A brushless DC motor, also known as a BLDC motor, is driven by direct current (or DC electricity) and uses an electronically controlled commutations system.
Like all motors, a brushless motor has a stator and a rotor as its major parts. The rotor is made of permanent magnets, and the outer part – the stator – has several copper windings depending on the number of magnetic poles on the rotor. These windings are placed in slots which are axially cut along the inner periphery of the stator.
The motor is running when the rotor is spinning inside of the stator. Electronics make the rotor spin by inducing a series of magnetic fields in the copper windings that can push and pull the permanent magnets in a sequence that ensures a continuous rotation.