Stepper motors consist
of a permanent magnetic rotating shaft, called the rotor, and electromagnets on
the stationary portion that surrounds the motor, called the stator. Figure 1 illustrates
one complete rotation of a stepper motor. At position 1, we can see that the
rotor is beginning at the upper electromagnet, which is currently active (has
voltage applied to it). To move the rotor clockwise (CW), the upper
electromagnet is deactivated and the right electromagnet is activated, causing
the rotor to move 90 degrees CW, aligning itself with the active magnet. This
process is repeated in the same manner at the south and west electromagnets
until we once again reach the starting position.
Figure 1
In the above example,
we used a motor with a resolution of 90 degrees or demonstration purposes. In
reality, this would not be a very practical motor for most applications. The
average stepper motor's resolution -- the amount of degrees rotated per pulse --
is much higher than this. For example, a motor with a resolution of 5 degrees
would move its rotor 5 degrees per step, thereby requiring 72 pulses (steps) to
complete a full 360 degree rotation.
You may double the
resolution of some motors by a process known as "half-stepping".
Instead of switching the next electromagnet in the rotation on one at a time,
with half stepping you turn on both electromagnets, causing an equal attraction
between, thereby doubling the resolution. As you can see in Figure 2,
in the first position only the upper electromagnet is active, and the rotor is
drawn completely to it. In position 2, both the top and right electromagnets
are active, causing the rotor to position itself between the two active poles.
Finally, in position 3, the top magnet is deactivated and the rotor is drawn
all the way right. This process can then be repeated for the entire rotation.
Figure 2
There are several
types of stepper motors. 4-wire stepper motors contain only two electromagnets,
however the operation is more complicated than those with three or four
magnets, because the driving circuit must be able to reverse the current after
each step. For our purposes, we will be using a 6-wire motor.
Unlike our example
motors which rotated 90 degrees per step, real-world motors employ a series of
mini-poles on the stator and rotor to increase resolution. Although this may
seem to add more complexity to the process of driving the motors, the operation
is identical to the simple 90 degree motor we used in our example. An example
of a multipole motor can be seen in Figure 3.
In position 1, the north pole of the rotor's permanent magnet is aligned with
the south pole of the stator's electromagnet. Note that multiple positions are
aligned at once. In position 2, the upper electromagnet is deactivated and the
next one to its immediate left is activated, causing the rotor to rotate a
precise amount of degrees. In this example, after eight steps the sequence
repeats.
Figure 3
The specific stepper
motor we are using for our experiments (ST-02: 5VDC, 5 degrees per step) has 6
wires coming out of the casing. If we follow Figure 5,
the electrical equivalent of the stepper motor, we can see that 3 wires go to
each half of the coils, and that the coil windings are connected in pairs. This
is true for all four-phase stepper motors.
Figure 4
However, if you do not
have an equivalent diagram for the motor you want to use, you can make a resistance
chart to decipher the mystery connections. There is a 13 ohm resistance between
the center-tap wire and each end lead, and 26 ohms between the two end leads.
Wires originating from separate coils are not connected, and therefore would
not read on the ohm meter.
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