Because of their similarities, the principles of switched and variable reluctance motors are described together here. They are both synchronous motors similar to the brushless permanent magnet motors noted above except that the rotors are made from laminated "soft" magnetic materials, shaped to form salient poles.
- Operating Principle
When a piece of magnetic material is free to move in a magnetic field, it will will align itself with the magnetic field to minimise the reluctance of the magnetic circuit. To put it another way the piece will orient itself towards the magnetic pole creating the field. (This also has the effect of maximising the inductance of the field coil). The torque on the rotor created in this way is called the reluctance torque.

When the spaces or notches between the rotor poles are opposite the stator poles the magnetic circuit of the motor has a high magnetic reluctance, but when the rotor poles are aligned with the stator poles the magnetic circuit has a low magnetic reluctance. When a stator pole pair is energised the nearest rotor pole pair will be pulled into alignment with the energised stator poles to minimize the reluctance path through the machine. As with brushless permanent magnet motors, rotary motion is made possible by energising the stator poles sequentially causing the rotor to step to the next energised pole.
A polyphase inverter energises appropriate pole pairs based on shaft position. The excitation of the stator poles must be timed precisely to correspond with the rotor position so that it occurs just as the rotor pole is approaching. The reluctance motor thus requires position feedback to control the motor phase commutation. This feedback control can be provided by using position sensors such as encoders or Hall effect sensors to feedback the rotor angle to trigger the commutator at the appropriate point .
Sensorless position control is also possible at the expense of more complex electronics and software.
Motor torque and efficiency are optimised by synchronising the controller switching phase with the rotor position so that the torque angle is held at its maximum of 90 degrees.
Complex control electronics have been simplified by the availability of low cost DSPs

Practical motor designs are doubly salient, (both stator and rotor have salient poles) with multiple stator and rotor poles. The rotor however usually has fewer poles than the stator to enable self starting and bidirectional control.
Because the rotor is not a permanent magnet but is constructed from iron, no back EMF is generated, allowing the motor to reach much higher speeds than with similar permanent magnet motors.
The motor does not require sinusoidal exciting waveforms for efficient operation, so it can maintain higher torque and efficiency over broader speed ranges than is possible with other advanced variable-speed systems.
Because of the double saliency, the design suffers from torque ripple, structural resonances and acoustic noise and various methods such as multiple poles and pole shaping are needed to smooth out these variations.
The switched reluctance machine can also be driven as a generator.
- Characteristics
No I2R loss in the rotor.
Inert rotor. No permanent magnet.
Compact size and low weight.
Low cost.
Efficiencies greater than 90% possible.
Inexpensive and easy to manufacture.
Lowest construction complexity of any motor. Many stamped metal elements.
High reliability (no brush wear). Rugged construction.
High efficiency.
High start-up torque and high speed operation possible.
- Applications
Available with ratings up to thousands of Amps and hundreds of kiloVolts.
The automotive industry now makes extensive use of variable reluctance motors for applications such as traction drives, power steering systems, pumps and windscreen wipers.
3 or 4 phase motors used for scooters and fans.
High speed pumps and compressors.
Household appliances.
See also Integrated Starter Generator.
Stepping Motors
The stepper motor which includes some of the features of the modern switched reluctance motor was invented and patented in the 1920’s in Aberdeen by C.L. Walker
A stepping motor is a special case of a variable reluctance motor or a permanent magnet brushless DC motor. Instead of being fed with a constant, repetitive stream of pulses the motor can be stepped one pulse at a time enabling the motor to make very precise angular rotations.The motor is reversible, positive going pulses causing a rotation in one direction while negative going pulses drive the motor in the opposite direction.
If the motor is coupled with a leadscrew it can be used to make precise linear displacements.
The pulses may be generated by a Voltage Controlled Oscillator (VCO), but the design is particularly suited to digital and microprocessor controllers.
All of these factors make the stepping motor ideal for industrial robotics, machine tools and process controllers.
The stepping angle due to each pulse is given by:
Step angle = 360°
(rotor teeth) X (stator phases)
Position control is possible simply by counting the pulses and complex closed loop feedback systems are not necessary for the basic operation. More precise control (smaller angles) can be achieved by stacking and offsetting several rotors and stators along a single rotor shaft.
For very long movements it may be desirable to control the speed during the operation, accelerating up to a maximum slew speed then decelerating as the target is approached. For such applications a closed loop speed control may be added.
Stepper motors are categorized as permanent-magnet (PM), variable reluctance (VR) or hybrid (a combination of PM and VR).
- Characteristics
Precise position control.
Simple open loop position control.
Amenable to simple computer control.
- Applications
Used in computer plotters and printers.
Industrial controls.
Numerically controlled machine tools.
Robotic equipment.