Source: http://www.allindianpatents.com/patents/253835-thermal-overload-protection
Timestamp: 2017-11-21 00:29:00
Document Index: 714317695

Matched Legal Cases: ['ART1', 'ART2', 'ART1', 'ART2', 'ART1', 'ART2', 'ART1', 'ART2', 'ART1', 'ART2', 'ART1', 'ART2']

Indian Patents. 253835:THERMAL OVERLOAD PROTECTION
A thermal overload protection (1) for an electrical device, particularly an electric motor (M), measures (10) a load current supplied to the electrical device (M), and calculates (16) the thermal load on the electrical device on the basis of the measured load current, and shuts off (S2) a current supply (L1, L2, L3) when the thermal load reaches a given threshold level. The protection comprises a processor system employing X-bit, preferably X=32, fixed-point arithmetic, wherein the thermal load is calculated by a mathematic equation programmed into the microprocessor system structured such that a result or a provisional result never exceeds the X-bit value.
[0001] The invention relates to thermal overload protection for pro¬tecting electrical devices, and particularly electric motors, from overheating.
[0002] Electric motors are utilized in several applications for driving various moving parts. An electric motor often has an associated control unit for adjusting and monitoring the operation of the electric motor, the speed of rota¬tion, for example.
[0003] An electric motor may temporarily operate also overloaded, but if it becomes overheated as the loading continues, this may result in dam¬age to the motor. Damage to the isolation of the stator coiling caused by over¬heating is the most critical.
[0004] Various solutions are known for protecting an electric motor against thermal overload. One known solution is based on 1..3-phase meas¬urement of the motor current and on modelling the heating of the motor by us¬ing an RC equivalent circuit. The oldest and most common technical imple¬mentation is a bimetallic relay (thermal relay) coupled directly or via a current transformer to the main circuit.
[0005] A known solution is a thermal safety switch arranged inside or in connection with the motor, the switch tripping after a given temperature limit and interrupting the current flow through the electric motor. A more ad¬vanced version is an electronic unit that measures the temperature of the elec¬tric motor with temperature sensors and triggers a shut-off of the motor. This alternative manner is directly based on temperature detection with various sensors. The problem is the difficulty of placing the sensors correctly. Such a protection reacts relatively slowly.
[0006] In numerical protection, data is processed in a numeric for¬mat, i.e. digitally. Analogical measurement data are converted with an A/D converter into digital. The actual measurement and protection functions are implemented by means of a microprocessor. The thermal overload protection measures the root mean square (rms) values of the phase currents (load cur¬rents) of a motor or another object to be protected (e.g. a cable or a trans¬former), and calculates the temperature-dependent operating time. This ther¬mal operating time may be accordant with standard IEC 60255-8:
t = operating time
lp = load current before overload
lb = operating current (maximum allowed continuous current)
[0007] The thermal time constant x is determined as the time re¬quired of the object to be protected to reach a temperature 6, which is a given portion (e.g. 63%) of a steady-state temperature 9S, when the object to be pro¬tected is supplied with constant current. The operating current lp is the highest allowed continuous current, which also corresponds to the highest allowed temperature, i.e. the steady-state temperature 9S. This highest allowed tem¬perature is the trip level. Alternatively, the relative value of the thermal load on the object to be protected relative to a full (100%) thermal load can be calcu¬lated from the phase currents. The trip occurs when the relative thermal load reaches a 100% value.
[0008] Numeric thermal protection is thus associated with heavy calculation requiring an efficient processor and fast and expensive peripheral circuits, such as memories. Prior art solutions have employed an efficient processor having also an in-built mathematics processor, a floating point unit (FPU) or a corresponding unit for performing real-time calculation within a de¬termined time. An efficient processor having library functions emulating a float¬ing-point number unit has also been used. Implementations also exist wherein the algorithm is implemented with ASIC circuits, whereby they cannot be re-programmed afterwards. Consequently, changes cannot be made to such a single-purpose circuit, but a new circuit is always required if the operation is to be changed. Implementations also exist wherein the current is meas¬ured/calculated, the warming-up is calculated, measurements are repeated etc., in a sequence. Such an implementation does not ensure fully real-time protection (no continuous measurement), but enables the use of a less efficient processor.
[0009] The object of the invention is thus to provide a method for thermal protection of electrical devices and an apparatus for implementing the
method, allowing the calculation associated with the protection to be lightened and the technical requirements of the processors and peripheral circuits to be lowered. The object of the invention is achieved with a method and system that are characterized in what is stated in the independent claims. Preferred embodiments of the invention are described in the dependent claims.
