The slip mechanism: why one loss source defines the efficiency gap
The efficiency difference between synchronous and asynchronous motor drives originates from a single physical principle: slip. Asynchronous induction motors require the rotor to lag behind the stator’s rotating magnetic field — this lag, called slip, is the mechanism by which electromagnetic torque is produced. Without slip, there is no torque. The consequence is that rotor copper losses are continuous and unavoidable in steady-state operation. Synchronous motors eliminate this mechanism entirely: the rotor locks to the stator field frequency, producing torque with no steady-state rotor copper losses.
As confirmed by research from Central Queensland University (2019), the induction motor cannot produce torque at exactly synchronous speed because slip ceases to exist at that point — a fundamental physical constraint that distinguishes it from synchronous machines. This inherent slip makes the induction motor self-starting, which is a practical advantage, but also introduces rotor copper losses that are absent in synchronous drives. The same study emphasises that torque estimation is essential for energy-efficient variable speed drives in heavy industrial applications such as conveyors and motorised lathes, where uncontrolled maximum torque can cause equipment damage.
Asynchronous induction motors require rotor slip to produce torque, which generates continuous rotor copper losses in steady-state operation. Synchronous motors lock the rotor to the supply frequency, eliminating this loss mechanism entirely and achieving inherently higher efficiency at rated load.
This structural loss difference is not marginal. It cascades into every aspect of drive system design: the control algorithms needed to compensate for it, the thermal management required to dissipate it, and the efficiency curves that determine total cost of ownership over a motor’s operating life. According to data cited by Lipetsk State Technical University (2020), asynchronous induction motors represent approximately 70–80% of all industrial electric motors in operation — meaning the aggregate energy cost of rotor copper losses across global industry is substantial. Standards bodies including IEC and IEEE have progressively tightened motor efficiency classifications (IE3, IE4) precisely in response to this loss profile.
Synchronous drive architectures: PMSM, SynRM, and sensorless control
Synchronous motor drives for industrial applications divide into three principal architectures: permanent magnet synchronous motors (PMSMs), synchronous reluctance motors (SynRMs), and wound-rotor synchronous machines. Each trades off cost, efficiency, and control complexity differently, but all share the slip-free torque production that defines the synchronous family.
PMSM drives are the most widely patented synchronous technology in this dataset. Hitachi Industrial Equipment Systems demonstrated in a 2020 patent that a PM motor drive system can achieve high-performance control characteristics even in low-velocity regions by detecting the release voltage of non-energised phases and dynamically adjusting switching timing based on estimated load torque. This sensorless position estimation approach is critical for industrial cost reduction without sacrificing precision — eliminating the resolver or encoder that would otherwise be required. Mitsubishi Electric Corporation’s parallel PMSM architecture, patented in both Japanese and US jurisdictions (2020–2021), takes a different approach: a controller performs stability judgment processing across multiple parallel-connected synchronous motors, dynamically selecting the number of motors to drive and their operating speed based on higher-order system commands. This prevents over-provisioning of motor capacity — a direct system-level efficiency gain relevant to HVAC and blower applications.
A SynRM is a synchronous motor that produces torque through rotor reluctance — the tendency of the rotor to align with the stator field — rather than through permanent magnets or rotor windings. This eliminates the cost and supply-chain risk of rare-earth magnets while retaining the slip-free operation that gives synchronous drives their efficiency advantage. SynRMs require specific control strategies for different speed regions and have been confirmed as viable alternatives to induction motors at 2.2 kW, 4 kW, and 5.5 kW power levels by Istanbul Technical University (2019).
ABB Schweiz AG has patented parallel synchronous machine architectures (2023–2024) that use either vector control with closed-loop current controllers or scalar control with open-loop variable frequency drives (VFDs), maintaining net active power balance and rejecting power perturbations at the common node. This approach is particularly relevant for high-power industrial pump and compressor stations where multiple machines must operate in synchronism. The efficiency of synchronous drives is also addressed at the motor level: IRISMAN MH Equipment Corp.’s 2018 patent describes a closed-loop efficiency correction technique involving real-time measurement of the phase angle between applied voltage and the induced electromotive force, then regulating excitation current to return the operating angle to its optimal preset value — a direct analog to maximum power factor point tracking.
The SynRM’s cost competitiveness is its defining advantage. RWTH Aachen University (ISEA) has proposed modular, segmented SynRM designs for direct-drive applications scalable from kilowatts to high-power levels, with cost optimisation over belt-driven systems. The University of Padova’s work on model-free current loop autotuning (2020) and model-free predictive current control for pump applications (2021) removes the need for motor parameter identification, making high-efficiency synchronous drives more accessible for industrial deployment without specialist commissioning expertise.
Explore the full patent landscape for synchronous and asynchronous motor drives across all assignees and jurisdictions.
