The invention relates to an arrangement for a rail vehicle, a hollow-shaft motor with a corresponding arrangement and a rail vehicle.
Hollow-shaft motors can be employed for example in rail vehicles as drive motors. These can be employed as what is known as a direct drive, in which a wheelset shaft extends through the rotor of the hollow-shaft motor and the wheelset shaft is driven directly by the rotor. The hollow-shaft motor is held radially spaced apart from the wheelset shaft by means of a motor fastening.
The object of the invention is to specify an arrangement in which, in the event of a failure of the motor fastening of the hollow-shaft motor, damage to the motor and the risk of accidents and in particular danger to persons is reduced.
This object is inventively achieved by an arrangement having the features as claimed. Advantageous embodiments of the inventive arrangement are specified in dependent claims.
Accordingly it is inventively provided that arranged in the region of the radial air gap between the rotor and the wheelset shaft is a protective material which in the event of a failure of the motor fastening of the hollow-shaft motor and subsequent support of the rotor on the wheelset shaft separates the rotor from the wheelset shaft, wherein the protective material is softer than the material of the wheelset shaft and softer than at least one material of the rotor.
A significant advantage of the inventive arrangement can be seen in that in the event of any failure of the motor fastening the rotor of the hollow-shaft motor cannot fall directly onto the wheelset shaft guided therein, since the inventively provided soft protective material keeps shaft and rotor separate.
According to one development the protective material forms at least one protective ring, which is arranged on the interior of the hollow rotor and has a smaller internal diameter than the rotor, wherein in the event of a failure of the motor fastening the at least one protective ring rests on the wheelset shaft, or is arranged on the exterior of the wheelset shaft, has a larger external diameter than the wheelset shaft and in the event of a failure of the motor fastening supports the rotor.
According to an alternative development to the aforementioned development, the protective material forms at least one protective tube, which is arranged on the interior of the hollow rotor and has a smaller internal diameter than the rotor, wherein in the event of a failure of the motor fastening the at least one protective tube rests on the wheelset shaft, or is arranged on the exterior of the wheelset shaft, has a larger external diameter than the wheelset shaft and in the event of a failure of the motor fastening supports the rotor.
According to a further alternative development, the protective material forms at least two protective rings, which are each arranged on the interior of the hollow rotor, have a smaller internal diameter than the rotor and are spaced apart axially from one another, wherein one of the protective rings is arranged in the region of one axial end of the rotor and the other protective ring is arranged in the region of the other axial end of the rotor.
In accordance with a further development the two axially spaced-apart protective rings are made of materials of different hardness.
In accordance with a further development a radially interior rotor tube is arranged between the two axially spaced-apart protective rings and is axially fixed by at least one of the protective rings. An interior rotor tube such as this can for example advantageously protect hollow spaces in the rotor from the wheelset shaft.
In accordance with a further development the rotor comprises ferrous laminated cores and the protective material is softer than the material of the ferrous laminated cores.
In accordance with a further development the at least one protective ring and/or the at least one protective tube is mounted as a separate part on the interior face of the rotor or on the exterior face of the wheelset shaft or is attached by a coating process.
According to a further development the protective material is non-ferrous.
In accordance with a further development the protective material contains aluminum and/or copper or consists thereof. Alternatively or additionally the protective material contains rubber, for example specifically acrylonitrile-butadiene rubber, and/or natural rubber or consists thereof. Alternatively or additionally the protective material has a maximum elastic limit of 200 N/mm2.
In accordance with a further development the hollow-shaft motor is held by a chassis or frame of a vehicle and the wheelset shaft is rotatably mounted by means of bearings attached to the chassis or the frame.
In accordance with a further development the rotor is non-rotatably connected to the wheelset shaft at one of its two rotor ends by means of an axially and/or radially movable connection device, wherein the connection device enables an axial and/or radial relative movement between the rotor end and the wheelset shaft.
In accordance with a further development a protective ring close to the connection device is softer than a protective ring remote from the connection device. A different hardness such as this of the protective material is possible since a mechanical load of the close protective ring is smaller in the event of a failure of the motor fastening than that of the remote protective ring.
In accordance with a further alternative development it is provided that the protective material forms at least two protective rings, which in each case are arranged on the exterior of the wheelset shaft, have a larger external diameter than the wheelset shaft and are axially spaced apart from one another, wherein one of the protective rings is attached to the wheelset shaft in the region of one axial end of the rotor and the other protective ring is attached in the region of the other axial end of the rotor.
The object is further achieved by a hollow-shaft motor which has an inventive arrangement.
Finally the object is achieved by a rail vehicle having at least one inventive arrangement or at least one inventive hollow-shaft motor.
The rail vehicle can here for example be a rail vehicle externally supplied with electric power via a current collector, a battery-driven rail vehicle, a rail vehicle fitted with fuel cells or a hybrid rail vehicle.
The invention is explained in greater detail below using exemplary embodiments, where for example:
For the sake of clarity the same reference characters are always used in the figures for identical or comparable components.
The rotor 12 comprises ferrous laminated cores, which during the operation of the hollow-shaft motor 10 are penetrated by magnet fields generated by the stator 11.
The stator 11 is held by a housing 13 of the hollow-shaft motor 10, which in turn is held by a motor fastening 14, merely indicated, on a chassis or frame of the vehicle, not further shown.
Extending through the internal hollow rotor 12 is a wheelset shaft 20, attached to the shaft ends of which in each case is a vehicle wheel 30 of the vehicle. The wheelset shaft 20 is rotatably mounted on the chassis or frame of the vehicle by means of bearings, which for reasons of clarity are likewise not shown in
The rotor 12 is non-rotatably connected to the wheelset shaft 20 by means of a connection device 40 which is preferably axially and radially movable and enables a certain axial and radial relative movement between the rotor 12 and the wheelset shaft 20, for example to be able to absorb vibrations of the wheelset shaft 20 during the journey.
Thanks to the motor fastening 14 the hollow-shaft motor 10 and thus also the rotor 12 is kept separate from the wheelset shaft 20 by the formation of a radial air gap 50. Located in the air gap 50 in the exemplary embodiment in accordance with
The two protective rings 60 and 70 preferably consist of aluminum, copper, rubber or natural rubber. It is particularly advantageous if the protective ring 60 close to the connection device 40 consists of a softer material than the protective ring remote from the connection device 40.
In the event of a failure of the motor fastening 14, the protective tube 80 separates the rotor 12 from the wheelset shaft 20, as was explained above in connection with the protective rings 60 and 70 in the exemplary embodiment in accordance with
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2020 210 211.2 | Aug 2020 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2021/072076 | 8/6/2021 | WO |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2022/033989 | 2/17/2022 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20230211812 A1 | Jul 2023 | US |