Energies (Jan 2021)

Design and Analysis of a Five-Phase Permanent-Magnet Synchronous Motor for Fault-Tolerant Drive

  • Muhammad H. Iftikhar,
  • Byung-Gun Park,
  • Ji-Won Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/en14020514
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 2
p. 514

Abstract

Read online

Reliability is a fundamental requirement in electric propulsion systems, involving a particular approach in studies on system failure probabilities. An intrinsic improvement to the propulsion system involves introducing robust architectures such as fault-tolerant motor drives to these systems. Considering the potential for hardware failures, a fault-tolerant design approach will achieve reliability objectives without recourse to optimized redundancy or over-sizing the system. Provisions for planned degraded modes of operation are designed to operate the motor in fault-tolerant mode, which makes them different from the pure design redundancy approach. This article presents how a five-phase permanent-magnet synchronous motor operates under one- or two-phase faults, and how the system reconfigures post-fault motor currents to meet the torque and speed requirement of reliable operation that meets the requirements of an electric propulsion system.

Keywords