“One of the customers that [Crouzet]
works with has a product that is an addition
for the dialysis machine, so it’s
able to administer the Venofer iron
with just the nurse doing the initial
injection. This frees up the nurse for
the five minutes she might be standing
there otherwise manually doing the
entire process.”
According to Morehead, other innovations
in recent years include making
motors more discreet, mobile and efficient.
“It boils down to a few key words:
quieter, conserving, controllable and
connected,” Morehead says about the
current state of medical motors. “Basically,
we’re seeing more and more interest
in quieter motors in the medical
market, and the interest is heightened
even further in the operating room
where there is an especially strong
incentive to reduce high-frequency
noises.
“On the conserving side, it’s in reference
to energy efficiency and batterypowered
equipment. When you’re
looking at devices that are portable,
energy efficiency becomes very important
so that you can get the greatest
running time between charges for the
equipment.
“Controllable is the fact that people
are wanting to operate equipment at
varying speeds and at the speeds that
are required by the task at hand.
“I think that plays into what we’re
seeing with the brushless motors a lot.”
Brush it Off
Since the dawn of Homo erectus, the
brushed DC motor has been aiding
two-legged primates tackle the enormity
of the planet earth.
OK, so maybe not.
Brushed motors don’t actually date
all the way back to the days of cave
paintings and Oldowan stone tools,
but close — DC distribution systems
were used for more than 100 years to
operate motors in commercial and industrial
buildings.
A brushed DC motor is an internally
commutated electric motor designed
to be run from a direct current power
source. They’re economical, but also
noisy and often in need of maintenance
because the brushes wear down
due to friction.
Slowly but surely, the brushless DC
motor — also called the direct drive motor or the electronically commutated
motor — has begun displacing
brushed motors in many applications.
And in terms of effective usage in
medical devices, brushless DC motors
have been a natural fit.
“Brushless motors have been around
a long while. It’s just that it takes a long
time to percolate to various locations,”
Jones says. “The brushless motor is the
best motor for torque and the smallest
motor for performance power for power,
so it has a lot of advantages.
“It’s linear, where induction motors
are not, so you have more current
and get the torque you want. You have
more voltage and you get more speed.
It’s better and it’s easier to control — so
people are figuring out a way to use it.”
Brushless motors became commercially
available in 1962, but were not
widely used in medical devices until
about 15 to 20 years ago, according to
Morehead.
A typical brushless motor has permanent
magnets which rotate around
a fixed armature, eliminating problems
associated with connecting current to
the moving armature. An electronic
controller, which continually switches
the phase to the windings to keep the
motor turning, replaces the commutator
assembly of the brushed DC motor..
The controller performs similar
timed power distribution by using a
solid-state circuit rather than the commutator
system.
“It used to be that you could buy a
brushless motor and then if you were
to buy a control to operate that motor
and vary the speed, the control might
cost as much as the motor,” Morehead
says. “That control was typically on a
separate circuit board on a bracket or
in a small enclosure that was separate
from the motor.
“I would say that in the late ’90s, early
2000s time frame, the state of electronic
development advanced to the
point where you were able to reduce
the size of the control. The other part
of that was in order to get electronics
to live, you had to be able to isolate the
electronic components from the heat
that would be produced by the motor.
Some of the early ventures to try to do
that were kind of short lived, because they would put a control board on a
motor generating heat and get premature
failure on the component.
“The thing was to figure out how to
properly isolate and provide the right
thermo-barrier there. I would say in
the last five to eight years, there’s been
a big growth in brushless motors with
integral electronic controls. In some
instances, that control can be used to
vary the speed of the motor and can
use various IO, as well. More recently,
that control capability has gone to positioning
controls, so basically you can
have the equivalent of a servo drive all
on the motor.
“That’s really become an important
growing area. It’s a much higher value
component.”
Brushless motors are used in CTscanners
and equipment related to
opening protective barriers in medical
environments such as an x-ray room,
but it’s their use in various pumps that
seem to be having the most influence
in the medical field.
“We tend to see, in terms of the types
of motors [Crouzet] produces, a lot of
interest in changing the type of motor
used in various pumping applications,”
Morehead says. “Some of the motors
we make are used in various surgical
procedures where the motor is pumping
a saline solution that provides a
kind of lubricant while the procedure
is being done.
“Of course, in all of this, the big thing
is reliability and the lifetime of the
product.”
There is no doubt that brushless motors
represent the future. For a moment,
though, let’s travel back to the
dark ages and posit a question:
Do brushed motors hold any sway in
today’s world?
The answer according to Morehead:
thanks to Crouzet, they certainly do.
“I sound kind of boastful, but there
haven’t been any real significant developments
in brushed DC motors in
probably 25 years,” he says. “[Crouzet’s
DCmind Brush] is one where we do
feel like it’s pretty significant, because
of the noise being reduced from something
like 60 decibels to 34 decibels,
and the increase of life can be three
times longer or more.
“The DCmind Brush is probably the
most innovative product on the market
on the brushed side.”
On the brushless motor side, Portescap
recently introduced a new addition
to its Ultra EC mini motor platform
— the 16 ECH brushless motor.
According to a press release, the 16
ECH was designed specifically to provide
an economic motor solution for
high performance applications. It’s
specifically optimized for high continuous
torque at low to medium speeds,
maximizing power between 40 K and
55 K rpm, and rated speed at approximately
60 K rpm.
The advantages of the 16ECH make
it a great match for low speed, high
torque end applications, or applications
in the medium speed range (30 K
to 55 K rpm). The 16ECH is a good
choice for geared applications because
of its minimal speed drop and low motor
heating under load. Additionally,
the 16ECH’s efficiency, power density
and long life make it an alternative for
a brush DC motor solution, the press
release said.
A Quick Look through the
Crystal Ball
Now that we’ve touched on both the
past and present of medical motors,
you may be asking yourself, “But what
of the future?”
Morehead said it’s closer than you
may think.
“I think one thing you’ll see more of
is the magnetic pump drive for gear
pumps,” Morehead says. “There aren’t
many companies who are doing that
and we’re a player in that. We’re actually
making a brushless motor without
any [internal] moving parts.
“It’s a brushless motor with variable
speed control mounted to it, but
there’s nothing rotating within the motor.
Rather, instead of the rotor rotating
like it would in a regular brushless motor,
it’s replaced by a magnetic cylinder
that couples to the gear pump. Therefore,
the gear pump is able to operate
without any seal so there’s no leakage
or contamination.
“This makes for a more precise dispensing
and calibration than you
would have with a typical peristaltic
pump.”
Looking through his crystal ball,
Morehead saw that these magnetic
pump drives would be a prominent fixture
of the medical market in the next
several years.
And, presumably, he also saw himself
healthy as a horse, devoid of any
nagging head cold or annoying throat
condition.
Either way, it would seem that happy,
healthy days are surely ahead.
For more information:
Crouzet Motors
Phone: (214) 906-0182
www.crouzet.com
Incremotion Associates, Inc.
Phone: (805) 496-2621
www.incremotion.com