I am using FEMM to see how the losses in a motor change when different soft magnetic materials are used for the stator/rotor laminations. My simulation showed that the no-load losses (hysteresis, eddy current losses) were 3-4 orders of magnitude lower than the resistive losses. This result surprised me quite a bit since I've heard no-load losses make up such a significant portion of losses in transformers, for instance.

The two materials I am comparing are M27 Silicon iron and metglas 2605. The metglas alloy had ~40% lower no-load losses in the stator than the M27 steel laminations. I'm surprised as to why these losses, for both materials, made up such a small portion of the total stator losses.

I have very little experience with power engineering or motors, and want to know whether no-load losses in motors are supposed to be small compared to the winding/resistive losses. I should note that I have not input any boundary conditions to account for the skin effect.

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