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UNH ECE 791 Senior Project I Design Proposal Presentation

UNH ECE 791 Senior Project I Design Proposal Presentation. Team. Members: Luke Vartuli Stephen Doran Doug MacMillan Advisor: Dr. Gordon Kraft. Problem Statement. Problem: Noise Emissions Cost of operation Solution: Electric snowmobile. Project Overview.

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UNH ECE 791 Senior Project I Design Proposal Presentation

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  1. UNH ECE 791 Senior Project I Design Proposal Presentation

  2. Team Members: • Luke Vartuli • Stephen Doran • Doug MacMillan Advisor: • Dr. Gordon Kraft

  3. Problem Statement Problem: • Noise • Emissions • Cost of operation Solution: • Electric snowmobile

  4. ProjectOverview • Starting point => Polaris Snowmobile • Breakdown of snowmobile • Electric motor • Motor Theory • Motor Control • Pulse Width Modulation • PWM circuit • Power MOSFET’s • Mounting bezels • Battery type • Battery mounting • Timeline • Budget • Contributions

  5. Starting Point Donor Sled: 1996 Polaris Indy XLT

  6. Components Removed: Engine Exhaust Fuel tank Oil tank Starting battery Cooling system Breakdown of Snowmobile

  7. Specifications: Mfg: General Electric Model: 2CM6501 Nameplate Ratings: Voltage: 120VDC Armature Current: 167 A Field Current: 10 A Place of Origin: WWII Era B-29 Aircraft Electric Motor

  8. Armature • Main component of the DCMG • Uses multiple Armature windings for conduction • Undergoes Dynamo effect

  9. Shunt DCMG • Armature and Inter-poles are in parallel to the Main poles. • As load changes only a fraction of the field will change. • Safer, but has bad torque characteristics

  10. Shunt Diagram

  11. Windings

  12. Commutator • “Assembly line for current transfer” • As the commutator spins, current conducts from the brush (-) to the commutator bars the Load back to the Brush’s(+).

  13. Inter-poles • Maintains a neutral field flux over the commutator as the load changes. • By having a neutral field flux over the commutator, this limits “sparking” on the commutator which then leads to pitting and damage. This will disrupt proper commutation.

  14. Inter-poles at work!

  15. Motor Control How the motor will be controlled: • Vary armature current, fixed field • Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) • Power MOSFET’s

  16. Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) • Use PWM to control armature, fixed field • PWM controls power MOSFET’s • As duty-cycle increases, switches on longer, motor spins faster

  17. PWM circuit

  18. Power MOSFET’s Pros: • High current • Fast switching • Low resistance Cons: • No protection from fly back voltage • Get hot

  19. Mounting Bezels Key Components: • Bed plate • Motor • Motor bezel • Bearing Bezel • Clutch assembly • Orig. Motor Mounts

  20. Flooded Lead Acid, Why? Availability Low cost Ease of configuration Ease of mounting Ease of connection Source: www.carbasics.co.uk/inside_car_battery.gif Battery Type

  21. Battery Mounting Configuration: Series Nom. Voltage: 120VDC Mounting: Battery rack with top straps

  22. Timeline

  23. Budget • Snowmobile: Donated • Electric Motor: Donated • Wire and misc. supplies: Donated • Mounting Bezel: $200 • Batteries: $1000 • Pulse Width Modulator: $150

  24. Contributions Donations: • Snowmobile donated by Vincent Pelliccia • DC Motor donated by Kevin White • Wire and misc. electrical materials donated by Vartuli Electric, LLC Support and Guidance: • Prof. Kraft • Prof. Hludik • Prof. Clark • Prof. Smith • Adam Perkins • Matt Borowski

  25. Thank you for your time

  26. DC MOTOR THEORY • Same concept as AC Motor/Generators • Utilizes carbon brushes for DC characteristics

  27. Flemings right Hand rule

  28. Armature Physics

  29. Commutation Diagram

  30. Compound DCMG • Utilizes both series and shunt characteristics • More common DCMG

  31. Compund Diagram

  32. Series DCMG • Poles, Inter-poles, and Armature all in series. • Change in load is directly proportional to change in speed. • Reduction in load can cause a “run-away” motor which will then lead to mechanical failure. • High torque applications.

  33. Series DCMG diagram

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