[0010] The invention is based on programming a mathematical equation or algorithm and its operands that calculate the thermal load such that they are suitable for an X-bit, preferably X=32, processor system employ¬ing fixed-point arithmetic in such a manner that the result or provisional result never exceed the X-bit value when the program is run in the processor system. The measured current is preferably scaled into a unit value to a range of 0 to Y, wherein Y represents Y/100% of the nominal current, and preferably Y=65000, whereby the calculation is independent of the actual current range.
[0011] The invention enables the calculation of the thermal load with a less efficient processor and less memory, which, in turn, lower the power consumption, production costs and physical size of the device. The calculation can be implemented with a simple and transferable code, which does not re¬quire a mathematics processor or mathematical libraries. However, the thermal load can be calculated with nearly the accuracy of a 64-bit floating-point num¬ber calculation, even if the processor used 32-bit fixed-point arithmetic.
[0012] In the following, the invention will be described in more detail in connection with preferred embodiments with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which
Figure 1 is an exemplary block diagram illustrating the overload pro¬tection according to an embodiment of the invention,
Figure 2 is an exemplary signal diagram illustrating the operation of the device of Figure 1; and
Figure 3 is an exemplary flow diagram illustrating the operation of the device of Figure 1.
[0013] In Figure 1, a thermal overload protection is coupled be¬tween an electric motor M or other electrical device to be protected and a three-phase mains current supply L1, L2 and L3. S1 is a main mains switch, e.g. manually controlled, and S2 is a release switch controlled by the overload
protection and controlled with a trip signal TRIP. The overload protection 1 measures the current load of each phase L1, L2 and L3 of the mains current supply of the motor M with a current measurement unit 10, which is based on current transformers, for example. In addition, the overload protection 1 may comprise a measuring unit 11 for measuring phase voltages. Further, the over¬load protection 1 preferably comprises a user interface, i.e. a human-machine-interface (HMI) 12, with a display 13 and a keyboard 14. Furthermore, the overload protection 1 may comprise a data communication unit 15 connected to a local area network (e.g. Ethernet), a bus, a field bus (e.g. Profibus DP) or another data communication medium 17.
[0014] As regards the invention, the most essential function is re¬lated to the protection and control unit 16. The overload protection 1 is imple¬mented with a microprocessor system, the majority of the above units being implemented with suitable microprocessor software and peripheral circuits, such as memory circuits. The measuring values provided by the current and voltage-measuring units are converted into numerical, i.e. digital values with digital/analog converters (A/D). In accordance with the basic principle of the invention, the microprocessor system employs fixed-point arithmetic, prefera¬bly 32-bit arithmetic. A suitable processor type is for instance a general-purpose processor having a 32-bit RISC instruction set, such as ARM7/9 or the M68k series.
[0015] It is to be appreciated that the above-described structure is only one example of a thermal overload protection for implementing the inven¬tion.
[0016] The overload protection 1 protects the motor M from over¬heating and from any damage caused thereby. The protection is based on cal¬culating the thermal load on the motor on the basis of measured phase cur¬rents. In the following, the general operation of the protection will be explained by means of the example of Figures 2 and 3. Phase conductors L1, L2 and L3 are connected to the motor M by closing switches S1 and S2. The current-measuring unit 10 measures the currents of the phases (step 31, Figure 3), and the control unit 16 calculates the thermal load on the motor M on the basis of the phase currents by using fixed-point arithmetic (step 32). The mathemati¬cal equation used in the calculation of the thermal load for one phase may be as follows:
0 = thermal load, preferably 0 to 200% preferably corresponding to
a value range of 0 to 2.4
AT = interval for thermal load calculation, preferably in milliseconds
R = cooling factor of electrical device, preferably 1 to 10
C = trip-class factor
i = measured load current
[0017] Factor C is preferably a trip-class factor t6l which indicates the longest starting time set on the motor relative to the actual starting time of the motor. Factor C may be for instance 1.7 (x actual starting time). In a pri¬mary embodiment of the invention, the trip-class factor te is multiplied by a constant, preferably 29.5, or calculated by the formula (1/k) * Te * (la/In)2, wherein la = starting current, In = nominal current, Te = allowed starting time, and k = constant. Constant k = 1.22 when an operating time graph correspond¬ing to that of a combination of trip class and t6-time is desired (operating times according to the requirements of IEC 60947-4-1). The measured current is preferably scaled into a unit value to a range of 0 to Y, wherein Y represents Y/100% of the nominal current, and preferably Y=65000, whereby the calcula¬tion is independent of the actual current range.
