Showing posts with label synchronous motor applications. Show all posts
Showing posts with label synchronous motor applications. Show all posts

Thursday, 26 March 2026

Synchronous Motor Working Principle (Complete Guide with Diagram & Applications)

 

⚡ Synchronous Motor Working Principle (Complete Guide with Diagram & Applications)

🔍 Introduction

A synchronous motor is one of the most important machines used in electrical engineering and industrial applications. Unlike other motors, it runs at a constant speed (synchronous speed), making it highly efficient and reliable.

In this blog, you will learn:

  • What is a synchronous motor
  • Working principle (step-by-step)
  • Construction
  • Advantages & disadvantages
  • Real-life applications

📌 What is a Synchronous Motor?

A synchronous motor is an AC motor that operates at a speed exactly equal to the synchronous speed of the rotating magnetic field produced by the stator.

👉 This means there is no slip between the stator field and rotor.




⚙️ Synchronous Motor Working Principle

The working principle of a synchronous motor is based on magnetic locking between stator and rotor fields.

🧠 Simple Concept:

  • The stator produces a rotating magnetic field.
  • The rotor (excited by DC supply) produces a constant magnetic field.
  • These two magnetic fields lock together.
  • As a result, the rotor rotates at the same speed as the stator field.

🔄 Step-by-Step Working

1. Stator Operation

  • When a 3-phase AC supply is given to the stator, it produces a rotating magnetic field (RMF).

2. Rotor Excitation

  • The rotor is supplied with DC current, creating a steady magnetic field.

3. Magnetic Locking

  • The rotor aligns with the rotating magnetic field of the stator.
  • This alignment creates a synchronous motion.

4. Constant Speed

  • Once synchronized, the motor runs at constant speed, regardless of load (within limits).

📐 Synchronous Speed Formula

The speed of the motor is given by:

Ns=120fPN_s = \frac{120f}{P}

Where:

  • NsN_s = Synchronous speed (RPM)
  • ff = Supply frequency (Hz)
  • PP = Number of poles

👉 Example:
If frequency = 50 Hz and poles = 4
→ Speed = 1500 RPM


🏗️ Construction of Synchronous Motor

1. Stator

  • Similar to induction motor
  • Contains 3-phase winding

2. Rotor

Two types:

  • Salient Pole Rotor (low-speed machines)
  • Cylindrical Rotor (high-speed machines)

⚡ Advantages of Synchronous Motor

✔ Runs at constant speed
✔ High efficiency
✔ Power factor correction capability
✔ Suitable for heavy industrial loads


❌ Disadvantages

✖ Not self-starting
✖ Requires DC excitation
✖ More complex design
✖ Higher initial cost


🏭 Applications of Synchronous Motor

Synchronous motors are widely used in:

  • Power plants
  • Cement industries
  • Steel manufacturing
  • Compressors and pumps
  • HVAC systems
  • Power factor correction (as synchronous condenser)

💡 Why Synchronous Motor is Important?

Because it maintains constant speed, it is ideal for precision applications where speed variation is not acceptable.

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