Gives introductory remarks about chapter 1 of this group of 31 papers, from ISEF 1999 Proceedings, in the methodologies for field analysis, in the electromagnetic community…
Abstract
Gives introductory remarks about chapter 1 of this group of 31 papers, from ISEF 1999 Proceedings, in the methodologies for field analysis, in the electromagnetic community. Observes that computer package implementation theory contributes to clarification. Discusses the areas covered by some of the papers ‐ such as artificial intelligence using fuzzy logic. Includes applications such as permanent magnets and looks at eddy current problems. States the finite element method is currently the most popular method used for field computation. Closes by pointing out the amalgam of topics.
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Introduces the fourth and final chapter of the ISEF 1999 Proceedings by stating electric and magnetic fields are influenced, in a reciprocal way, by thermal and mechanical fields…
Abstract
Introduces the fourth and final chapter of the ISEF 1999 Proceedings by stating electric and magnetic fields are influenced, in a reciprocal way, by thermal and mechanical fields. Looks at the coupling of fields in a device or a system as a prescribed effect. Points out that there are 12 contributions included ‐ covering magnetic levitation or induction heating, superconducting devices and possible effects to the human body due to electric impressed fields.
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F. Rapetti, L. Santandrea, F. Bouillault and A. Razek
This paper deals with the numerical simulation of eddy current distributions in non‐stationary geometries with sliding interfaces. We study a system composed of two solid parts: a…
Abstract
This paper deals with the numerical simulation of eddy current distributions in non‐stationary geometries with sliding interfaces. We study a system composed of two solid parts: a fixed one (stator) and a moving one (rotor) which slides in contact with the former. We also consider a two‐dimensional mathematical model based on the transverse electric formulation of the eddy current problem whose approximation is performed via the mortar element method combined with the standard linear finite element discretization in space and an implicit first order Euler scheme in time. Numerical results underline the influence of the rotor movement on the current distribution and give an estimate of the power losses with respect to the rotor angular speed.
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S. Lepaul, F. Bouillault and A. De Lustrac
Recent advances in the fabrication technology of heterojunction semiconductor nanostructures have made possible the realization of systems with extremely small sizes. In these…
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Recent advances in the fabrication technology of heterojunction semiconductor nanostructures have made possible the realization of systems with extremely small sizes. In these devices, electrons are confined along some directions and are free to move in others. Semiconductor nanostructures have become so small that we have to take into account quantum effects. The two dimensional physical model consists of Poisson’s equation for the electrostatic potential φ, coupled with an eigenvalue problem for Schrödinger’s equation. Proposes
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G.B. Kumbhar, S.V. Kulkarni, R. Escarela‐Perez and E. Campero‐Littlewood
This paper aims to give a perspective about the variety of techniques which are available and are being further developed in the area of coupled field formulations, with selective…
Abstract
Purpose
This paper aims to give a perspective about the variety of techniques which are available and are being further developed in the area of coupled field formulations, with selective bibliography and practical examples, to help postgraduate students, researchers and designers working in design or analysis of electrical machinery.
Design/methodology/approach
This paper reviews the recent trends in coupled field formulations. The use of these formulations for designing and non‐destructive testing of electrical machinery is described, followed by their classifications, solutions and applications. Their advantages and shortcomings are discussed.
Findings
The paper gives an overview of research, development and applications of coupled field formulations for electrical machinery based on more than 160 references. All landmark papers are classified. Practical engineering case studies are given which illustrate wide applicability of coupled field formulations.
Research limitations/implications
Problems which continue to pose challenges to researchers are enumerated and the advantages of using the coupled‐field formulation are pointed out.
Practical implications
This paper gives a detailed description of the application of the coupled field formulation method to the analysis of problems that are present in different electrical machines. Examples of analysis of generators and transformers with this formulation are presented. The application examples give guidelines for its use in other analyses.
Originality/value
The coupled‐field formulation is used in the analysis of rotational machines and transformers where reference data are available and comparisons with other methods are performed and the advantages are justified. This paper serves as a guide for the ongoing research on coupled problems in electrical machinery.
