Motor Supplier Improves Machine Design with VisSim Modeling & Simulation
Software
Author: William M. Erickson, Staff Engineer, Indramat Division, The Rexroth
Corporation
Machine builders throughout industry are under pressure to provide higher
throughput, greater accuracy, higher reliability (uptime) &endash;all
at lower cost. For the motor supplier, this is an important opportunity
to play a role in the machine design.
The supplier's expertise in motor requirements and capability can lower
the expense of designing a machine and shorten the design cycle.
"VisSim's easy-to use-interface and sophisticated simulation engine
not only boosts the productivity and quality of control system design,
but also minimizes costs for everyone. VisSim is intuitive and visual,
with a block diagram approach that closely emulates the way a control
engineer looks at the world."
William M. Erickson, Engineerr, Indramat Division of Rexroth Corporation
The Challenge
As a supplier of servo motors, drives and computer controls, we at Indramat
gain a substantial competitive advantage by proving to our customers that
the motors and drives we select will achieve the required performance
criteria, without forcing them to build an expensive prototype or spend
months evaluating the equipment. Our competitive position depends not
only on the quality of our products, but also on our ability to deliver
the exact performance specifications required by our customers. Our customers
are machine builders who use our servo products to perform motion control
in a variety of applications, ranging from high-speed spindles to low-speed
rotary tables.

Indramat frameless motor.

VisSim model of a motion control system comprising
servo drive, motor and machine mechanics. The plots depict the system's
response in terms of torque, velocity and position variation caused by
step change in commanded velocity.
Consider the customer who requires a certain bandwidth (a
measure of how well the real-world application follows the control command).
The customer doesn't want a bandwidth lower than what he needs, but he
can't accept a higher bandwidth either, since that increases cost and
unnecessarily loads the system. We don't want to supply a motor whose
torque and velocity are so strong it will excite resonances in the machine.
Given the mechanical load, the mass of the customer's machine, and other
factors, we determine the appropriate motor and drive, along with the
exact set of control parameters.
We have to guarantee to the customer that these parameters
will deliver the required performance bandwidth. Until recently, we provided
that proof by testing the components in our lab. We would take the selected
motor and drive from stock, connect them to a large steel wheel having
the same mass as the customer's machine and then run tests for half a
day.
The Solution: VisSim
An alternative to this time-consuming process would be to run simulation
software to test the components. Initially we were not encouraged by the
simulation software we had tested... until we learned about VisSim,
an interactive Windows-based modeling and simulation software program. VisSim
provides a visual block diagram interface instead of lines of text. The
flow of the diagram, such as summing junctions and gains, is graphically
depicted on the screen. Blocks and connections are assembled with a classical
control perspective.
We liked VisSim's ease of use, but we didn't know
whether the software could accurately simulate motion control systems.
I ran some simulations with VisSim and compared it with our lab results.
VisSim's predictions matched the lab results on enough tests to convince
us of the accuracy and reliability of the software.
I began using VisSim on a regular basis to select
the correct motor and drive systems for our customers. The simulations
modeled the function of our motor and drive with the function of the customer
machine, inte- grating the mechanical load and electrical properties of
the components into a system. VisSim provided two critical components
used in selecting a motor: motor velocity and motor torque. Equally important,
I used VisSim to assure customers that the selected motor and drive would
give them the performance they required.
Frameless Motor Design with VisSim
One of our more critical applications was to assure
a customer that the frameless motor technology would provide the solution
for optimizing the machine-motor fit of a new machine. Responding to market
demand for smaller machine volume, the customer's engineers wanted to
downsize the motor volume. Frameless motors seemed the perfect answer.
Without a pre-defined frame casing, shaft, bearing structure and cooling
package, frameless motors can be as much as one-seventh the volume of
conventional framed motors, while achieving the same power rating. They
are installed as individual components (a rotor, stator and feedback assembly)
and become integral parts of the machine.
The customer's engineers were taking a bold step
in attempting to replace the two large conventional AC induction motors
and their bulky gearboxes with one smaller frameless motor. However, the
customer's management would not provide final authorization for the design
until they were confident that the design would perform as predicted by
the engineers. To assure management of the motor's performance capabilities,
I simulated the machine with the frameless motor, drive and computer control
using VisSim.
To design the model, I retrieved block diagrams
of frameless motors and drives from previous projects. With minor editing,
I modeled the properties specific to the drive, such as its velocity control
and current control, the motor's inductance and resistance, torque constant
and its conversion of electrical power to mechanical power, and the machine's
properties, such as inertia and load.
The Benefits
VisSim's interactive environment enabled me to easily generate dynamic
graphs of motor torque over time. I integrated the torque through the
machine inertia, which gave me velocity and plotted that to determine
how smoothly the velocity followed the command. The shape of this velocity
profile enabled me to find the bandwidth. The result was clear that the
frameless motor could perform the required bandwidth.
Because I was able to guarantee that the motor
configuration would meet customer specifications, the customer's management
approved the design. The project probably wouldn't have proceeded without
VisSim, and I wouldn't have had the time to extensively test the machine-motor
configuration in the lab. But through simulation with VisSim, I completed
the testing in a few hours.
By replacing the conventional motors with the
frameless motor, the customer built a machine not only with smaller volume,
but with several key advantages: the stiffer frameless motor yields improved
product quality, and the options for configuring shafting and bearing
structures offer more flexibility. In addition, the cooling system is
more efficient and the performance is quieter.
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