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Lecture 38Electro Mechanical System1 In star-stop fashion, there is upper limit to a stepping rate For too fast pulse rate, motor is unable to follow & will loose steps For synchronism, the rotor must settle before advancing Interval between two steps is at lease 6 ms, so the stepping rate is limited to a 1000/6 = 167 steps per second (sps) Start-Stop stepping rate We also know that higher the load and greater the inertia, the lower will be the allowable number of steps per second The start-stop stepping mode is also called start without error mode
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Lecture 38Electro Mechanical System2 The stepper motor can be made to run at a uniform speed, without starting and stopping at any every step. When the motor runs this way it is said to be slewing. Since the motor runs at a uniform speed the inertia effect is absent. For a given stepping rate the motor can carry a greater load torque when it is slewing. Slew speed
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Lecture 38Electro Mechanical System3 When a stepper motor is carrying a load, it cannot suddenly go from zero to a stepping rate of 5000 sps. In the same way, a motor that is slewing at 5000 sps cannot brought to a dead stop in one step. The motor must be accelerated gradually and it must be decelerated gradually. The instantaneous position of the motor must correspond to the number of pulses. Process whereby motor accelerates/decelerate is called ramping The ramp is generated by the power supply that drives the stepper motor. Types of Stepper Motor There are three main types of stepper motors Variable reluctance stepper motor Permanent magnet stepper motor Hybrid stepper motor Ramping
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Lecture 38Electro Mechanical System4 The stepper motor we studied is called variable reluctance stepper motor Structure can be modified to obtain small angular steps of 1.8 o instead of 60 o Circular rotor can be used milling out slots around its periphery Variable reluctance stepper motor The teeth created thereby constitutes salient poles of the rotor Stator can have four, five or even eight poles steps of 18 o, 15 o, 7.5 o, 5 o, and 1.8 o are quite common
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Lecture 38Electro Mechanical System5 Similar to variable reluctance stepper motor except that motor has permanent N and S poles Due to permanent magnets the rotor remains lined up with the last pair of stator poles excited by the driver The rotor develops detent torque which keeps it in place without any current Permanent magnet stepper motor Coils A1, A2 are connected in series, as are B1,B2 Coils B are excited the rotor will move 30 o If coils B produce N & S poles rotor will move ccw
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Lecture 38Electro Mechanical System6 It has two identical soft iron armature mounted on same shaft Diagram shows a 5-pole armature driven by a 4-pole stator Permanent magnet PM is sandwiched between armatures It produces a unidirectional magnetic field. All poles on armature 1 are N and those on armature 2 are S Stator coils A1, A2 are in series, and so are B1, B2 If we excite coil B rotor will rotate 18 o, lining up with pole B Hybrid stepper motor
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Lecture 38Electro Mechanical System7 It should be noted that no of poles on stator of a stepper motor are never equal to the number of poles of rotor This feature is totally different from any other motor It is this difference that enables the motor to move in steps as they do Stepper motor
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