EV Revolution: Engineering the Role of Magnets in Next-Generation Electric Vehicle Motors

As the shift to electric mobility accelerates, powertrain engineers are under growing pressure to optimise motor performance, thermal efficiency, and material sustainability, without compromising cost or scalability. At the centre of this challenge lies a small but critical component (and our favourite topic of conversation): the permanent magnet.

In this article, we’ll delve into how magnets are engineered into EV motors, explore key material and design trade-offs, and discuss the implications of rare earth dependency for high-volume production.


Permanent Magnet Synchronous Motors: The Industry Standard

More than 80% of current-generation EVs, from Tesla’s IPM architecture to Hyundai’s Hairpin stator motors, employ some form of Permanent Magnet Synchronous Motor (PMSM). Their advantage is well-documented:

  • High torque density
  • Low rotor inertia
  • Excellent field weakening for high-speed operation
  • Tight packaging in axial and radial configurations

But these gains depend heavily on magnetic material selection, rotor topology, and cooling integration, all of which hinge on the magnets used.


Material Considerations: Neodymium and Beyond

Most OEMs default to Neodymium Magnets, often with Dy or Tb doping for thermal stability. But sourcing and cost challenges have made magnet specification a strategic decision.

Typical Grades in EV Motors:

  • N42SH/N48H: Balanced for cost and 150–180°C operating range
  • High-coercivity grades (N50UH/N52EH): For high-speed or under-bonnet systems
  • Heavy rare-earth free variants: Emerging in limited performance envelopes

Samarium Cobalt (SmCo) remains an option for performance-critical or elevated temperature scenarios (>200°C), but its brittleness and higher cost limit scalability.

Ferrite-based rotor designs, while less common, are seeing interest in cost-sensitive applications (e.g., urban Battery Electric Vehicles), especially in Interior Permanent Magnet configurations where saliency torque can partially compensate for lower Br.


Rotor Topology: Embedded vs Surface-Mounted

Rotor design dictates magnetic efficiency and temperature resilience. Here’s a high-level comparison:

TopologyAdvantagesConsiderations
Interior Permanent Magnet (IPM)High-speed capability, saliency torqueComplex machining, thermal gradients
Surface-Mounted (SPM)Simpler assembly, lower torque rippleDemagnetisation risk, field weakening
V-Shape or Multi-layer IPMEnhanced torque & flux controlRequires advanced FEA and flux barrier optimisation

Magnet placement must account for eddy current losses, mechanical stress under high RPM, and thermal conduction paths, especially in direct oil-cooled rotor designs.


Design for Thermal and Magnetic Reliability

With continuous motor operation pushing 150–200°C, coating integrity, adhesive reliability, and flux stability become failure modes. Recommended practices include:

  • Nickel-Cu-Ni or epoxy coatings for corrosion resistance
  • Magnet segmentation to mitigate eddy losses
  • Integration of thermal interface materials for active cooling paths
  • Flux-focusing geometries in stator design for better utilisation

Sustainability and Material Security

OEMs are now revisiting magnet architecture as part of broader ESG and cost initiatives:

  • Magnet recycling and magnet-to-magnet reprocessing is gaining traction
  • Topology optimisation to reduce total rare earth content without compromising output
  • Hybrid magnet designs (NdFeB + ferrite) under R&D by Tier 1s and universities
  • Exploring non-rare-earth motor designs (e.g., switched reluctance motors), though typically at the expense of NVH and control complexity

From Commodity to Competitive Edge

The magnet is no longer a passive component, it’s a strategic design lever in EV development. Whether optimising for power density, thermal performance, or cost per kWh delivered, collaboration between motor designers and magnetic specialists is critical.

At Magnet Expert Ltd, we work closely with automotive R&D teams and tiered suppliers to provide:

  • Custom magnetic assemblies built to tight tolerances
  • Simulation support for flux paths and thermal loads
  • Rapid prototyping using motor-grade NdFeB and SmCo
  • Consultation on demagnetisation resistance and lifetime performance

Want to know more? Get in touch with our team at Magnet Expert Ltd to discuss sourcing, prototyping, or custom development.

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