Search Motor Drive Patents in PatSnap Eureka →Optimising the asynchronous installed base with frequency converter control
Because asynchronous induction motors represent approximately 70–80% of all industrial electric motors in operation, frequency converter optimisation is the highest-impact near-term energy saving strategy available to global industry — even if synchronous drives are more efficient per unit. The question is not whether to replace every induction motor, but how to extract the maximum efficiency from the machines already installed.
Asynchronous induction motors represent approximately 70–80% of all industrial electric motors in operation globally, according to data cited by Lipetsk State Technical University (2020). Frequency converter control is therefore the highest-impact near-term energy saving strategy across global industry, even as synchronous drives gain ground in new installations.
Research from Izhevsk State Agricultural Academy (2019) demonstrates that scalar control of asynchronous drives powered by frequency converters can minimise winding losses by optimising flux level in steady-state operation. The study models the asynchronous motor as a series network of stator and rotor conductivities, enabling loss minimisation without requiring complex vector control hardware. A 2021 follow-up from the same institution further develops scalar control synthesis to minimise energy efficiency criteria while maintaining control system stability — an approach well-suited for the majority of industrial installations that lack high-dynamic-performance requirements.
Light-load efficiency is a particular weakness of asynchronous drives. Research from Qingdao University of Technology (2019) proposes a hybrid search method combining loss model analysis with golden-section search to optimise asynchronous motor efficiency under light-load conditions. The method achieves faster convergence than pure search-based approaches and does not require precise motor parameter knowledge — a practical advantage in industrial environments where motor parameters drift with temperature and ageing. This matters because many industrial processes — fans, pumps, compressors — spend significant operating hours at partial load, where induction motor efficiency drops most sharply.
“Frequency converter optimisation remains the highest-impact near-term energy saving strategy across global industry — given that 70–80% of industrial motors are asynchronous.”
On the patent side, a 2014 patent by KLAES, NORBERT RUDIGER describes a systematic approach to generating an optimal control characteristic curve for asynchronous motors: measuring motor size, assigning it to predefined operating ranges, and iteratively adjusting control parameters until a predetermined energy criterion is satisfied — effectively an automated efficiency tuning algorithm for deployed asynchronous drives. Sector-specific applications confirm the breadth of this challenge: research from Tashkent State Technical University (2020) confirms that frequency regulation of asynchronous motors in loom applications produces measurable energy savings by increasing the coefficient of efficiency and reducing power losses. Fergana Polytechnical Institute (2017) similarly validates an energy-saving management system for fan-law loaded drives through physical experimentation. The International Energy Agency has consistently identified electric motor systems as the largest single end-use of electricity in industry, reinforcing why even incremental converter efficiency gains across the asynchronous installed base represent substantial aggregate energy savings.
Head-to-head: starting behaviour, partial load, and control complexity
Three practical engineering dimensions differentiate synchronous and asynchronous drives most sharply in real-world industrial specification: starting behaviour, partial-load efficiency, and control system complexity. Each represents a genuine trade-off, not a clear win for one technology.
Starting behaviour
Asynchronous motors are self-starting: slip at standstill generates induction torque without any auxiliary circuit, and the motor accelerates naturally to near-synchronous speed. Synchronous motors historically required auxiliary starting means. A General Electric patent from 1930 documents this as a “well known inherent characteristic” — the synchronous torque of the motor is “practically negligible” except at synchronous speed, requiring induction motor-like squirrel cage windings on the rotor for starting assistance. Modern inverter-fed synchronous drives have largely resolved this limitation by ramping the output frequency from zero, but the starting challenge remains relevant in line-start configurations.
University Goce Delcev (2020) addressed this directly, proposing a redesigned rotor with flux barriers and permanent magnets to enable direct-on-line starting comparable to induction motors while retaining synchronous efficiency and power factor advantages. This “line-start permanent magnet” approach is the most direct path to synchronous efficiency in applications where the electrical supply is connected directly without a frequency converter. A parallel approach from the Scientific and Technical Centre “Electromechanical Systems” (2019) concludes that reconstructing only the active rotor section of a standard induction motor frame with high-coercive permanent magnets allows the resulting machine to achieve synchronous motor efficiency while preserving the mechanical form factor of general-purpose asynchronous motors — a cost-effective path for industrial retrofitting without replacing the entire motor assembly.
Synchronous motors historically required auxiliary starting mechanisms because synchronous torque is practically negligible except at synchronous speed, as documented in a General Electric patent from 1930. Modern line-start permanent magnet designs with flux-barrier rotors, as described by University Goce Delcev (2020), can achieve direct-on-line starting comparable to induction motors while retaining synchronous efficiency advantages.
