Induction Motor
Induction motor
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"Tesla
motor" redirects here. For the electric car company, see Tesla,
Inc.
Three-phase
totally-enclosed fan-cooled (TEFC) induction
motor with end cover on the left, and without end cover to show cooling fan on
the right. In TEFC motors, interior heat losses are dissipated indirectly
through enclosure fins, mostly by forced air convection.
Cutaway
view through stator of TEFC induction
motor, showing rotor with internal air circulation vanes. Many such motors have
a symmetric armature, and the frame may be reversed to place the electrical
connection box (not shown) on the opposite side.
An induction
motor or asynchronous motor is an AC
electric motor in which the electric
current in the rotor needed
to produce torque is obtained by electromagnetic
induction from the magnetic
field of the stator winding.[1] An
induction motor can therefore be made without electrical connections to the
rotor.[a] An
induction motor's rotor can be either wound
type or squirrel-cage type.
Three-phase squirrel-cage induction
motors are widely used as industrial drives because they are self-starting,
reliable and economical. Single-phase induction motors are used extensively for
smaller loads, such as household appliances like fans. Although traditionally
used in fixed-speed service, induction motors are increasingly being used with variable-frequency
drives (VFD) in variable-speed service. VFDs offer
especially important energy
savings opportunities for existing and prospective
induction motors in variable-torque centrifugal fan,
pump and compressor load applications. Squirrel-cage induction motors are very
widely used in both fixed-speed and variable-frequency drive applications.
Contents
·
1History
o
2.2Slip
§
2.3.3.3Variable-frequency drive
·
7Steinmetz equivalent circuit
·
10Notes
History[edit]
A
model of Nikola Tesla's first induction motor at the Tesla Museum in
Belgrade, Serbia
Squirrel-cage
rotor construction, showing only the center three laminations
In 1824, the
French physicist François
Arago formulated the existence of rotating
magnetic fields, termed Arago's rotations.
By manually turning switches on and off, Walter Baily demonstrated
this in 1879, effectively the first primitive induction motor.[2][3][4][5][6][7][8]
The first commutator-free
single-phase AC induction motor was invented by Hungarian engineer Ottó Bláthy; he used the single-phase motor to
propel his invention, the electricity meter.[9][10]
The first AC
commutator-free three-phase induction motors were independently invented
by Galileo Ferraris and Nikola
Tesla, a working motor model having been demonstrated by
the former in 1885 and by the latter in 1887. Tesla applied for US patents in
October and November 1887 and was granted some of these patents in May 1888. In
April 1888, the Royal Academy of Science of Turin published
Ferraris's research on his AC polyphase motor detailing the foundations of
motor operation.[5][11] In
May 1888 Tesla presented the technical paper A New System for
Alternating Current Motors and Transformers to the American
Institute of Electrical Engineers (AIEE)[12][13][14][15] [16] describing
three four-stator-pole motor types: one with a four-pole rotor forming a
non-self-starting reluctance
motor, another with a wound rotor forming a
self-starting induction motor, and the third a true synchronous
motor with separately excited DC supply to rotor
winding.
George Westinghouse,
who was developing an alternating current power system
at that time, licensed Tesla's patents in 1888 and purchased a US patent option
on Ferraris' induction motor concept.[17] Tesla
was also employed for one year as a consultant. Westinghouse employee C. F. Scott was
assigned to assist Tesla and later took over development of the induction motor
at Westinghouse.[12][18][19][20] Steadfast
in his promotion of three-phase development, Mikhail
Dolivo-Dobrovolsky invented the cage-rotor
induction motor in 1889 and the three-limb transformer in 1890.[21][22] Furthermore,
he claimed that Tesla's motor was not practical because of two-phase
pulsations, which prompted him to persist in his three-phase work.[23] Although
Westinghouse achieved its first practical induction motor in 1892 and developed
a line of polyphase 60 hertz induction
motors in 1893, these early Westinghouse motors were two-phase motors with
wound rotors until B.