[0018] Let us examine 32-bit fixed-point arithmetic by way of exam¬ple. In accordance with the invention, the above-described mathematical equa¬tion or algorithm and its operands that calculate the thermal load are pro¬grammed suitable for a processor system employing 32-bit fixed-point arithme¬tic in such a manner that the result or the provisional result never exceed the 32-bit value when the program is run in the processor system.
[0019] The following is an example of a calculation equation struc¬tured and scaled in this manner
thRes « ( (AT* (i2/C) +ROUNDING) /MSEC)
+ ( ( ( ( (MSEOSCALING) - ( (AT*SCALING) / (R*C) ) ) /SP.ART1) *th) /SPART2)
♦thFract
thRes = thermal load 0 to 200% corresponding to value range 0 to 24000
ROUNDING = e.g. 500
MSEC	=e.g. 1000
SCALING =e.g. 10000
SPART1	= e.g. SCALING /10
SPART2 = e.g. SCALING /100
thFract	= thRes of previous calculation divided by constant,
e.g. constant = SCALING = 10000.
[0020] ROUNDING corresponds to decimal rounding. MSEC scales milliseconds into seconds. SCALING is accuracy scaling. The product of terms SPART1 and SPART2 represents the scaling of a time unit (preferably milli¬seconds), split into two parts to maintain calculation accuracy.
[0021] The result of the thermal load, thRes, is too high because of the scaling (in the example, within the range 0 to 24000), and it is scaled down to represent the thermal load per unit value employed, in the example to the range 0 to 2.4
© = thRES/10000
[0022] This quotient 0 is saved as parameter thFract and employed in the calculation the next time. Calculation accuracy on 0 to 100% thermal load is better than 0.1% of the thermal load.
[0023] The graph of Figure 2 represents the calculated thermal load 0 as a function of time t. When the motor M is started from cold state, it begins to warm up. In the same way, the calculated thermal load 0 increases as a function of time. When the thermal load 0 increases to a given set alarm level AlarmJevel, the control unit 16 may give an alarm to the operator for instance via the user interface 12-14 or the communication unit 15 (steps 35 and 36 in Figure 3). The control unit 16 may also continuously or after a given level cal¬culate the remaining time to trip (time-to-trip) and communicate it to the opera¬tor (steps 33 and 34 in Figure 3). When the thermal load 0 increases to a given set trip level Trip (preferably 100% of the thermal load on the motor), the control unit 16 activates a trip signal TRIP, which controls the switch S2 to open, whereby the motor M is disconnected from the three-phase supply L1, L2 and L3 (steps 37 and 38 in Figure 3). If the thermal capacity of the motor remaining after the tripping is too low (e.g. less than 60%), the protection 1 may prevent a restart until the motor is cooled to a given level (restart inhibit) or for a given time (steps 39 and 40 in Figure 3). For start-up, signal TRIP is again connected inactive and switch S2 is closed. In an embodiment, the op¬erator may control the control unit 16 into an override state, wherein the Trip
level is double (override Trip level).
[0024] It is obvious to a person skilled in the art that as technology advances, the basic idea of the invention can be implemented in a variety of ways. Consequently, the invention and its embodiments are not restricted to the above examples, but can vary within the scope of the claims.
1.	A device for thermal overload protection of an electrical device, particularly an electric motor (M), the device comprising means (10) for meas¬uring at least one load current supplied to the electrical device (M), means (16) for calculating the thermal load on the electrical device on the basis of said at least one load current, and means (S2) for disconnecting a current supply (L1, L2, L3) when the thermal load reaches a given threshold level, charac¬terized in that said means (16) for calculating the thermal load on the elec¬trical device comprise a processor system employing X-bit, preferably X=32, fixed-point arithmetic, the system comprising means for scaling the measured current into unit values to a range of 0 to Y, wherein Y represents Y/100% of a nominal current, and means for calculating the thermal load using a mathe¬matical equation that, together with its operands, is programmed into the mi¬croprocessor system structured such that a result or a provisional result never exceeds the X-bit value.
2.	A device as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that the mathematical equation is
@ = thermal load
AT = interval for thermal load calculation R = cooling factor of electrical device C = trip-class factor.
3.	A device as claimed in claim 2, characterized in that one
or more of following operand values are used
0 = 0 to 200% preferably corresponding to a value range of 0 to 2.4 AT = interval for thermal load calculation in milliseconds R = cooling factor of electrical device in a range of 1 to 10 C = trip-class factor i = measured current.
