In industrial plants and facilities, electric motors and motor driven systems are a part of everyday life. Engineers with job functional responsibilities for energy and facility management need a good understanding of how motor driven systems work. By gaining a good basic understanding of these integrated systems, engineers will be able to appreciate their potential and limitations.
Objectives
Topic 1: Concept of Power and Energy
Calculation of energy savings
Power factor correction
Implementation at component or device level
Implementation at system level
Economic benefits
Technical advantage/disadvantage comparison
Topic 2: Motors
Operation and characteristics of electric motors
Conventional DC Motors - shunt, series and compound
AC Induction Motors – cage and wound rotor types
Conventional synchronous motor
PM synchronous motor
Brushless DC Motor (BLDC, self synchronous motor)
Motor efficiency
Various losses in motors: copper , iron, core, stray, windage, hysteresis, eddy current losses
Motor loading and efficiency
High efficiency motors
Speed control methods
Variable applied voltage
Variable armature current
Variable motor field
Variable frequency
Combination of the above
Selection and sizing of motors (including industry standards)
Topic 3: Drive Systems
Power Electronic Converter and Inverter Switching Devices
Main Components of VSD
Types of VSD
Voltage Source Inverter
Current source inverter,
PWM
Key features of VSD
Rectification
Inverting
Harmonic filtering
Power factor correction
Voltage level regulation / adjustment
Energy reversal
Selection, sizing and efficiency of VSD for variable torque load / constant torque load
Application of converters for AC/ DC motor speed/torque control
Application of converters for Permanent Magnet Synchronous (PMSM) speed/torque control
Topic 4: Driven Systems
Types of transmission (belts, gears, coupling, chain, etc)
Comparative features of transmission system
Selection, Sizing and Efficiency of transmission system