Lecture 14Electro Mechanical System1 Current flowing in the armature coils creates a powerful magnetomotive force that distorts and weakens the flux coming from the poles Considering the armature alone, the armature current produces a magnetic field that acts at a right angle to the field produced by the poles The flux intensity depends on the current Armature Reaction
Lecture 14Electro Mechanical System2 Contrary to the field flux, the armature flux is not constant, but varies with the load The flux in the neutral zone is no longer zero, and a flux is induced in the coils shorted by the brushes Armature Reaction The armature mmf distorts the flux produced by the poles The neutral zones have shifted in the direction of rotation Flux is concentrated at the far end of the poles (pole tip 2 & 3 in fig.) Increase in flux causes saturation to set in the far ends The total flux produced by the poles is less than when the generator runs at no load
Lecture 14Electro Mechanical System3 The shift in the neutral zone causes an increase in arcing We can move the brushes in the direction of rotation to reduce the arcing For time varying loads, the fluctuating current raises and lowers the armature magnetic- motive force and the neutral zone shifts back and forth It is not practical to continuously move the brushes to minimize the arcing For small machines the brushes are set in an intermediate position to ensure reasonably good commutation at all loads Improving Commutation
Lecture 14Electro Mechanical System4 In larger machines, a set of commutating poles are placed to counter the effect of armature reaction Narrow poles carry windings that are designed to develop a MMF equal and opposite to the MMF of the armature As load current varies, the two MMF’s rise and fall together The vertical component of the field is nullified and the neutral zone is restored Commutating Poles
Lecture 14Electro Mechanical System5 Separately Excited Generators Instead of using permanent magnets to create the magnetic field, pairs of electromagnets called field poles are employed Separately excited field poles are supplied by an independent current source Batteries or another generator The current source is referred to as the exciter
Lecture 14Electro Mechanical System6 Machine Saturation Curve In a separately excited, no- load, generator a change in excitation current causes a corresponding change in the induced voltage The saturation curve relates the flux produced to the current For small currents, the flux is linearly proportionate At higher currents, the flux output decreases due to iron saturation The segment from a to b is the saturation knee The induced voltage curve is identical to the flux curve
Lecture 14Electro Mechanical System7 Shunt Generator A shunt-excited generator is a machine with the fieldwinding in parallel with the armature terminals This eliminates the need for an external source of excitation The generator becomes self-exciting Starting the self-excitation Remanent flux in the pole induce a small armature voltage when there is rotation The voltage produces a small exciting current, I X This results in a small mmf, acting in the same direction as the remanent flux and causing the flux per pole to increase The increased flux raises E O, which feeds back to increase I X E O increases until R f and the saturation limits the feedback
Lecture 14Electro Mechanical System8 Controlling the voltage of shunt generator The induced voltage of the shunt generator is easily controlled by varying the excitation current by means of a rheostat connected in series with the shunt field coil The no-load value of E O is determined from the saturation curve and R f It is the intersection of the R f line and the voltage curve