The electrification of the economy entails the development and optimization of efficient electrical machines. Permanent magnet machines use permanent magnets, rather than windings, for field excitation. They are more efficient than other electrical machine technologies for high-efficiency applications. Multiphase machines, as compared to 3-phase machines, have advantages including lower torque pulsation, higher power density, and better fault tolerance.
This book offers concise and systematic coverage of multiphase permanent magnet machines and control techniques. It gives an overview of multiphase machines and control techniques in the context of various electrical machine technologies and presents the advantages of multiphase electrical machines. Applications are covered, including wind turbine generators, electric vehicles, electric ship and aircraft and train propulsion. Machine topologies, modelling, design, control, pulse-width modulation, fault-tolerance, and reduction of current harmonics and torque ripples are considered.
Multiphase Permanent Magnet Synchronous Machines: Principles, design, and control is written for industrial engineers and researchers, including PhD and post-doctoral research students working on electrical machines and drives, as well as for researchers working on electric vehicles, wind power generators, aerospace, electric ships and trains. Following a general introduction, chapters cover winding configurations, multiphase and dual-three-phase permanent magnet synchronous machines (PMSMs), modelling, design, modulation strategies for multiphase PMSMs, field-oriented control, direct torque control, model reference control, sensorless control, and also fault tolerant control for multiphase PMSMs. The logical progression from fundamental concepts to state-of-the-art research outcomes helps readers understand and use multiphase electrical machines.