Please re-forum (or delete) this if it is too far off-topic here.
If you have a PMDC motor that develops maximium power at 36V and 400RPM, that spends a large proportion of its life running at (say) 133rpm, but needs to be capable of excursions upto 500rpm; would it be more efficient to run it at (say) 12V when running at 133rpm, and use something like a boost converter to increase the voltage when higher speeds are required?
I'm looking at this "typical" power/efficiency curve as the basis of my thought processes:
Best efficiency typically comes when the motor is running close to its maximum speed. Lower speeds are typically achieved by varying the duty cycle of the PWM driving the 3-phase bridge inverter.
Within limits, the maximum speed of a PMDC motor is proportional to the voltage supplied.
The question is, if you reduce the supply voltage to the inverter & motor in order to run it at a lower speed, does that move the regime closer to the peak efficiency?
If you have a PMDC motor that develops maximium power at 36V and 400RPM, that spends a large proportion of its life running at (say) 133rpm, but needs to be capable of excursions upto 500rpm; would it be more efficient to run it at (say) 12V when running at 133rpm, and use something like a boost converter to increase the voltage when higher speeds are required?
I'm looking at this "typical" power/efficiency curve as the basis of my thought processes:
Best efficiency typically comes when the motor is running close to its maximum speed. Lower speeds are typically achieved by varying the duty cycle of the PWM driving the 3-phase bridge inverter.
Within limits, the maximum speed of a PMDC motor is proportional to the voltage supplied.
The question is, if you reduce the supply voltage to the inverter & motor in order to run it at a lower speed, does that move the regime closer to the peak efficiency?