1. Field of the Invention
The present invention concerns an apparatus with a rotary body that is arranged such that it is rotationally driven in a housing. Rotary bodies are used, for example, in actuator technology and in cooling technology. A further example of such an apparatus is an x-ray radiator with a rotary piston tube as a rotary body.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Rotary piston tubes or x-ray radiators with rotary piston tubes are, among other things, described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,084,942 and 6,364,527, and 6,396,901 and 5,579,364. The rotary piston tube is normally positioned in the radiator housing such that it can rotate around its longitudinal axis, and in operation is rotated around its longitudinal axis by a suitable drive system, for example an electromotor. The anode of the rotary piston tube is fixed to the vacuum housing of the tube or forms a part of the vacuum housing. The electron beam emitted in operation by the cathode (likewise fixed to the vacuum housing) is deflected by a suitable deflection system that is stationary relative to the rotary piston tube, such that a focal spot that is stationary relative to the radiator housing is created on the incident surface of the anode. New cold or cooled locations of the anode are thus always struck by the electron beam. The thermal capacity of the focal spot is thus significantly higher than with an x-ray tube with an anode at rest relative to the electron beam.
So that the rotary piston tube is sufficiently cooled, the radiator housing is normally filled with a fluid as coolant.
For improved cooling of the rotary piston tube, the x-ray radiators disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,084,942 and 6,396,901 are provided with fixed conductor bodies that direct the coolant to the rotary piston tube.
To reduce the friction losses within the coolant, in the x-ray radiator known from U.S. Pat. No. 6,364,527 the rotary piston tube is fixed in a coolant housing that rotates together with the rotary piston tube. Particularly given relatively long x-ray exposure times, the cooling is worse, due to a lesser heat transfer, than in the x-ray radiators known from U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,084,942 and 6,396,901.
In the x-ray radiator described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,579,364, cooling ensues through fluid loops. The part of the rotary piston tube adjacent to the anode, however, is cooled relatively little and can be thermally stressed more severely by scattered electrons.
An object of the present invention to provide an apparatus of the above general type wherein the rotary body is better cooled.
This object is achieved in accordance with the invention by an apparatus having a housing, a rotationally driven rotary body mounted in the housing such that it can rotate, and at least one rotary-driven conductor body mounted such that it can rotate in the housing around the rotary body, the conductor body having a rotational frequency different than the rotational frequency of the rotary body. The rotary body and the rotary conductor body, according to different embodiments of the inventive apparatus, are each driven with a separate actuator or are both connected with one actuator via transmission containing gears or the like to produce the different rotational frequencies. Moreover, according to an advantageous variant of the inventive apparatus, the rotational frequency of the rotary body and/or the rotational frequency of the rotary conductor body can be adjusted (varied). The rotary conductor body preferably rotates with a lower rotational frequency than the rotary body.
Due to the rotational frequency difference between the rotary body and the rotary conductor body, turbulences that lead to an improved heat transfer, and thus have the result of an improved cooling of the rotary body, are intentionally produced in the fluid filling the housing according to a preferred embodiment of the inventive apparatus. The rotary body thus is optimally, completely cooled by the fluid serving as a coolant, which is, for example, an oil.
In a further embodiment of the inventive apparatus, a fluid is disposed between the rotary body and the rotary conductor body, and a medium that exhibits a lower viscosity than the fluid is disposed between the rotary conductor body and the housing. The medium of lower viscosity is preferably a gas, in particular sulfur hexafluoride, air or a mixture of hydrocarbon, SF6 and air. Moreover, a vacuum can be present outside of the rotary conductor body.
In another embodiment of the inventive apparatus, the rotary conductor body is coaxially positioned with regard to the rotary body. In a further embodiment the rotary conductor body is two-part or multi-part.
If the apparatus is an x-ray radiator, i.e. if the rotary body is a rotary piston tube, then the common rotation of rotary conductor body and rotary piston tube in the medium of lower viscosity or vacuum enables a relatively short exposure time with relatively high x-ray radiation capacity, because the anode can be moved with a relatively high rotational speed (angular velocity) relative to the electron beam. Moreover, in comparison to the x-ray radiators known from U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,084,942 and 6,396,901, such an x-ray radiator requires unchanged or decreased drive capacity.
