Servomotor

A servomotor is a rotary actuator or linear actuator that allows for precise control of angular or linear position, velocity and acceleration.[1] It consists of a suitable motor coupled to a sensor for position feedback. It also requires a relatively sophisticated controller, often a dedicated module designed specifically for use with servomotors.

Industrial servomotor
The grey/green cylinder is the brush-type DC motor. The black section at the bottom contains the planetary reduction gear, and the black object on top of the motor is the optical rotary encoder for position feedback. This is the steering actuator of a large robot vehicle.
Industrial servomotors and gearboxes, with standardised flange mountings for interchangeability

Servomotors are not a specific class of motor, although the term servomotor is often used to refer to a motor suitable for use in a closed-loop control system.

Servomotors are used in applications such as robotics, CNC machinery or automated manufacturing.

Mechanism

A servomotor is a closed-loop servomechanism that uses position feedback to control its motion and final position. The input to its control is a signal (either analogue or digital) representing the position commanded for the output shaft.

The motor is paired with some type of position encoder to provide position and speed feedback. In the simplest case, only the position is measured. The measured position of the output is compared to the command position, the external input to the controller. If the output position differs from that required, an error signal is generated which then causes the motor to rotate in either direction, as needed to bring the output shaft to the appropriate position. As the positions approach, the error signal reduces to zero and the motor stops.

The very simplest servomotors use position-only sensing via a potentiometer and bang-bang control of their motor; the motor always rotates at full speed (or is stopped). This type of servomotor is not widely used in industrial motion control, but it forms the basis of the simple and cheap servos used for radio-controlled models.

More sophisticated servomotors use optical rotary encoders to measure the speed of the output shaft[2] and a variable-speed drive to control the motor speed.[3] Both of these enhancements, usually in combination with a PID control algorithm, allow the servomotor to be brought to its commanded position more quickly and more precisely, with less overshooting.[4]

Servomotors vs. stepper motors

Servomotors are generally used as a high-performance alternative to the stepper motor. Stepper motors have some inherent ability to control position, as they have built-in output steps. This often allows them to be used as an open-loop position control, without any feedback encoder, as their drive signal specifies the number of steps of movement to rotate, but for this the controller needs to 'know' the position of the stepper motor on power up. Therefore, on first power up, the controller will have to activate the stepper motor and turn it to a known position, e.g. until it activates an end limit switch. This can be observed when switching on an inkjet printer; the controller will move the ink jet carrier to the extreme left and right to establish the end positions. A servomotor will immediately turn to whatever angle the controller instructs it to, regardless of the initial position at power up.

The lack of feedback of a stepper motor limits its performance, as the stepper motor can only drive a load that is well within its capacity, otherwise missed steps under load may lead to positioning errors and the system may have to be restarted or recalibrated. The encoder and controller of a servomotor are an additional cost, but they optimise the performance of the overall system (for all of speed, power and accuracy) relative to the capacity of the basic motor. With larger systems, where a powerful motor represents an increasing proportion of the system cost, servomotors have the advantage.

There has been increasing popularity in closed loop stepper motors in recent years. They act like servomotors but have some differences in their software control to get smooth motion. The main benefit of a closed loop stepper motor is its relatively low cost. There is also no need to tune the PID controller on a closed loop stepper system.[5]

Many applications, such as laser cutting machines, may be offered in two ranges, the low-priced range using stepper motors and the high-performance range using servomotors.[6]

Encoders

The first servomotors were developed with synchros as their encoders.[7] Much work was done with these systems in the development of radar and anti-aircraft artillery during World War II.[8]

Simple servomotors may use resistive potentiometers as their position encoder. These are only used at the very simplest and cheapest level, and are in close competition with stepper motors. They suffer from wear and electrical noise in the potentiometer track. Although it would be possible to electrically differentiate their position signal to obtain a speed signal, PID controllers that can make use of such a speed signal generally warrant a more precise encoder.

Modern servomotors use rotary encoders, either absolute or incremental. Absolute encoders can determine their position at power-on, but are more complicated and expensive. Incremental encoders are simpler, cheaper and work at faster speeds. Incremental systems, like stepper motors, often combine their inherent ability to measure intervals of rotation with a simple zero-position sensor to set their position at start-up.

