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SENSORLESS FIELD ORIENTED CONTROL OF BRUSHLESS ...

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Examining the two windings with a squarewave motor would be more difficult because of the<br />

discontinuous function describing rotor flux but fortunately the analysis may be done intuitively,<br />

beginning again with the CFP winding. When the rotor is at zero degrees all the flux would be<br />

linked by all N turns, as shown in Figure C.14.<br />

Figure C.14 – CFP winding with ideal squarewave rotor.<br />

The peak rotor-stator flux linkage is thus found by multiplying the total flux by N.<br />

R N <br />

NB Area<br />

p<br />

D <br />

NBp Y<br />

2 <br />

<br />

R NDY Bp<br />

(CFP winding, squarewave rotor flux) (C.18)<br />

2<br />

As the rotor rotates CCW the rotor-stator flux linkage changes linearly with negative slope over<br />

0, and with positive slope over ,2 <br />

is shown as well but will not be discussed until later.)<br />

as shown in Figure C.15-a. (The position-derivative<br />

Figure C.15 – CFP winding with squarewave rotor: (a) rotor-stator flux linkage, and<br />

(b) its position-derivative.<br />

296

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