G. Lamme developed a rotating bar winding rotor.[12]
The General Electric
Company (GE) began developing three-phase induction
motors in 1891.[12] By
1896, General Electric and Westinghouse signed a cross-licensing agreement for
the bar-winding-rotor design, later called the squirrel-cage rotor.[12] Arthur E. Kennelly was
the first to bring out the full significance of complex
numbers (using j to represent the
square root of minus one) to designate the 90º rotation operator
in analysis of AC problems.[24] GE's Charles Proteus
Steinmetz greatly developed application of AC complex
quantities including an analysis model now commonly known as the induction
motor Steinmetz equivalent circuit.[12][25][26][27]
Induction motor
improvements flowing from these inventions and innovations were such that a
100-horsepower induction
motor currently has the same mounting dimensions as a 7.5-horsepower motor in
1897.[12]
Principle of operation[edit]
A
three-phase power supply provides a rotating magnetic field in an induction
motor
Inherent
slip - unequal rotation frequency of stator field and the rotor
In both
induction and synchronous
motors, the AC power supplied to the motor's stator creates
a magnetic field that
rotates in synchronism with the AC oscillations. Whereas a synchronous motor's
rotor turns at the same rate as the stator field, an induction motor's rotor
rotates at a somewhat slower speed than the stator field. The induction motor
stator's magnetic field is therefore changing or rotating relative to the
rotor. This induces an opposing current in the induction motor's rotor, in
effect the motor's secondary winding, when the latter is short-circuited or
closed through an external impedance.[28] The
rotating magnetic flux induces
currents in the windings of the rotor,[29] in
a manner similar to currents induced in a transformer's
secondary winding(s).
The induced
currents in the rotor windings in turn create magnetic fields in the rotor that
react against the stator field. The direction of the magnetic field created
will be such as to oppose the change in current through the rotor windings, in
agreement with Lenz's Law.
The cause of induced current in the rotor windings is the rotating stator
magnetic field, so to oppose the change in rotor-winding currents the rotor
will start to rotate in the direction of the rotating stator magnetic field.
The rotor accelerates until the magnitude of induced rotor current and torque
balances the applied mechanical load on the rotation of the rotor. Since
rotation at synchronous speed would result in no induced rotor current, an
induction motor always operates slightly slower than synchronous speed. The
difference, or "slip," between actual and synchronous speed varies
from about 0.5% to 5.0% for standard Design B torque curve induction motors.[30] The
induction motor's essential character is that it is created solely by induction
instead of being separately excited as in synchronous or DC machines or being
self-magnetized as in permanent magnet
motors.[28]
For rotor
currents to be induced, the speed of the physical rotor must be lower than that
of the stator's rotating magnetic field ();
otherwise the magnetic field would not be moving relative to the rotor
conductors and no currents would be induced. As the speed of the rotor drops
below synchronous speed, the rotation rate of the magnetic field in the rotor
increases, inducing more current in the windings and creating more torque. The
ratio between the rotation rate of the magnetic field induced in the rotor and
the rotation rate of the stator's rotating field is called "slip".
Under load, the speed drops and the slip increases enough to create sufficient
torque to turn the load. For this reason, induction motors are sometimes
referred to as "asynchronous motors".[31]
An induction
motor can be used as an induction generator,
or it can be unrolled to form a linear induction
motor which can directly generate linear motion.
The generating mode for induction motors is complicated by the need to excite
the rotor, which begins with only residual magnetization. In some cases, that
residual magnetization is enough to self-excite the motor under load.
Therefore, it is necessary to either snap the motor and connect it momentarily
to a live grid or to add capacitors charged initially by residual magnetism and
providing the required reactive power during operation. Similar is the
operation of the induction motor in parallel with a synchronous motor serving
as a power factor compensator. A feature in the generator mode in parallel to
the grid is that the rotor speed is higher than in the driving mode. Then
active energy is being given to the grid.[2] Another
disadvantage of induction motor generator is that it consumes a significant
magnetizing current I0 =
(20-35)%.
