This invention relates to an axial ventilator and, in particular, to an axial electric ventilator for automotive applications.
Prior art ventilators of reference in this specification, such as, for example, the one illustrated in
The electric motor has a substantially cylindrical casing, a stator unit and a rotor unit, both housed in the casing, and a shaft protruding from the casing and rotationally driven by the rotor unit.
The fan has a connecting hub 103 coaxial with the shaft of the motor and a plurality of blades extending radially from the hub.
Usually, the fan hub is cup shaped, that is to say, it has a bottom wall 104 for connecting to the motor shaft and a substantially cylindrical lateral wall 105 from which the blades extend.
In order to limit the axial dimensions of the ventilator, the motor is at least partly housed inside the hub, surrounded by the lateral wall of the hub itself which extends from the bottom wall towards the motor.
A tubular gap 106 is defined between the motor casing and the fan hub, that is, between the casing and the lateral wall of the hub to allow the fan to rotate freely.
This type of ventilator has some disadvantages in heavy-duty applications such as agricultural machines or earthmoving machines.
In effect, in these applications, the performance of the ventilator may be seriously diminished by extraneous material such as straw, dust, soil, mud and so on, which finds its way into the gap 106 and prevents the fan from turning smoothly relative to the motor casing.
Under these circumstances, friction between the fan and the casing is increased, aeraulic performance is reduced and the motor may work with the rotor seized up and eventually break down.
To overcome these disadvantages, fans like the one described in patent EP1718872, to the same Applicant as this invention, have been developed. That patent relates to an axial fan where the bottom wall of the hub has openings in it from which the dirt that accumulates between the fan and the motor may be expelled during use.
In the event of prolonged use under heavy-duty conditions, however, the holes tend to become clogged, eventually bringing the fan to a stop.
In other prior art solutions, the fan hub is sealed and is defined by a box-shaped body.
Examples of hubs of this kind are described and illustrated in documents U.S. Pat. No. 2,664,961, U.S. Pat. No. 3,006,417, U.S. Pat. No. 3,904,314, U.S. Pat. No. 4,610,600, U.S. Pat. No. 3,231,022, U.S. Pat. No. 2,495,433, GB-A-630773 and GB-A-716389.
A detail of another prior art fan 101 is illustrated in
In practice, the hub 103 is defined by a rigid disc 108 and an annular wall 109 connected at a middle portion of it to the disc 108.
The wall 109 forms a single part with the disc 108 and allows the blades 110 to be connected to the disc 108.
In this solution, too, however, as illustrated, gaps 111 are formed which are eventually filled by material such as mud, soil, sand and so on, leading to imbalance of the fan 101; the fan 101 illustrated in
In this context, the main technical purpose of this invention is to propose an axial ventilator which is free of the above mentioned disadvantages.
It is an aim of this invention to propose an axial ventilator which limits the risk of accumulated dirt bringing the fan to a stop.
Another aim of the invention is to propose an axial ventilator which limits the risk of accumulated dirt increasing friction and imbalance and leading to vibrations and/or noise.
A yet further aim of the invention is to propose an axial ventilator that can be used continuously for heavy-duty applications in the presence of mud, dust, soil and the like.
The stated technical purpose and aims of the invention are substantially achieved by a ventilator as described in claim 1 and in one or more of the claims dependent thereon.
Further features and advantages of the invention are more apparent in the detailed description below, with reference to a preferred, non-restricting, embodiment of a ventilator as illustrated in the accompanying drawings, in which:
a is a schematic cross section of a detail of a prior art fan;
a is a suitably interrupted schematic cross section of the ventilator of
With reference to the accompanying drawings, the numeral 1 denotes a ventilator according to this invention.
Preferably, the ventilator 1 is of the heavy-duty type, that is to say, designed for use in conditions where straw, soil, mud, dust, water and other extraneous materials might prevent the ventilator 1 from functioning properly.
The ventilator 1 comprises an electric motor 2 and a fan 3, rotationally driven by the motor 2.
Schematically, the motor 2 comprises a casing 4, a stator, not illustrated, and a rotor, not illustrated, rotatable inside the casing 4 about an axis of rotation R.
The motor 2 is of a substantially known type and therefore described only insofar as necessary for understanding this invention.
The rotor of the motor 2 comprises a shaft 5 with an end portion 6 which protrudes from the casing 4 and to which the fan 3 is coupled.
The fan 3 comprises a plurality of blades 7 and a hub 8 for mounting the blades 7 and connecting the fan 3 to the shaft 5.