According to a further embodiment, the apparatus is an x-ray radiator in which the rotary body constitutes an x-ray tube with a cathode that can be rotated relative to the x-ray tube and a stationary anode.
To allow the rotary piston tube 1 to rotate around its longitudinal axis L, shafts 5 and 6 respectively extend through opposite ends of the vacuum housing 2 of the rotary piston tube 1. The longitudinal axes of the shafts 5 and 6 coincide with the longitudinal axis L of the vacuum housing 2 of the rotary piston tube 1. The shafts 5 and 6 are respectively mounted so they can rotate with ball bearings 7 and 8. At the free end of the shaft 5, an electromotor (schematically indicated) is connected that, in the exemplary embodiment, in operation rotates the rotary piston tube 1 around its longitudinal axis L with a variable rotational frequency.
Because, in operation of the rotary piston tube 1, the cathode 3 and the anode 4 rotate together with the vacuum housing 2, the x-ray radiator RS1 has an election beam deflection system (not shown in detail in
In the exemplary embodiment, a piston-shaped rotary conductor body 14 is disposed around the rotary piston tube 1. In the exemplary embodiment, the rotary conductor body 14 is composed of aluminum or an aluminum alloy.
The rotary conductor body 14 also is mounted at both ends thereof with ball bearings 15 and 16 such that it can rotate relative to its longitudinal axis that, in the exemplary embodiment, coincides with the longitudinal axis L of the rotary piston tube 1. At the anode-side end of the rotary piston tube 1, the rotary conductor body 14 is connected with the anode-side shaft of the rotary piston tube 1 via a (gearing) transmission 17. By means of the transmission 17, the rotary conductor body 14 is rotationally driven together with the rotary piston tube 1, but with a rotational frequency different than the rotational frequency of the rotary piston tube 1. In the exemplary embodiment, the transmission 17 reduces the rotational frequency of the rotary conductor body 14 to a lower rotational frequency composed to the rotary piston tube 1.
The rotary conductor body 14 and the rotary piston tube 1 are disposed in a stationary radiator housing G, i.e., they are (as shown in
In the exemplary embodiment, the radiator housing G is composed of three parts and includes a main housing H and two sub-housings T1 and T2. The sub-housing T1 surrounds the shaft 5 and the housing part T2 surrounds the shaft 6. The sub-housings T1 and T2 respectively have openings O1 and O2 with which the radiator housing G is connected to an external cooling circuit (not shown in
In order to cool the rotary piston tube 1 in operation, the rotary conductor body 14 is filled with a fluid F as a coolant, which is normally an oil especially suited for cooling. Moreover, the rotary conductor body 14 is provided with bores in the regions in which it rotates within the sub-housings T1 and T2, and is thus permeable for the fluid F, such that the fluid F that is heated due to the heating of the rotary piston tube 1 can be cooled via the openings O1 and O2 in the sub-housings T1 and T2 by means of the external cooling circuit.
By contrast, in the exemplary embodiment the main housing H of the radiator housing G is filled with sulfur hexafluoride, which exhibits a lower viscosity than the fluid F located within the rotary conductor body 14. To prevent the sulfur hexafluoride from leaking from the main housing H of the radiator housing G into the sub-housings T1 or T2, and to prevent the fluid F from permeating into the main housing H, in this example the main housing H is sealed from the rotary conductor body 14 and the sub-housings T1 and T2 with shaft seals 18 and 19.
In contrast to the x-ray radiator RS1 shown in
Furthermore, the rotary conductor body 14 of the x-ray radiator RS2 shown in
In the specified exemplary embodiments, the rotary conductor body 14 is a one-piece component, but two-piece and multi-piece rotary conductor bodies are also suitable.
It is also not necessary that the rotary conductor body 14 be positioned coaxially to the rotary piston tube 1.
The rotary piston tube 1 shown in
The rotary piston tube 1 is an example from medical technology. The inventive apparatus also can be used in other technical fields, in particular actuator technology or cooling technology, wherein the rotary body is not a rotary piston tube.
Although modifications and changes may be suggested by those skilled in the art, it is the intention of the inventors to embody within the patent warranted hereon all changes and modifications as reasonably and properly come within the scope of their contribution to the art.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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103 31 807.0 | Jul 2003 | DE | national |