Synchronous speed[edit]
An AC motor's
synchronous speed, ,
is the rotation rate of the stator's magnetic field,
,
where is
the frequency of the power supply, is
the number of magnetic poles, and is
the synchronous speed of the machine. For in hertz and synchronous
speed in RPM,
the formula becomes:
For example, for
a four-pole, three-phase motor, =
4 and =
1,500 RPM (for =
50 Hz) and 1,800 RPM (for =
60 Hz) synchronous speed.
The number of
magnetic poles, ,
is equal to the number of coil groups per phase. To determine the number of
coil groups per phase in a 3-phase motor, count the number of coils, divide by
the number of phases, which is 3. The coils may span several slots in the
stator core, making it tedious to count them. For a 3-phase motor, if you count
a total of 12 coil groups, it has 4 magnetic poles. For a 12-pole 3-phase
machine, there will be 36 coils. The number of magnetic poles in the rotor is
equal to the number of magnetic poles in the stator.
The two figures
at right and left above each illustrate a 2-pole 3-phase machine consisting of
three pole-pairs with each pole set 60° apart.
Slip[edit]
Typical torque curve as a function of slip,
represented as "g" here
Slip, ,
is defined as the difference between synchronous speed and operating speed, at
the same frequency, expressed in rpm, or in percentage or ratio of synchronous
speed. Thus
where is
stator electrical speed, is
rotor mechanical speed.[34][35] Slip,
which varies from zero at synchronous speed and 1 when the rotor is stalled,
determines the motor's torque. Since the short-circuited rotor windings have
small resistance, even a small slip induces a large current in the rotor and
produces significant torque.[36] At
full rated load, slip varies from more than 5% for small or special purpose
motors to less than 1% for large motors.[37] These
speed variations can cause load-sharing problems when differently sized motors
are mechanically connected.[37] Various
methods are available to reduce slip, VFDs often offering the best solution.[37]
Torque[edit]
See also: Fleming's
left-hand rule for motors
Standard torque[edit]
Speed-torque curves for four induction motor types:
A) Single-phase, B) Polyphase cage, C) Polyphase cage deep bar, D) Polyphase
double cage
Typical speed-torque curve for NEMA Design B Motor
Transient solution for an AC induction motor from a
complete stop to its operating point under a varying load.
The typical
speed-torque relationship of a standard NEMA Design B polyphase induction motor
is as shown in the curve at right. Suitable for most low performance loads such
as centrifugal pumps and fans, Design B motors are constrained by the following
typical torque ranges:[30][b]
·
Breakdown torque (peak
torque), 175–300% of rated torque
·
Locked-rotor
torque (torque at 100% slip), 75–275% of rated
torque
·
Pull-up torque,
65–190% of rated torque.
Over a motor's
normal load range, the torque's slope is approximately linear or proportional
to slip because the value of rotor resistance divided by slip, ,
dominates torque in a linear manner.[38] As
load increases above rated load, stator and rotor leakage reactance factors
gradually become more significant in relation to such
that torque gradually curves towards breakdown torque. As the load torque
increases beyond breakdown torque the motor stalls.
Starting[edit]
See also: Motor
controller
There are three
basic types of small induction motors: split-phase single-phase, shaded-pole
single-phase, and polyphase.
In two-pole
single-phase motors, the torque goes to zero at 100% slip (zero speed), so
these require alterations to the stator such as shaded-poles to
provide starting torque. A single phase induction motor requires separate
starting circuitry to provide a rotating field to the motor. The normal running
windings within such a single-phase motor can cause the rotor to turn in either
direction, so the starting circuit determines the operating direction.
Magnetic
flux in shaded pole motor.
In certain
smaller single-phase motors, starting is done by means of a copper wire turn
around part of a pole; such a pole is referred to as a shaded pole. The current
induced in this turn lags behind the supply current, creating a delayed
magnetic field around the shaded part of the pole face. This imparts sufficient
rotational field energy to start the motor. These motors are typically used in
applications such as desk fans and record players, as the required starting torque
is low, and the low efficiency is tolerable relative to the reduced cost of the
motor and starting method compared to other AC motor designs.
