This invention relates to an apparatus for damping the torsional excitation of a hollow drive shaft.
It is known to design drive shafts such that their critical speeds (the speeds at which they resonate) do not coincide with the speeds of operation of the equipment being driven. This helps avoid torsional excitation of the drive shaft. It is not always possible to so design a drive shaft. Further, torsional excitation of a drive shaft may occur due to operation of other equipment not driven by the drive shaft but in the same vicinity. Torsional excitation of a drive shaft may also occur due to operation of equipment connected to the equipment being driven, e.g. connected by an electrical circuit. This is especially so since the advent of high powered electronic control equipment utilising thyristors.
When a drive shaft is not robust enough to cope with the torsional excitation it experiences, this is dealt with by: increasing the robustness of the drive shaft; reducing the magnitude of the torsional stresses applied to the drive shaft; and damping the torsional excitation of the drive shaft itself. The present invention relates to the last of these three alternatives.
WO-2005/121594-A2 discloses an apparatus for damping the torsional excitation of a drive shaft.
According to the present invention there is provided an apparatus for damping the torsional excitation of a hollow drive shaft, the apparatus comprising: an elongate member that extends along the interior of the drive shaft, one end of the member being secured to one end of the drive shaft, the other end of the member being disposed at the other end of the drive shaft; and a hydraulic damping device secured to the other end of the drive shaft for damping vibration of the other end of the member, the hydraulic damping device including: a piston and cylinder arrangement having first and second hydraulic chambers; a reservoir of hydraulic fluid; and hydraulic circuitry by means of which the hydraulic chambers communicate with the reservoir of hydraulic fluid, wherein the hydraulic damping device is arranged so that any leakage of hydraulic fluid from the first and second hydraulic chambers via a piston/cylinder interface passes to the reservoir of hydraulic fluid.
In an apparatus according to the preceding paragraph, it is preferable that the piston and cylinder arrangement includes a piston located in a wall of the reservoir.
In an apparatus according to the preceding paragraph, it is preferable that an actuation lever extends radially outwardly from the elongate member at the other end of the member, the lever acting upon the piston.
In an apparatus according to the preceding paragraph, it is preferable that a pair of actuation levers extend radially outwardly from the elongate member at the other end of the member, the levers being located on opposite sides of the member, and the hydraulic damping device comprises: first and second piston and cylinder arrangements, one lever acting upon the first piston and cylinder arrangement, the other lever acting upon the second piston and cylinder arrangement, the first piston and cylinder arrangement extending in a line of vibration of the one lever, the second piston and cylinder arrangement extending in a line of vibration of the other lever; and hydraulic circuitry by means of which the first and second hydraulic chambers of the piston and cylinder arrangements communicate with the reservoir of hydraulic fluid.
In an apparatus according to the preceding paragraph, it is preferable that each piston and cylinder arrangement comprises a single cylinder containing a single piston, each piston being positioned along its cylinder so as to form at either end of the cylinder the first and second hydraulic chambers of the piston and cylinder arrangement.
In an apparatus according to the preceding paragraph, it is preferable that the hydraulic circuitry comprises first and second sections, each section comprising first and second branches connected in parallel, one branch comprising a flow restrictor, the other branch comprising a check valve that permits flow only in a direction away from the reservoir, the first section being connected between the reservoir and both the first hydraulic chamber of the first piston and cylinder arrangement and the diagonally opposite second hydraulic chamber of the second piston and cylinder arrangement, the second section being connected between the reservoir and both the second hydraulic chamber of the first piston and cylinder arrangement and the diagonally opposite first hydraulic chamber of the second piston and cylinder arrangement.
In an apparatus according to the preceding paragraph but two, it is preferable that the first piston and cylinder arrangement comprises a first pair of piston and cylinder assemblies disposed opposite one another in the line of vibration of the one actuation lever, the pistons of the first pair of assemblies bearing against opposite sides of the one lever, and the second piston and cylinder arrangement comprises a second pair of piston and cylinder assemblies disposed opposite one another in the line of vibration of the other actuation lever, the pistons of the second pair of assemblies bearing against opposite sides of the other lever.