4.	A device as claimed in claim 1,2 or 3, characterized in
that the mathematical equation that, together with its operands, is structured
such that the result or the provisional result of the calculation of the thermal
load never exceeds the 32-bit value is
thRes = ( (AT* (i2/C) +ROUNDING) /MSEC)
+ ( (( ( (MSEC*SCALING) -( (AT*SCALING)/(R*C) ))/SPART1)*th)/SPART2)
+thFract
thRes = thermal load,
AT = interval for thermal load calculation
R = cooling factor of electrical device
i = measured current scaled into unit value
ROUNDING = rounding factor
MSEC	= time unit scaling
SCALING = accuracy scaling
SPART1 = partial scaling
SPART2 = partial scaling
thFract	= thermal load thRes of previous calculation divided
5.	A device as claimed in claim 4, characterized in that one
or more of the following operand values are used
thRes = 0 to 200% preferably corresponding to a value range of 0 to
AT = interval for thermal load calculation in milliseconds
R= 1 to 10
i = measured current scaled into a unit value between 0 and 65000,
corresponding to 0 to 650% of nominal current,
ROUNDING =500
MSEC	=1000
SCALING =10000
SPART1	= SCALING/10
SPART2 = SCALING/100
thFract	= thRes of previous calculation divided by constant
6.	A device as claimed in claim 3, 4 or 5, characterized in
that C is trip-class factor t6 multiplied by a constant, preferably 29.5, or calcu¬
lated by the formula (1/k) * Te * (la/In)2, wherein la = starting current, In =
nominal current, Te = allowed starting time and k = constant, preferably k =
7. A method for thermal overload protection of an electrical device, particularly an electric motor, the method comprising
measuring at least one load current supplied to the electrical device,
calculating the thermal load on the electrical device on the basis of said at least one load current, and
interrupting current supply to the electrical device when the thermal load reaches a given threshold level, characterized by
scaling the measured current into a unit value to a range of 0 to Y, wherein Y represents Y/100% of a nominal current,
calculating the thermal load on the electrical device using an X-bit, preferably X=32, processor system employing fixed-point arithmetic, wherein a mathematical equation for thermal load is programmed structured such that a result or a provisional result never exceeds the X-bit value.
10.	A method as claimed in claim 9, characterized by using
one or more of following operand values
SCALING = 10000
11.	A method as claimed in claim 8, 9 or 10, characterized
by C being trip-class factor t6 multiplied by a constant, preferably 29.5, or cal¬
culated by the formula (1/k) * Te * (la/In)2, wherein la = starting current, In =
1 -22- Dated this 1 day of August 2006
2823-CHENP-2006 AMENDED CLAIMS 11-04-2011.pdf
2823-CHENP-2006 AMENDED CLAIMS 26-09-2011.pdf
2823-chenp-2006 amended claims 29-08-2011.pdf
2823-CHENP-2006 AMENDED PAGES OF SPECIFICATION 26-09-2011.pdf
2823-CHENP-2006 CORRESPONDENCE OTHERS 29-08-2011.pdf
2823-CHENP-2006 CORRESPONDENCE OTHERS 26-09-2011.pdf
2823-chenp-2006 form-3 11-04-2011.pdf
2823-CHENP-2006 OTHER PATENT DOCUMENT 11-04-2011.pdf
2823-CHENP-2006 AMENDED CLAIMS 20-07-2012.pdf
2823-CHENP-2006 CORRESPONDENCE 29-10-2010.pdf
2823-CHENP-2006 CORRESPONDENCE OTHERS 20-07-2012.pdf
2823-CHENP-2006 EXAMINATION REPORT REPLY RECEIVED 11-04-2011.pdf
2823-chenp-2006-abstract.pdf
2823-chenp-2006-claims.pdf
2823-chenp-2006-correspondnece-others.pdf
2823-chenp-2006-description(complete).pdf
2823-chenp-2006-drawings.pdf
2823-chenp-2006-form 1.pdf
2823-chenp-2006-form 26.pdf
2823-chenp-2006-form 3.pdf
2823-chenp-2006-form 5.pdf
2823-chenp-2006-pct.pdf
2823/CHENP/2006
1 KUIVALAINEN, Janne Pitkakatu 38 C 41, FI-65100 Vaasa
2 OSTERBACK, Peter Karperovagen 881, FI-65650 Vaasa
PCT/FI2005/000066
1 20040154 2004-02-02 Finland