Larger single
phase motors are split-phase
motors and have a second stator winding fed with
out-of-phase current; such currents may be created by feeding the winding
through a capacitor or having it receive different values of inductance and
resistance from the main winding. In capacitor-start designs,
the second winding is disconnected once the motor is up to speed, usually
either by a centrifugal switch acting on weights on the motor shaft or a thermistor which
heats up and increases its resistance, reducing the current through the second
winding to an insignificant level. The capacitor-run designs
keep the second winding on when running, improving torque. A resistance
start design uses a starter inserted in series with the startup
winding, creating reactance.
Self-starting
polyphase induction motors produce torque even at standstill. Available
squirrel-cage induction motor starting methods include direct-on-line starting,
reduced-voltage reactor or auto-transformer starting, star-delta starting or,
increasingly, new solid-state soft assemblies and, of course, variable
frequency drives (VFDs).[39]
Polyphase motors
have rotor bars shaped to give different speed-torque characteristics. The
current distribution within the rotor bars varies depending on the frequency of
the induced current. At standstill, the rotor current is the same frequency as
the stator current, and tends to travel at the outermost parts of the cage
rotor bars (by skin effect).
The different bar shapes can give usefully different speed-torque characteristics
as well as some control over the inrush current at startup.
Although
polyphase motors are inherently self-starting, their starting and pull-up
torque design limits must be high enough to overcome actual load conditions.
In wound rotor
motors, rotor circuit connection through slip rings to external resistances
allows change of speed-torque characteristics for acceleration control and
speed control purposes.
Speed control[edit]
Resistance[edit]
Typical speed-torque curves for different motor
input frequencies as for example used with variable-frequency
drives
Before the
development of semiconductor power
electronics, it was difficult to vary the frequency, and cage
induction motors were mainly used in fixed speed applications. Applications
such as electric overhead cranes used DC drives or wound rotor motors (WRIM) with slip
rings for rotor circuit connection to variable
external resistance allowing considerable range of speed control. However,
resistor losses associated with low speed operation of WRIMs is a major cost
disadvantage, especially for constant loads.[40] Large
slip ring motor drives, termed slip energy recovery systems, some still in use,
recover energy from the rotor circuit, rectify it, and return it to the power
system using a VFD.
Cascade[edit]
The speed of a
pair of slip-ring motors can be controlled by a cascade connection, or
concatenation. The rotor of one motor is connected to the stator of the other.[41][42] If
the two motors are also mechanically connected, they will run at half speed.
This system was once widely used in three-phase AC railway locomotives, such
as FS Class E.333.
Variable-frequency drive[edit]
Variable frequency drive
Main
article: Variable-frequency
drive
In many
industrial variable-speed applications, DC and WRIM drives are being displaced
by VFD-fed cage induction motors. The most common efficient way to control
asynchronous motor speed of many loads is with VFDs. Barriers to adoption of
VFDs due to cost and reliability considerations have been reduced considerably
over the past three decades such that it is estimated that drive technology is
adopted in as many as 30–40% of all newly installed motors.[43]
Variable
frequency drives implement the scalar or vector control of an induction motor.
With scalar
control, only the magnitude and frequency of the supply voltage are
controlled without phase control (absent feedback by rotor position). Scalar
control is suitable for application where the load is constant.
Vector control allows
independent control of the speed and torque of the motor, making it possible to
maintain a constant rotation speed at varying load torque. But vector control
is more expensive because of the cost of the sensor (not always) and the
requirement for a more powerful controller.[44]
Construction[edit]
Typical winding pattern for a three-phase (U, W,
V), four-pole motor. Note the interleaving of the pole windings and the
resulting quadrupole field.
