Harman Patil (Editor)

Motor constants

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit

The constants KM (motor size constant) and Kv (motor velocity constant, or the back EMF constant) are values used to describe characteristics of electrical motors.

Contents

Motor constant

KM is the motor constant (sometimes, motor size constant). In SI units, the motor constant is expressed in (N⋅m/sqrt(W)):

K M = τ P

where

  • τ is the motor torque (SI units, N·m)
  • P is the resistive power loss (SI units, W)
  • The motor constant is winding independent (as long as the same conductive material used for wires); e.g., winding a motor with 6 turns with 2 parallel wires instead of 12 turns single wire will double the velocity constant, Kv, but KM remains unchanged. KM can be used for selecting the size of a motor to use in an application. Kv can be used for selecting the winding to use in the motor.

    Since the torque is current x Kt then Km becomes Kt / ( motor resistance)^0.5.

    Motor velocity constant, back EMF constant

    Kv is the motor velocity constant (= unloaded motor speed divided by applied voltage), measured in RPM per volt (not to be confused with kV, the abbreviation for kilovolt) or radians per volt-second (rad/V-s). The Kv rating of a brushless motor is the ratio of the motor's unloaded RPM to the peak (not RMS) voltage on the wires connected to the coils (the back EMF). For example, an unloaded motor of Kv, 5,700 rpm/V, supplied with 11.1 V, will run at a nominal 63,270 rpm (5,700 rpm/V × 11.1 V).

    The terms Ke, Kb are also used, as are the terms back EMF constant. or the generic electrical constant. In contrast to KV the value Ke is often expressed in SI units V s r a d , thus it is an inverse measure of KV. Sometimes it is expressed in non SI units krpm/V.

    The field flux may also be integrated into the formula:

    E b = K ω ϕ ω where E b is back EMF, K ω is the constant, ϕ is the flux, and ω is the angular speed

    An inverse measure is also sometimes used, which may be referred to as the speed constant.

    By Lenz's law, a running motor generates a back-EMF proportional to the RPM. Once the motor's rotational velocity is such that the back-EMF is equal to the battery voltage (also called DC line voltage), the motor reaches its limit speed.

    Motor Torque constant

    KT is the torque produced divided by armature current. It can be calculated from the motor velocity constant Kv.

    K T = τ I A = 60 2 π K V

    where I A is the armature current of the machine (SI units A ). KT is primarily used to calculate the armature current for a given torque demand:

    I A = τ K T

    The SI units for the torque constant are newton-metres per ampere (N-m/A). Since N-m = J, and A = C/s, then N-m/A = J-s/C = V-s (same units as back EMF constant).

    References

    Motor constants Wikipedia