Marine propulsion – Electric drive for propelling means
Reexamination Certificate
2000-04-19
2001-11-06
Basinger, Sherman (Department: 3617)
Marine propulsion
Electric drive for propelling means
Reexamination Certificate
active
06312298
ABSTRACT:
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to ship propulsion systems and can be used in the structural configuration of an electromotive drive system. The electromotive drive system includes an electric motor, composed of stator and motor which directly drives at least one propeller. The electric motor is arranged, gondola-like, using a shaft-like supporting structure on the lower side of a ship hull and in a housing having a streamlined shape, parts of the electric motor being artificially cooled.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
In a conventional ship propulsion system, a three-phase AC current motor having a short-circuited rotor is used as the motor, the rotor being mounted on a hollow shaft, which is coupled via a coupling to the drive shaft running inside the hollow shaft. The drive shaft is directly coupled to the propeller. In this ship propulsion system, the stator of the motor is fit into a tubular frame, which in turn is inserted into a pipe-saddle-like housing part of the housing, secured, gondola-like, on the lower side of the ship hull by a shaft-like supporting part. The cooling of the motor, including the bearings of the rotor, is carried out using fresh water, which is pumped from a tank arranged in the ship hull into the interior of the gondola-like housing and is circulated. Such a conventional system is described in, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 2,714,866.
In another conventional ship propulsion system, which can be designed for propulsive outputs of 10 MW and more, the dynamoelectric motor having its stator is supported in the surrounding housing by radially arranged web plates. The web plates used for this purpose also function to form cooling ducts (pipes) for a gaseous coolant, supplied from the ship hull and re-cooled there using a heat exchanger. In this context, the costly cooling device is arranged on the shaft-like supporting part. Conventionally, a synchronous motor, which is supplied by a frequency converter and which has a separately excited rotor, is used as the motor, the rotor being able to be additionally cooled through being arranged on a hollow drive shaft that has water flowing through it. Such an arrangement is described in, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,403,216.
For the purpose of cooling an electric motor that is driven under water, it is also conventional to pump in circulation the insulating oil used as a coolant so that in the cooling ducts which run axially in the area of the housing wall, heat is dissipated into the ambient water. Such a conventional system is described in, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 2,862,122.
It is furthermore conventional for the coolant circulation of a driving engine (prime mover) of a ship arranged in the ship hull to use a heat exchanger that is integrated into the jacket ring of the propeller. Such circulation is described in, for example, British Patent No. 2 260 805.
SUMMARY
An object of the present invention is to simplify the arrangement and configuration of the cooler.
According to the present invention, the cooler is includes an annular duct that is arranged below the ship and inside the shaft-like supporting part on its wall, the duct being provided with openings for the intake and outflow of the coolant.
Thus, the present invention provides for using the wall of the shaft-like supporting part itself as a part of the cooler, and specifically as a heat-exchanging element for re-cooling the coolant using the ambient seawater. For optimizing the cooling performance, provision may be made for additional cooling fins, which extend into the annular duct and are joined to the wall of the supporting part.
An arrangement and configuration of the cooler of this type saves space and weight and avoids a flexible coupling between various parts of the cooling device, which are assigned, on the one hand, to the rotatable part of the drive system and, on the other hand, to the body of the ship.
The configuration and arrangement of the cooler provided according to the present invention are particularly suited for ship propulsion systems as described in WO97/49605 dated Jun. 24, 1997, (which is based on German Patent Application No. 196 27 323.4), which are distinguished by the fact that the electric motor is furnished with a permanently magnetized and therefore low-loss rotor, that the stator is configured in a form-locking manner in the streamlined housing, and that the interior space of the housing containing the electric motor is free from a flowing coolant. This configuration of the electric motor, in conditions of appropriate use, makes possible direct cooling solely using the ambient seawater. Waste heat that can arise in response to more intensive use as a function of the design of the electric motor in the coil ends, stator irons, and/or in the winding copper in the area of the core stack of the stator and that cannot be dissipated directly through the housing into the ambient seawater must be removed with the assistance of an additional cooler. The dissipation of this waste heat can advantageously be carried out using a cooler configured according to the present invention, by having cooling pipes lead from the annular cooling duct to the coil ends of the stator and, if appropriate, also to axial cooling ducts that are arranged so as to be equally distributed in the peripheral direction.
An exemplary embodiment of an electromotive drive system having a cooler configured according to the present invention is depicted in FIGS.
1
through
5
.
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patent: 2 260 805 (1993-04-01), None
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patent: WO 97/49605 (1997-12-01), None
patent: WO-99/05023-A1 (1999-02-01), None
Peter Andersen et al., “New Type of Permanent Field Machines for diesel electric propulsion systems”, Siemens-Schottel-Propulsor (SSP) The Podded Electric Drive with Permanently Excited Motor, Mar. 7, 1997.
Basinger Sherman
Kenyon & Kenyon
Siemens Aktiengesellschaft
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