The stator of an
induction motor consists of poles carrying supply current to induce a magnetic
field that penetrates the rotor. To optimize the distribution of the magnetic
field, windings are distributed in slots around the stator, with the magnetic
field having the same number of north and south poles. Induction motors are
most commonly run on single-phase or three-phase power, but two-phase motors
exist; in theory, induction motors can have any number of phases. Many single-phase
motors having two windings can be viewed as two-phase motors, since a capacitor
is used to generate a second power phase 90° from the single-phase supply and
feeds it to the second motor winding. Single-phase motors require some
mechanism to produce a rotating field on startup. Cage induction motor rotor's
conductor bars are typically skewed to avoid magnetic locking.
Standardized
NEMA & IEC motor frame sizes throughout the industry result in
interchangeable dimensions for shaft, foot mounting, general aspects as well as
certain motor flange aspect. Since an open, drip proof (ODP) motor design
allows a free air exchange from outside to the inner stator windings, this
style of motor tends to be slightly more efficient because the windings are cooler.
At a given power rating, lower speed requires a larger frame.[45]
Rotation reversal[edit]
The method of
changing the direction of rotation of an induction motor depends on whether it
is a three-phase or single-phase machine. In the case of three-phase, reversal
is straightforwardly implemented by swapping connection of any two phase
conductors.
In a
single-phase split-phase motor, reversal is achieved by changing the connection
between the primary winding and the start circuit. Some single-phase
split-phase motors that are designed for specific applications may have the
connection between the primary winding and the start circuit connected
internally so that the rotation cannot be changed. Also, single-phase
shaded-pole motors have a fixed rotation, and the direction cannot be changed
except by disassembly of the motor and reversing the stator to face opposite
relative to the original rotor direction.
Power factor[edit]
The power
factor of induction motors varies with load,
typically from around 0.85 or 0.90 at full load to as low as about 0.20 at
no-load,[39] due
to stator and rotor leakage and magnetizing reactances.[46] Power
factor can be improved by connecting capacitors either on an individual motor
basis or, by preference, on a common bus covering several motors. For economic
and other considerations, power systems are rarely power factor corrected to
unity power factor.[47] Power
capacitor application with harmonic currents requires power system analysis to
avoid harmonic resonance between capacitors and transformer and circuit
reactances.[48] Common
bus power factor correction is recommended to minimize resonant risk and to
simplify power system analysis.[48]
Efficiency[edit]
Induction motor drill press
See also: Variable-frequency
drive § Energy savings
Full-load motor
efficiency is around 85–97%, related motor losses being broken down roughly as
follows:[49]
·
Friction
and windage, 5–15%
·
Iron or core losses,
15–25%
·
Stator losses,
25–40%
·
Rotor losses,
15–25%
·
Stray load
losses, 10–20%.
Various
regulatory authorities in many countries have introduced and implemented
legislation to encourage the manufacture and use of higher efficiency electric
motors. There is existing and forthcoming legislation regarding the future
mandatory use of premium-efficiency induction-type motors in defined
equipment. For more information, see: Premium efficiency.
Steinmetz equivalent circuit[edit]
Many useful
motor relationships between time, current, voltage, speed, power factor, and
torque can be obtained from analysis of the Steinmetz equivalent circuit (also
termed T-equivalent circuit or IEEE recommended equivalent circuit), a
mathematical model used to describe how an induction motor's electrical input
is transformed into useful mechanical energy output. The equivalent circuit is
a single-phase representation of a multiphase induction motor that is valid in
steady-state balanced-load conditions.
The Steinmetz
equivalent circuit is expressed simply in terms of the following components:
·
Stator resistance and leakage reactance (, ).
·
Rotor resistance,
leakage reactance, and slip (, or , ,
and ).
·
Magnetizing reactance ().