Partial-load efficiency
At partial load, the efficiency gap between synchronous and asynchronous drives widens considerably. Qingdao University of Technology’s 2019 research explicitly quantifies that asynchronous motor efficiency “decreases significantly under light load” — a well-known limitation that has driven industrial interest in synchronous alternatives. PM synchronous drives equipped with loss minimisation controllers, such as those described in a Weatherford/Lamb patent (2008) for electric submersible pump applications, actively monitor output power and adjust drive current to maintain minimum energy consumption at fixed speed — a continuous online optimisation that is simpler to implement in synchronous machines due to the deterministic rotor position.
Control complexity
Asynchronous motor drives with scalar (V/f) control are the simplest and cheapest to implement, requiring no rotor position feedback. Research from the University of Banja Luka (2010) notes that for HVAC and similar low-dynamic-performance applications, constant V/f control with simple efficiency optimisation is the most common and cost-effective solution. Field-oriented control (FOC) for induction motors adds complexity and requires speed or flux estimation, but remains within reach of standard industrial drive hardware.
Synchronous drives — particularly PMSMs and SynRMs — generally require rotor position information, either from a physical resolver or encoder, or through sensorless estimation techniques. Hamilton Sundstrand’s 2019 patent on synchronous disturbance suppression in variable speed motor drives illustrates the additional signal processing required. TMEIC Corporation’s 2025 patent addresses this by defining two control regions — one prioritising current control linearity and another prioritising non-linearity requirements — selected dynamically based on motor control state. The trend across the synchronous drive literature is clearly toward sensorless control and autonomous self-calibration, reducing the commissioning burden that has historically made synchronous drives more expensive to deploy. According to WIPO patent data, sensorless synchronous drive control is among the fastest-growing sub-categories within the broader electric motor drive patent class.
The University of Padova’s model-free current loop autotuning for SynRM drives (2020) and model-free predictive current control for pump applications (2021) remove the need for motor parameter identification. This makes high-efficiency synchronous drives more accessible for industrial deployment without specialist commissioning expertise — a significant shift in the practical trade-off between synchronous and asynchronous drive selection.
Hybrid drives and innovation trends shaping the next generation
The most sophisticated response to the synchronous/asynchronous trade-off is not to choose one technology but to combine both in a single drivetrain, allocating torque dynamically based on real-time efficiency optimisation. American Axle & Manufacturing’s patents (2020–2021) describe an electronic drive unit containing at least one synchronous motor and at least one asynchronous motor, controlled independently via a blending map that allocates torque output percentages based on real-time efficiency optimisation.
In these hybrid systems, the controller varies the respective magnitudes of rotary power from each motor type “over a significant portion of the operating range” to maximise combined efficiency — exploiting the fact that synchronous motors are more efficient at low-to-medium loads while asynchronous motors may offer advantages in high-slip transient conditions. The blending map is stored in non-volatile memory and selected in response to different torque request input signals, enabling real-time operating-point-aware switching between motor types. This architecture is currently most developed in electric vehicle drive systems, but the underlying control philosophy is applicable to any multi-motor industrial installation.
American Axle & Manufacturing’s 2020–2021 patents describe hybrid drive systems containing both synchronous and asynchronous motors, using stored blending maps to allocate torque between motor types based on real-time efficiency optimisation. These systems achieve combined efficiency that neither motor type can achieve alone across the full torque-speed operating envelope.
Key assignee activity in the dataset reflects distinct strategic positions. Mitsubishi Electric Corporation is the most active assignee for synchronous motor drive systems, holding multiple active patents in both US and EP jurisdictions (2020–2025) covering multi-motor parallel drive architectures with stability judgment and selective motor engagement for HVAC and blower applications. ABB Schweiz AG is a significant contributor in high-power synchronous machine control, with active patents on parallel synchronous machine drives using both vector control and scalar VFD approaches. Hitachi Industrial Equipment Systems maintains a long-standing focus on PM synchronous motor drives for low-speed high-performance applications, with sensorless commutation switching based on release voltage detection and load torque estimation. Academic research from institutions in Russia, Uzbekistan, and Kazakhstan forms a substantial body of work on frequency-controlled asynchronous drives, reflecting the continued dominance of induction motors in those industrial regions.
The broader innovation trajectory points toward three converging trends. First, sensorless control is becoming the default for synchronous drives, removing the cost and reliability burden of physical position sensors. Second, model-free and self-tuning control algorithms are reducing the specialist knowledge required to commission and maintain synchronous drives at industrial scale. Third, hybrid architectures that blend synchronous and asynchronous motor types within a single drivetrain are moving from automotive prototypes toward broader industrial applicability. For R&D teams and IP professionals tracking this space, PatSnap’s IP analytics platform provides assignee-level trend monitoring across all three of these vectors. The European Patent Office‘s cooperative patent classification system (CPC) codes H02P21 and H02P25 are the primary classification nodes for this technology domain.
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