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Z. REN, F. BOUILLAULT, A. RAZEK and J.C. VERITE
A semi‐analytical integration technique to evaluate the singular integration in 3‐D boundary element method for electromagnetic field computation is reported. The technique has…
Abstract
A semi‐analytical integration technique to evaluate the singular integration in 3‐D boundary element method for electromagnetic field computation is reported. The technique has been applied in a hybrid finite element—boundary integral model to evaluate the singular integral terms when constructing the “outside stiffness matrix” in the case of small air‐gaps, and it has also been used to calculate the exterior magnetic field in the proximity of the boundaries. The comparison with the conventional Gaussian quadrature has been carried out by modelling a 3‐D magnetostatic problem with a small air‐gap.
Herbert De Gersem, Mariana Ion, Markus Wilke, Thomas Weiland and Andrzej Demenko
To propose trigonometric interpolation in combination with both sliding‐surface and moving‐band techniques for modelling rotation in finite‐element electrical machine models. To…
Abstract
Purpose
To propose trigonometric interpolation in combination with both sliding‐surface and moving‐band techniques for modelling rotation in finite‐element electrical machine models. To show that trigonometric interpolation is at least as accurate and efficient as standard stator‐rotor coupling schemes.
Design/methodology/approach
Trigonometric interpolation is explained concisely and put in a historical perspective. Characteristic drawbacks of trigonometric interpolation are alleviated one by one. A comparison with the more common locked‐step linear‐interpolation and mortar‐element approaches is carried out.
Findings
Trigonometric interpolation offers a higher accuracy and therefore can outperform standard stator‐rotor coupling techniques when equipped with an appropriate iterative solver incorporating Fast Fourier Transforms to reduce the higher computational cost.
Originality/value
The synthetic interpretation of trigonometric interpolation as a spectral‐element approach in the machine's air gap, the efficient iterative solver combining conjugate gradients with Fast Fourier Transforms. The unified application to both sliding‐surface and moving‐band techniques.
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J. Korecki, Y. Le Menach, J‐P. Ducreux and F. Piriou
To compare the numerical solutions in primal and dual meshes of magnetostatic problems solved with the finite integration technique.
Abstract
Purpose
To compare the numerical solutions in primal and dual meshes of magnetostatic problems solved with the finite integration technique.
Design/methodology/approach
The development of the whole set of magnetostatic discrete formulations is proposed. Four formulations are computed: two in terms of fields and two in terms of potentials. Moreover, each computation is carried out on the primal and dual mesh. Two applications are presented and the results are analysed and discussed.
Findings
The whole set of magnetostatic formulations gives only two solutions. The solutions do not depend of the formulation, but they depend of the choice of the field discretisation in primal or dual mesh.
Originality/value
The computation is carried out on the dual mesh.
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Mariana Ion, Herbert De Gersem, Markus Wilke and Thomas Weiland
To propose trigonometric interpolation in combination with the sliding‐surface technique for modeling rotation in electrical machine models discretised by the finite integration…
Abstract
Purpose
To propose trigonometric interpolation in combination with the sliding‐surface technique for modeling rotation in electrical machine models discretised by the finite integration technique (FIT).
Design/methodology/approach
Locked‐step, linear and trigonometric interpolation techniques are developed for coupling the stator and rotor model parts of an electrical machine model.
Findings
Linear and trigonometric interpolation should be preferred over the locked‐step approach. Three‐machine models with sliding‐surface coupling discretised by the FIT result in efficient and reliable models.
Originality/value
The introduction of sliding‐surface techniques in the FIT, the trigonometric interpolation used in combination, the application of the FIT for simulating electrical machines.
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Koji FUJIWARA and Takayoshi NAKATA
Benchmark problem 7 of the TEAM workshop consists of an asymmetrical conductor with a hole. 17 computer codes are applied, and 25 solutions are compared with each other and with…
Abstract
Benchmark problem 7 of the TEAM workshop consists of an asymmetrical conductor with a hole. 17 computer codes are applied, and 25 solutions are compared with each other and with experimental results for eddy current densities and flux densities. Most of the codes were found to give satisfactory solutions.