Paraphrasing
from Alger in Knowlton, an induction motor is simply an electrical transformer
the magnetic circuit of which is separated by an air gap between the stator
winding and the moving rotor winding.[28] The
equivalent circuit can accordingly be shown either with equivalent circuit
components of respective windings separated by an ideal transformer or with
rotor components referred to the stator side as shown in the following circuit
and associated equation and parameter definition tables.[39][47][50][51][52][53]
Steinmetz
equivalent circuit
hideCircuit
parameter definitions |
||
Units |
||
|
stator source
frequency |
Hz |
|
stator synchronous
frequency |
Hz |
|
rotor speed
in revolutions per minute |
rpm |
|
synchronous speed in revolutions per minute |
rpm |
|
stator or primary current |
A |
|
rotor or secondary current referred
to stator side |
A |
|
magnetizing current |
A |
|
imaginary number, or 90° rotation, operator |
|
|
Thévenin reactance
factor |
|
|
number of motor phases |
|
|
number of motor poles |
|
|
W or hp |
|
|
air gap power |
W |
|
rotor copper losses |
W |
|
input power |
W |
|
core loss |
W |
|
friction and windage loss |
W |
|
running light watts input |
W |
|
stray-load loss |
W |
|
stator or primary resistance
and leakage reactance |
Ω |
|
rotor or secondary resistance &
leakage reactance referred to the stator side |
Ω |
|
resistance & leakage reactance
at motor input |
Ω |
|
Thévenin equivalent resistance
& leakage reactance combining and |
Ω |
|
slip |
|
|
Nm or ft-lb |
|
|
breakdown torque |
Nm or ft-lb |
|
impressed stator phase voltage |
V |
|
Ω |
|
|
|
Ω |
|
stator or primary impedance |
Ω |
|
rotor or secondary impedance
referred to the primary |
Ω |
|
impedance at motor stator or primary
input |
Ω |
|
combined rotor or secondary and
magnetizing impedance |
Ω |
|
Thévenin equivalent circuit
impedance, |
Ω |
|
rotor speed |
|
|
synchronous speed |
rad/s |
|
|
mho |
|
|
Ω |
The following
rule-of-thumb approximations apply to the circuit:[53][54][55]
·
Maximum current
happens under locked rotor current (LRC) conditions and is somewhat less
than ,
with LRC typically ranging between 6 and 7 times rated current for standard
Design B motors.[30]
·
Breakdown
torque happens
when and such
that and
thus, with constant voltage input, a low-slip induction motor's percent-rated
maximum torque is about half its percent-rated LRC.
·
The relative
stator to rotor leakage reactance of standard Design B cage induction motors is[56]
.
·
Neglecting
stator resistance, an induction motor's torque curve reduces to the Kloss
equation[57]
,
where is
slip at .
hideBasic
electrical equations |
||
Motor input equivalent impedance Stator current Rotor current referred to the
stator side in terms of stator current |
hidePower
equations |
||
From Steinmetz equivalent circuit,
we have That is, air gap power is equal to
electromechanical power output plus rotor copper losses Expressing electromechanical power
output in terms of rotor speed (watts) (hp) Expressing in ft-lb: (hp) |
hideTorque
equations |
||
(newton-meters) In order to be able to
express directly in
terms of , IEEE recommends
that and be
converted to the Thévenin equivalent
circuit IEEE recommended
Thévenin equivalent circuit where Since and , and
letting and [55] (N·m)[55] For low values of slip: Since and (N·m) For high values of slip Since (N·m) For maximum or breakdown torque,
which is independent of rotor resistance (N·m)[55] Corresponding slip at maximum or
breakdown torque is In foot-pound units (ft-lb) (ft-lb) |
Linear induction motor[edit]
Main
article: Linear induction
motor
Linear induction
motors, which work on the same general principles as rotary induction motors
(frequently three-phase), are designed to produce straight line motion. Uses
include magnetic levitation,
linear propulsion, linear
actuators, and liquid
metal pumping.[58]
See also[edit]
·
AC motor
Notes[edit]
1. ^ That is,
electrical connections requiring mechanical commutation,
separate-excitation or self-excitation for all or part of the energy
transferred from stator to rotor as are found in universal, DC and synchronous motors.
2. ^ NEMA
MG-1 defines a) breakdown torque as the maximum torque developed by the motor
with rated voltage applied at rated frequency without an abrupt drop in speed,
b) locked-rotor torque as the minimum torque developed by the motor at rest
with rated voltage applied at rated frequency, and c) pull-up torque as the
minimum torque developed by the motor during the period of acceleration from
rest to the speed at which breakdown torque occurs.
