Tuesday, October 21, 2014

TRINAMIC motor drivers at work

HAMBURG, GERMANY: —TRINAMIC Motion Control, a leading global developer of motor and motion control technologies, revealed its patent-pending technology for stepper motors. Dubbed stealthChop, the new technology significantly reduces the noise of conventional stepper motor operation.

Motors operating at low speed exhibit a phenomenon known as magnetostriction, which causes an audible low frequency ‘hum.’ This low-frequency noise is well known as the 60Hz hum that emanates from transmission lines and transformers. Trinamic’s stealthChop minimizes magnetostriction by implementing a PWM algorithm that relies predominantly on voltage modulation for motor control at lower speeds. This technology minimizes PWM current fluctuation, which is the primary cause of low-speed hum.

“Stepper motors used in automation must respect the needs of their human overlords. The continuous noise of individual stepper motors in a laboratory environment may be rather distracting, and the din from hundreds of stepper motors in an industrial implementation can be deafening,” explained TRINAMIC R & D chief, Dr. Stephan Kubisch.

“Our customers asked Trinamic to perfect a commutation scheme for lower step frequencies that reduces noise. We made it self tuning, easy to use and added an automated switch to transition to higher frequencies.“

Noise limitations are especially desirable in applications that normally occur in close proximity to human operators, in applications where multiple stepper motors are in use, in video surveillance applications where installations near walls and ceilings amplify noise, and in consumer applications, like home automation and air conditioning, where users expect minimal noise.

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