In an apparatus according to the preceding paragraph, it is preferable that each piston and cylinder assembly contains a spring located in its hydraulic chamber that biases its piston against an actuation lever, and the piston of each assembly contains therein a flow restrictor and a check valve connected in parallel that communicate between the hydraulic chamber of the assembly and the reservoir of hydraulic fluid, the check valve permitting fluid flow only in a direction away from the reservoir.
In an apparatus according to either of the preceding two paragraphs, it is preferable that the piston of each piston and cylinder assembly includes an actuator awl that extends from the piston generally radially outwardly, the radially outer end of each actuator arm bearing against a side of an actuation lever.
In an apparatus according to any one of the preceding six paragraphs, it is preferable that the reservoir of hydraulic fluid extends around the elongate member and the pair of actuation levers.
In an apparatus according to the preceding paragraph, it is preferable that a spring loaded piston located adjacent the hydraulic damping device and on the axis of rotation of the drive shaft pressurises the reservoir of hydraulic fluid.
The invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring to
An oscillating twist in shaft 1 due to torsional excitation of shaft 1 results in corresponding relative rotary movement between levers 9a, 9b and damping device 11. For example, take the instance where the driven unit end of shaft 1 is twisted clockwise, and consequently the driver end of shaft 1 is twisted anti-clockwise. The clockwise twisting of the driven unit end causes a corresponding clockwise twist of damping device 11 connected to this end, and the anti-clockwise twisting of the driver end causes a corresponding anti-clockwise twist of transfer member 7 secured to this end and hence a corresponding anti-clockwise twist of levers 9a, 9b. The relative angular position of damping device 11 and levers 9a, 9b corresponds to the twist at that instant of shaft 1.
Referring also to
Each of the first and second piston and cylinder arrangements 25, 27 comprises a single cylinder 37, 39 containing a single piston 41, 43. Each piston 41, 43 is positioned generally centrally along its cylinder 37, 39 so as to form at either end of the cylinder 37, 39 first and second hydraulic chambers 45a, 45b, 47a, 47b. A slot 49a, 49b is cut centrally along each piston 41, 43 to receive an end 51a, 51b of a corresponding actuation lever 9a, 9b. Each piston and cylinder arrangement 25, 27 extends in the line of vibration of the end 51a, 51b of its corresponding lever 9a, 9b.
The fluid flow path between diagonally opposite hydraulic chambers 45a, 47b and pressurised reservoir 19 comprises first and second branches connected in parallel, one branch comprising restrictor orifice 31, the other branch comprising check valve 35. Similarly, the fluid flow path between diagonally opposite chambers 47a, 45b and reservoir 19 comprises first and second branches connected in parallel, one branch comprising restrictor orifice 29, the other branch comprising check valve 33. Restrictor orifices 29, 31 are designed so that the flow therethrough is laminar. Check valves 33, 35 permit fluid flow only in a direction away from reservoir 19. Check valves 33, 35 are designed so as to be low pressure drop and fast response.
The operation of hydraulic damping device 11 is as follows.
With particular reference to
If torsional excitation of shaft 1 causes levers 9a, 9b to rotate in an anti-clockwise direction, then operation of the hydraulic damping circuit is as before, but in reverse. Thus, fluid leaves chambers 45a, 47b, crosses restrictor orifice 31, enters and leaves reservoir 19, crosses check valve 33, and enters chambers 47a, 45b. In this case, the pressure difference across both first pair of chambers 45a, 47a and second pair of chambers 45b, 47b equals the pressure difference across restrictor orifice 31.
If the dynamics of the overall system are well defined, then restrictor orifices 29, 31 may be of fixed restriction, i.e. variation of their restriction not possible. This saves cost. However, in a less well defined system, variable laminar orifices may be used to provide adjustable damping. The level of damping would then be adjusted to suit actual running conditions.