References[edit]
1. ^ IEC
60050 (Publication date: 1990-10). Section 411-31: Rotation Machinery -
General, IEV
ref. 411-31-10: "Induction Machine - an asynchronous machine of
which only one winding is energized".
2. ^ Jump up to:a b Babbage,
C.; Herschel, J. F. W. (Jan 1825). "Account
of the Repetition of M. Arago's Experiments on the Magnetism Manifested by
Various Substances during the Act of Rotation". Philosophical
Transactions of the Royal Society. 115: 467–496. Bibcode:1825RSPT..115..467B. doi:10.1098/rstl.1825.0023.
Retrieved 2 December 2012.
3. ^ Thompson,
Silvanus Phillips (1895). Polyphase Electric Currents and Alternate-Current Motors (1st ed.).
London: E. & F.N. Spon. p. 261. Retrieved 2 December2012.
4. ^ Baily,
Walter (June 28, 1879). "A
Mode of producing Arago's Rotation". Philosophical
Magazine. Taylor & Francis. 3 (1): 115–120. Bibcode:1879PPSL....3..115B. doi:10.1088/1478-7814/3/1/318.
5. ^ Jump up to:a b Vučković,
Vladan (November 2006). "Interpretation
of a Discovery" (PDF). The
Serbian Journal of Electrical Engineers. 3 (2).
Retrieved 10 February 2013.
6. ^ The
Electrical engineer, Volume 5. (February, 1890)
7. ^ The
Electrician, Volume 50. 1923
8. ^ Official
gazette of the United States Patent Office: Volume 50. (1890)
9. ^ Eugenii
Katz. "Blathy".
People.clarkson.edu. Archived from the
original on June 25, 2008.
Retrieved 2009-08-04.
10. ^ Ricks,
G.W.D. (March 1896). "Electricity
Supply Meters". Journal
of the Institution of Electrical Engineers. 25 (120):
57–77. doi:10.1049/jiee-1.1896.0005.
11. ^ Ferraris,
G. (1888). "Atti della Reale Academia delle Science di
Torino". Atti della R. Academia delle Science di Torino. XXIII:
360–375.
12. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f g Alger,
P.L.; Arnold, R.E. (1976). "The History of Induction Motors in
America". Proceedings of the IEEE. 64 (9):
1380–1383. doi:10.1109/PROC.1976.10329. S2CID 42191157.
13. ^ Froehlich,
Fritz E. Editor-in-Chief; Allen
Kent Co-Editor (1992). The Froehlich/Kent
Encyclopedia of Telecommunications: Volume 17 - Television Technology to Wire
Antennas (First ed.). New York: Marcel Dekker, Inc. p. 36. ISBN 978-0-8247-2902-8.
14. ^ The Electrical
Engineer (21 Sep 1888). .
. . a new application of the alternating current in the production of rotary
motion was made known almost simultaneously by two experimenters, Nikola Tesla
and Galileo Ferraris, and the subject has attracted general attention from the
fact that no commutator or connection of any kind with the armature was
required. . . . Volume II.
London: Charles & Co. p. 239.
15. ^ Ferraris,
Galileo (1885). "Electromagnetic Rotation with an Alternating
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Classical sources[edit]
·
Bailey, Benjamin
Franklin (1911). The
Induction Motor.
McGraw-Hill. induction motor.
·
Behrend,
Bernhard Arthur (1901). The
Induction Motor: A Short Treatise on its Theory and Design, With Numerous
Experimental Data and Diagrams. McGraw
Publishing Company / Electrical World and Engineer.
·
Boy de la Tour,
Henri (1906). The
Induction Motor: Its Theory and Design, Set Forth By a Practical Method of
Calculation. Translated Cyprien Odilon
Mailloux. McGraw Pub. Co.
External links[edit]
|
Wikimedia Commons has media related
to Induction motors. |
·
Who
Invented the Polyphase Electric Motor?
·
Silvanus
Phillips Thompson: Polyphase electric currents and alternate current motors
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