ADVERTISEMENT
You will be redirected to your destination in 10 seconds.
Electronics Industry Search

Polling Question

Should the government bail out U.S. automakers?

  • Yes
  • No



View previous polls
Advertisement
Email
Print
Reprints/License
RSS
Article tools sponsored by

Coming soon: 10-mm stepper motors

Joseph Rajendran, Singapore -- Design News, July 16, 2001

Singapore—Stepper motors have found a new lease on life, thanks to miniaturization and increased automation. Advances in magnetization and improved materials technologies have helped shrink frame sizes from 60 to 15 mm. By 2002, predicts Thomson Airpax Mechatronics Pte. Ltd., 10-mm motors will become part of the mainstream market.

Fresh on the heels of having developed customer-centric applications for its 55- and 44-mm slim motors, the company has now introduced its 20-mm stepper motors into commercial production. Strong understanding of motor stators, improvements in motor assembly, and advances in material technologies—coupled with better coil design—have contributed to the improved stepper motor offerings, says Engineering Director Eric Chia.

Explaining further, Chia states that the three key elements instrumental in a stepper are the motor stator, motor assembly, and the manner in which the coil is designed. Motor stators basically refer to the pole configuration, which is instrumental to the performance of the motor. Thomson's key edge here, Chia believes, is the company's big database of information in having optimized the performance of the end product based on various pole configurations. Likewise, motor assembly is dependent largely on the saturation of magnets, and Thomson has been able to add depth because of its experimentation with neo-magnetic technology. The third element of coil design really depends on the application of the stepper. Chia notes that Thomson is able to enhance performance because of the variety of places where its products have ended up.

With these building blocks, Thomson's anchor offerings now are the new 55-mm, 42L series, 44-mm, and the 20-mm steppers. The 7.5-degree 55-mm stepper features a high torque-to-inertia rating. Offering both unipolar and bipolar versions, this stepper produces 176.5 mNm pull-out torque when driven with a 24V dc chopper (p/n 55M048D1B-5V bipolar version). Having a 4.8W input power per winding, ideal applications include paper feed/sorting functions in printers and wheel positioning in gaming machines.

The 3.6-degree 44-mm slim stepper, producing 30 mNm pull-out torque, is targeted at applications which have space constraints. Hence, it will ideally fit into medical design applications like vitro diagnostic equipment, blood analyzers, and pharmaceutical packaging equipment. And, the newest product to join the family is the 20-mm stepper, whose preliminary specifications include a minimum holding torque of 11.30 mNm and detent torque of 3.53 mNm.

Chia adds that Thomson is able to deliver a prototype for an application within two weeks. "We have developed quite a number of specific products for customers such that 95% of the time, we have a product the customer wants," he says. "For most standard and non-unique applications, we will be able to offer a solution because we have an in-house team dedicated to re-engineering products to customer needs."

Looking ahead, the company is not sitting still as its 10-mm stepper is already on the drawing board. Chia expects the stepper to be ideal for applications like vibrating pagers, which is expected to be a big market in China. However, he cautions, this won't happen before the end of 2001.

For more information about stepper motors from Thomson Airpax Mechatronics: Enter 519

  • related stories
  • resource center
  • by this author
 
 
Advertisement

Sponsored Content

Technology Marketplace

Email
Print
Reprints/License
RSS
Article tools sponsored by
Find a supplier on oemsuppliersearch.com

Talkback


We would love your feedback!


» Submit talk back
Advertisement
Advertisement

Design News Partner Zones

AnarkCAD/CAE Model Clean-Up: Reduce Iterative Cycles
This webinar featured research and survey results related to problems associated with preparing CAD geometry for CAE applications.  We discussed how Recipe-Based Automation can help create "just-in-time" CAE-ready geometry each time a cad model is updated. Watch the Presentation


Light Matters: Systems Level Approach to HBLED illumination applications
Its good practice to apply a systems-level approach to high-brightness LED (HBLED) illumination applications. Minimally, the system includes the optical, thermal and electrical characteristics of the of the HBLED, the lens (if any) which is built-in to its package, secondary optics such as external plastic lenses/reflectors to direct the light as your application requires and power driver electronics. Read More


Design Engineers' Portal for Sensing and Machine Safety
Whatever industry you're in, or whatever product you manufacture, the right sensors to automate your plant, and to improve your overall efficiency, quality and safety are a must. You'll find Banner Engineering to be an amazing resource of products, training and people with expertise.

Design News Partner Zone Directory »

Please visit these other Reed Business sites