Instead of servomotors, sometimes a motor with a separate, external linear encoder is used.[9] These motor + linear encoder systems avoid inaccuracies in the drivetrain between the motor and linear carriage, but their design is made more complicated as they are no longer a pre-packaged factory-made system.

Motors

The type of motor is not critical to a servomotor and different types may be used. At the simplest, brushed permanent magnet DC motors are used, owing to their simplicity and low cost. Small industrial servomotors are typically electronically commutated brushless motors.[10] For large industrial servomotors, AC induction motors are typically used, often with variable frequency drives to allow control of their speed. For ultimate performance in a compact package, brushless AC motors with permanent magnet fields are used, effectively large versions of Brushless DC electric motors.[11]

Drive modules for servomotors are a standard industrial component. Their design is a branch of power electronics, usually based on a three-phase MOSFET or IGBT H bridge. These standard modules accept a single direction and pulse count (rotation distance) as input. They may also include over-temperature monitoring, over-torque and stall detection features.[12] As the encoder type, gearhead ratio and overall system dynamics are application specific, it is more difficult to produce the overall controller as an off-the-shelf module and so these are often implemented as part of the main controller.

Control

Most modern servomotors are designed and supplied around a dedicated controller module from the same manufacturer. Controllers may also be developed around microcontrollers in order to reduce cost for large-volume applications.[13]

Integrated servomotors

Integrated servomotors are designed so as to include the motor, driver, encoder and associated electronics into a single package.[14][15]

gollark: We don't actually need paired fluxducts, due to that quirk of their transfer rates. I think.
gollark: Anyway, we can probably just run some itemducts in the planned power cabling tunnels, so it's not too problematic.
gollark: Unless you make the reactor building very big.
gollark: For wiring from the reactor to cells, we can afford most things.
gollark: So if you feed the reactor output straight into a cell and make the cell output into three fluxducts, you could have the actual long range wiring carry all the power, but each machine would only receive 1kRF/t max unless you have a bunch of connections on that machine.

References

  1. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2012-09-07. Retrieved 2012-10-12.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. Suk-Hwan Suh; Seong Kyoon Kang; Dae-Hyuk Chung; Ian Stroud (22 August 2008). Theory and Design of CNC Systems. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 11–. ISBN 978-1-84800-336-1. Archived from the original on 21 March 2017.
  3. Jacek F. Gieras (3 June 2011). Permanent Magnet Motor Technology: Design and Applications, Third Edition. CRC Press. pp. 26–. ISBN 978-1-4398-5901-8. Archived from the original on 21 March 2017.
  4. Ralf Der; Georg Martius (11 January 2012). The Playful Machine: Theoretical Foundation and Practical Realization of Self-Organizing Robots. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 302–. ISBN 978-3-642-20253-7. Archived from the original on 20 March 2017.
  5. "Fastech Closed Loop Stepper Motors". Fastech Korea. Archived from the original on 2015-03-17.
  6. "Legend Elite laser series". Epilog Laser. Archived from the original on 2012-08-25. Servo motors are incorporated in both the X and Y axes of every Legend Elite Series laser. These motors are known for their fast acceleration and deceleration speeds.
  7. Upson, A.R.; Batchelor, J.H. (1978) [1965]. Synchro Engineering Handbook. Beckenham: Muirhead Vactric Components. pp. 7, 67–90.
  8. "Chapter 10". Naval Ordnance and Gunnery. Volume 1. US Navy. 1957. Archived from the original on 2007-12-02.
  9. "Accupoint™ Linear Encoders". Epilog Laser. Archived from the original on 2012-10-07.
  10. "Brushless DC motor cores for servomotors". Maxon Motor. Archived from the original on 2013-12-25.
  11. "Compact Dynamic Brushless Servo Motor". Moog Inc. Archived from the original on 2012-10-13.
  12. "Brushless PWM Servo Amplifiers" (PDF). Advanced Motion Control. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2014-11-27.
  13. Chowdhury, Rasel. "Color detector and separator device". Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  14. Max A. Denket (2006). Frontiers in Robotics Research. Nova Publishers. pp. 44–. ISBN 978-1-60021-097-6. Archived from the original on 2018-05-13.
  15. Jacek F. Gieras (22 January 2002). Permanent Magnet Motor Technology: Design and Applications, Second Edition,. CRC Press. pp. 283–. ISBN 978-0-8247-4394-9. Archived from the original on 13 May 2018.
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