Back to Search Start Over

CFD simulations of electric motor end ring cooling for improved thermal management

Authors :
Grover Ronald O.
Yang Xiaofeng
Parrish Scott
Nocivelli Lorenzo
Asztalos Katherine J.
Som Sibendu
Li Yanheng
Burns Cooper
Van Gilder John
Attal Nitesh
Avanessian Oshin
Source :
Science and Technology for Energy Transition, Vol 77, p 17 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
EDP Sciences, 2022.

Abstract

Proper thermal management of an electric motor for vehicle applications extends its operating range. One cooling approach is to impinge Automatic Transmission Fluid (ATF) onto the rotor end ring. Increased ATF coverage correlates to enhanced heat transfer. Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) analytical tools provide a mechanism to assess motor thermal management prior to hardware fabrication. The complexity of the fluid flow (e.g., jet atomization, interface tracking, wall impingement) and heat transfer makes these simulations challenging. Computational costs are high when solving these flows on high-speed rotating meshes. Typically, a Volume-of Fluid (VOF) technique (i.e., two-fluid system) is used to resolve ATF dynamics within this rotating framework. Suitable numerical resolution of the relevant physics for thin films under strong inertial forces at high rotor speeds is computationally expensive, further increasing the run times. In this work, a numerical study of rotor-ring cooling by ATF is presented using a patent automated Cartesian cut-cell based method coupled with Automatic Mesh Refinement (AMR). This approach automatically creates the Cartesian mesh on-the-fly and can effectively handle complex rotating geometries by adaptively refining the mesh based on local gradients in the flow field which results in better resolution of the air-ATF interface. A Single non-inertial Reference Frame (SRF) approach is used to account for the rotating geometry and to further improve the overall computational efficiency. Quasi-steady state conditions are targeted in the analysis of the results. Important physics such as ATF jet structure, velocity detail near the air-jet interface, ATF coverage/accumulation on the ring surface, and cooling capacity are presented for a low-resolution Reynolds averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS), high-resolution RANS, and high-resolution Large-Eddy Simulation (LES) models. Computations are scaled over hundreds of cores on a supercomputer to maximize turnaround time. Each numerical approach is shown to capture the general trajectory of the oil jet prior to surface impingement. The high-resolution LES simulation, however, is superior in capturing small scale details and heat transfer between the free jet and surrounding air.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
28047699
Volume :
77
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Science and Technology for Energy Transition
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.78bfd7d5d6f647498c7b5ca8d8c97ed0
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2516/stet/2022015