.
Best regards
Hello Jaime;
I used Ia=I, Ib=-0.5*I, Ic= -0.5*I, this assuming that the current are sinus, so for time = 0, you have this set of currents.
But may be if you have square wave current, it is not the case, but the method still the same, you have to use in magneto static a set of current for time = 0 and turn the rotor to get the static torque.
Best regards
Thanks very much Farid for your help.
Appreciate it.
Jaime
Hello Jaime,
Are you computing an induction motor ?
If yes, then you can make a sine wave test, where you can find the breakdown torque, or you can also make a test model to extract the 1 phase equivalent circuit, we are computing also the whole torque vs slip curve.
Regards