New Technologies and Materials for an Evolving Aerospace Industry

New Technologies and Materials for an Evolving Aerospace Industry

As the aerospace industry continues to move away from traditional, centralized hydraulic systems and toward electrification to power its fleets, the importance of magnetics technologies is increasing. This article will discuss design considerations and challenges, including some specific materials that can help increase efficiency.

Electromagnetic components are used in electric motors and generators found throughout aircraft, in systems such as cabin air compressors (CACs), ram air turbines (RATs), integrated starter alternators/generators (ISAs/ISGs) and auxiliary power units (APUs). In order to minimize losses in these motoring and generating components, one must select the right topology and materials to optimize efficiency.

What is the current state of the industry?

Electric generators are already in use, converting mechanical energy produced by jet turbines into electrical energy useable by any aircraft system that needs power. Those generators rely upon the interaction between permanent magnets on a rotor system and stator components made from stacked lamination material and copper windings.

The longer-term vision eliminates the jet turbines altogether. That vision would either use battery power or a much larger APU (generator) situated in the rear of an aircraft could be used to power multiple electric motors on the airfoil, propelling it forward. Most electric vehicles (EVs) on the roads today are powered by motors utilizing permanent magnets. However, challenges remain before fully electric commercial aviation can truly take off, including but not limited to the efficiency and longevity of operating systems.

Arnold Magnetic Technologies is currently working to address these challenges through collaboration with the engineering staffs of airframers, Tier 1 manufacturers and Tier 2 suppliers, with the aim of maximizing system power density, efficiency and safety. Running through these goals is an underlying sense of purpose: to incorporate magnetic technologies in ways that move the industry toward reducing its reliance on fossil fuels.

Why choose a permanent magnet machine?

When designing for a high-speed motor application, many motor designers choose to use a surface mounted permanent magnet (SMPM) topology because of the following advantages:

  • Energy efficiency
  • Highest torque/inertia ratio
  • Simple construction, highest torque density
  • Good torque control
  • Very low rotor losses
  • Common drive topology

Design and material considerations

Whether they are deployed in aircraft, satellites or mission-critical defense vehicles, aerospace components must possess the capacity to meet unique demands. Below are some of the most salient considerations for designing electric motors and choosing materials for energy efficiency.

When designing a power dense and often high speed permanent magnet motor application, there are multiple design challenges which include:

  • High centrifugal force on permanent magnets
  • High eddy currents and rotor losses are introduced if electrically conductive sleeve material retains the permanent magnets
  • Cooling of sleeve and magnets
  • Trade-off between price, size and quality of permanent magnet material
  • Risk of demagnetization of permanent magnets

As electric motors become smaller and faster, designers must consider the potential effects such as electrical drive frequencies, magnetic eddy currents, laminated steel eddy currents, mechanical stresses on the faster rotating shaft (rotor dynamics) and electrical control of the motor through the inverter.

Electrical and magnetic phenomena that create excess heat within the motor during operation include:

  • The “skin effect” in the copper windings, which increases at higher speeds as switching frequencies increase
  • Eddy current losses occurring within the stator lamination stack
  • Rotor joule losses, which are dependent on the material used for the retention band on the PM rotor

To reduce heat generated from these losses, one should select the proper materials to achieve the highest efficiency possible. However, if the system is still running at higher temperatures, it is best to design with materials that perform under high temperature.

Performance materials enabling energy efficiency

Arnold Magnetic Technologies’ performance materials help balance these design challenges, allowing motors to function in extreme conditions while at the same time helping to increase their overall efficiencies.

Recoma samarium cobalt

Driven by the smaller, faster, hotter requirements in emerging motor technology, Arnold Magnetic Technologies offers highly dense, sintered magnet materials that provide increased magnetic performance at elevated temperatures. Arnold now produces a material, Recoma(R) 35E (35MGOe SmCo), which is considered to be the best performing samarium cobalt (SmCo) material on the market today.

Recoma 35E allows for the greatest power density at elevated temperatures when compared to existing commercial magnetic materials. The performance comparison shown below depicts Recoma SmCo versus neodymium iron boron magnetic material, which has a high level of dysprosium, an extremely scarce and expensive rare earth element.

Arnold thin-film lamination steel

One of the primary methods to reduce eddy currents induced in the lamination stack assembly is to use thinner cross-sectional material. The thinner material restricts the current to much smaller paths as opposed to solid stator cores. By taking a core and constructing the length from hundreds of thinner laminations that are electrically insulated, the normal magnetic flux paths are greatly restricted.

Another way to reduce eddy currents is by using a high resistivity steel. The motor designer might assume that increasing resistivity (R) would only increase the eddy current as it is defined as i2R losses. In reality, the amount of current (i) that will flow normal to the desired flux path is reduced, creating less eddy current. This is traditionally done by using a high silicon content steel (0.5 wt% to 3.5 wt%).

Arnold’s Precision Thin Metals (PTM) division manufactures precision rolled thin (1.524 mm to 0.013 mm) and ultra-thin (0.01245 mm to 0.00175 mm) gauge metal strip and foil products from a wide range of permanent and soft magnetic materials as well as non-magnetic alloys. Specific to motor design, they offer ArnonTM non grain oriented silicon steel from 0.002 inch thickness to 0.007 inch thickness. These materials allow motor designers to push their high-speed motor designs to the limit by enabling the reduction of eddy currents. Other services provided by PTM include:

  • Heat treating
  • Surface cleaning
  • Slitting
  • Special coating


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