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Phase redundancy is a proposed technique for improving the reliability of large solid-state adjustable-frequency ac drives. Based on the more general concept of parallel redundancy, this new technique relies heavily on the inherent capability of a general n-phase ac motor to continue operation with (n -1) or less of its stator phases excited. Motor performance degradation which inevitably accompanies such operation is sensitive to a variety of system parameters including the number of stator phases and the type of excitation source. A thorough evaluation of (n - 1)-phase excitation performance characteristics of an n-phase squirrel-cage induction motor is presented in this paper. Under favorable conditions, a large percentage of the motor's balanced excitation rating can be retained during postfault conditions of steady-state (n -1)-phase excitation. The n-phase-drive units must be conservatively designed to withstand transient stresses associated with fault-induced transitions from balanced n-phase to (n-1)-phase excitation. Key analytical results have been experimentally verified by tests conducted on a 5-hp six-phase squirrel-cage induction motor. Results of this investigation support the basic soundness of the phase-redundancy concept.
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Thomas M. Jahns
University of Wisconsin–Madison
IEEE Transactions on Industry Applications
Gallagher (United States)
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Thomas M. Jahns (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a229ed1cce2ba38c0cd4918 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1109/tia.1980.4503793
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