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Hollow Direct Air-Cooled Rotor Windings : Conjugate Heat Transfer Analysis

Reinap, Avo LU orcid ; Estenlund, Samuel LU orcid and Högmark, Conny LU (2025) In Machines 13(2).
Abstract

This article focuses on the analysis of a direct air-cooled rotor winding of a wound field synchronous machine, the innovation of which lies in the increase in the internal cooling surface, the cooling of the winding compared to the conventional inter-pole cooling, and the development of a CHT evaluation model accordingly. Conjugate heat transfer (CHT) analysis is used to explore the cooling efficacy of a parallel-cooled hollow-conductor winding of a salient-pole rotor and to identify a cooling performance map. The use of high current densities of 15–20 Arms/mm2 in directly cooled windings requires high cooling intensity, which in the case of air cooling results not only in flow velocities above 15 m/s to ensure permissible... (More)

This article focuses on the analysis of a direct air-cooled rotor winding of a wound field synchronous machine, the innovation of which lies in the increase in the internal cooling surface, the cooling of the winding compared to the conventional inter-pole cooling, and the development of a CHT evaluation model accordingly. Conjugate heat transfer (CHT) analysis is used to explore the cooling efficacy of a parallel-cooled hollow-conductor winding of a salient-pole rotor and to identify a cooling performance map. The use of high current densities of 15–20 Arms/mm2 in directly cooled windings requires high cooling intensity, which in the case of air cooling results not only in flow velocities above 15 m/s to ensure permissible operating temperatures, but also the need for coolant distribution and heat transfer studies. The experiments and calculations are based on a non-rotating machine and a wind tunnel using the same rotor coil(s). CHT-based thermal calculations provide not only reliable results compared to experimental work and lumped parameter thermal circuits with adjusted aggregate parameters, but also insight related to pressure and cooling flow distribution, thermal loads, and cooling integration issues that are necessary for the development of high power density and reliable electrical machines. The results of the air-cooling integration show that the desired high current density is achievable at the expense of high cooling intensity, where the air velocity ranges from 15 to 30 m/s and 30 to 55 m/s, distinguishing the air velocity of the hollow conductor and bypass channel, compared to the same coil in an electric machine and a wind tunnel at the similar thermal load and limit. Since the hot spot location depends on cooling integration and cooling intensity, modeling and estimating the cooling flow is essential in the development of wound-field synchronous machines.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
air cooling, computational fluid dynamics, experimental testing, rotor windings, wound-field synchronous machine
in
Machines
volume
13
issue
2
article number
89
publisher
MDPI AG
external identifiers
  • scopus:85219017584
DOI
10.3390/machines13020089
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
Publisher Copyright: © 2025 by the authors.
id
7f453dad-d407-4e60-876f-2d2936d5e13c
date added to LUP
2025-04-07 11:15:02
date last changed
2025-06-30 18:08:55
@article{7f453dad-d407-4e60-876f-2d2936d5e13c,
  abstract     = {{<p>This article focuses on the analysis of a direct air-cooled rotor winding of a wound field synchronous machine, the innovation of which lies in the increase in the internal cooling surface, the cooling of the winding compared to the conventional inter-pole cooling, and the development of a CHT evaluation model accordingly. Conjugate heat transfer (CHT) analysis is used to explore the cooling efficacy of a parallel-cooled hollow-conductor winding of a salient-pole rotor and to identify a cooling performance map. The use of high current densities of 15–20 Arms/mm<sup>2</sup> in directly cooled windings requires high cooling intensity, which in the case of air cooling results not only in flow velocities above 15 m/s to ensure permissible operating temperatures, but also the need for coolant distribution and heat transfer studies. The experiments and calculations are based on a non-rotating machine and a wind tunnel using the same rotor coil(s). CHT-based thermal calculations provide not only reliable results compared to experimental work and lumped parameter thermal circuits with adjusted aggregate parameters, but also insight related to pressure and cooling flow distribution, thermal loads, and cooling integration issues that are necessary for the development of high power density and reliable electrical machines. The results of the air-cooling integration show that the desired high current density is achievable at the expense of high cooling intensity, where the air velocity ranges from 15 to 30 m/s and 30 to 55 m/s, distinguishing the air velocity of the hollow conductor and bypass channel, compared to the same coil in an electric machine and a wind tunnel at the similar thermal load and limit. Since the hot spot location depends on cooling integration and cooling intensity, modeling and estimating the cooling flow is essential in the development of wound-field synchronous machines.</p>}},
  author       = {{Reinap, Avo and Estenlund, Samuel and Högmark, Conny}},
  keywords     = {{air cooling; computational fluid dynamics; experimental testing; rotor windings; wound-field synchronous machine}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{2}},
  publisher    = {{MDPI AG}},
  series       = {{Machines}},
  title        = {{Hollow Direct Air-Cooled Rotor Windings : Conjugate Heat Transfer Analysis}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/machines13020089}},
  doi          = {{10.3390/machines13020089}},
  volume       = {{13}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}