Hydraulic systems over the course of their operating life may suffer loss of incompressibility due to the formation of gas/air bubbles. This is of little consequence in many hydraulic systems, but in the case of the above described system may well result in inoperability, since an instantaneous damping torque is required in response to very small angular displacements. Gas/air bubbles form due to cavitation in the hydraulic fluid, i.e. negative pressure in the hydraulic fluid which results in the gas/air normally present in a hydraulic fluid coming out of solution to form gas/air bubbles. Cavitation typically occurs when a hydraulic fluid is drawn into a chamber by expansion of the chamber. In the above described system, cavitation is prevented by the use of: (i) pressurised reservoir 19; and (ii) check valves 33, 35 in parallel with restrictor orifices 29, 31 (the check valves allow hydraulic fluid to bypass the restrictor orifices when flowing to a chamber 45a, 47a, 45b, 47b, thereby enabling a fast response to an expanding chamber 45a, 47a, 45b, 47b ).
It is to be noted that pressurised reservoir 19 compensates for volume fluctuations within the hydraulic circuit. Such fluctuations might occur due to: wear (e.g. at the contact surfaces where ends 51a, 51b of actuation levers 9a, 9b abut pistons 41, 43), temperature change, and hydraulic fluid leakage.
It is to be noted that any hydraulic fluid leakage from chambers 45a, 47a, 45b, 47b via the interfaces between pistons 41, 43 and cylinders 37, 39 will pass to reservoir 19, therefore remaining in the closed hydraulic circuit and not harming operation.
The alternative hydraulic damping device 53 shown in
The operation of hydraulic damping device 53 is as follows.
If, due to torsional excitation of drive shaft 1, actuation levers 9a, 9b rotate in a clockwise direction, then this forces to the right piston 63b of piston and cylinder assembly 59b, and to the left piston 63c of piston and cylinder assembly 59c. This reduces the size of hydraulic chambers 65b, 65c, displacing fluid out of chambers 65b, 65c. The displaced fluid passes via restrictor orifices 69b, 69c into pressurised reservoir 19 (note check valves 71b, 71c permit flow only in a direction away from reservoir 19). Due to the flow into reservoir 19 and that reservoir 19 is pressurised, fluid also leaves reservoir 19. It crosses check valves 71a, 71d to reach hydraulic chambers 65a, 65d. The pressure difference across both pair of chambers 65a, 65b and pair of chambers 65c, 65d equals the pressure difference across restrictor orifices 69b, 69c and is proportional to the torque opposing the angular twist of shaft 1. As the flow across restrictor orifices 69b, 69c is dependent upon the angular twist velocity of shaft 1, a true damping torque is produced which is proportional to the angular twist velocity. Provided laminar flow is maintained across restrictor orifices 69b, 69c, the damping is purely linear and viscous in nature.
If torsional excitation of shaft 1 causes levers 9a, 9b to rotate in an anti-clockwise direction, then operation of the hydraulic damping circuit is as before, but in reverse. Thus, fluid leaves chambers 65a, 65d, crosses restrictor orifices 69a, 69d, enters and leaves reservoir 19, crosses check valves 71b, 71c, and enters chambers 65b, 65c. In this case, the pressure difference across both pair of chambers 65a, 65b and pair of chambers 65c, 65d equals the pressure difference across restrictor orifices 69a, 69d.
Similarly to the hydraulic damping device of
In the hydraulic damping device of
The hydraulic damping device of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0718861.8 | Sep 2007 | GB | national |
This application is the US National Stage of International Application No. PCT/EP2008/061588, filed Sep. 3, 2007 and claims the benefit thereof. The International Application claims the benefits of Great Britain application No. 0718861.8 GB filed Sep. 27, 2007. All of the applications are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP08/61588 | 9/3/2008 | WO | 00 | 3/25/2010 |