As illustrated in particular in
The blades 7 are connected to the bottom portion 9 by the perimeter portion 11, which defines, in the hub 8, a connecting base for the blades 7.
As illustrated in
As clearly illustrated, the wall 12 extends from the bottom wall 9 on the side opposite the casing 4 with respect to the bottom wall 9 itself.
In other words, the bottom wall 9 and the cylindrical wall 12 give the hub 8 a cup shape extending on the side opposite the motor 2, which is not, therefore, housed inside the cup.
As illustrated, the bottom wall 9 has a smooth outside surface.
More precisely, the bottom wall 9 is smooth in the geometric sense, that is to say, it does not have protuberances, protrusions, recesses or the like.
In order to prevent extraneous materials from finding their way into the hub 8, the ventilator 1 comprises a cover 13, illustrated in
In practice, the cover 13 closes the perimeter portion 11 on the side opposite the bottom wall 9.
The bottom wall 9, the perimeter portion 11, or more specifically, the cylindrical wall 12, and the cover 13, define a box-shaped body 14 that constitutes the hub 8 of the fan 3.
It should be observed that the outside surfaces of the body 14 are substantially smooth in order to facilitate the expulsion of mud, soil and the like thanks to the centrifugal force due to the rotation of the fan 3 during use.
More specifically, the outside surfaces of the bottom wall 9 and of the cover 13, that is to say, the outside surfaces of the walls of the body 14 transversal to the axis of rotation R are smooth in order to facilitate expulsion of dirt in a substantially radial direction by applying centrifugal force.
With reference to
The further the bottom wall 9 extends away from the axis of rotation R towards the periphery of the hub 8, the further it lies from the casing 4.
With reference to
The cover 13 has a discoidal portion 13a, preferably suitable for insertion into the cylindrical perimeter portion 11, while the wall 12 has an abutment 16 against which the cover 13 stops.
The gasket 15 is preferably interposed between the cover 13 and the abutment 16.
Preferably, the cover 13 comprises a ring 13b which extends outwards from the discoidal portion 13a and is designed to be inserted into the wall 12.
Preferably, the discoidal portion 13a of the cover 13 is frustoconical in shape, with vertex on the axis of rotation R and concavity facing the inside of the hub 8 for expelling the dirt during use of the ventilator 1.
The ventilator 1 comprises a stop system 17 for keeping the cover 13 stably associated with rest of the hub 8.
More in detail, the system 17 operates between the bottom portion 9 and the cover 13.
The system 17 comprises a tube 18 coaxial with the bottom portion 9 and extending from the latter towards the cover 13.
The system 17 also comprises a pin 19 which extends centrally along the axis of rotation R and which is designed to be engaged in the tube 18.
In order to keep the pin 19 securely coupled within the tube 18, the ventilator 1 comprises locking means 20.
In the embodiment illustrated, the tube 18 has an end portion 18a close to the cover 13 and comprising flexible elements 21 that extend along the axis R.
The flexible elements 21 are movable between a close-up position, illustrated in
The movement between these two positions is permitted by the flexibility of the elements 21, which can therefore be tightened around the pin 19 in the close-up position.
The system 17 comprises a spring 22 fitted round the tube 18 in such a way as to impinge on the flexible elements 21.
The spring 22 forces the flexible elements 21 into the close-up position causing them to retain the pin 19.
Preferably, the tube 18 has a base portion 18b which extends from the cylindrical bottom wall 9. The flexible elements 21 extend from the base portion 18b.
Between the base portion 18b and the flexible elements 21, there is defined an annular abutment 18c against which the spring 22 stops.
In alternative embodiments not illustrated the cover 13 is fastened and sealed to the hub 8 by gluing the cover 13 to the hub 8.
Alternatively, the cover 13 might be welded, for example by laser or ultrasound welding, to the hub 8.
As illustrated in dashed line style in
Inside it, the hub 8 of the fan 3 comprises an axial sleeve 36 inside which the shaft 5 passes and which extends for the full axial dimension of the hub 8 itself.
In practice, the sleeve 36 defines the hole 10 through which the shaft 5 passes.
In the preferred embodiment illustrated, the sleeve 36 extends substantially for the full height of the hub 8, that is, approximately the same height as the perimeter portion 11.
A first annular gasket 37 is interposed between the perimeter portion 11 and the cover 13.
A second annular gasket 38 is interposed between the cover 13 and the sleeve 36 and the fastening of the cover 13 to the hub 8 is described in more detail below.
The shaft 5 has a hole 23 passing through it transversally of the axis of rotation R and accommodating a peg 25 whose ends protrude from the shaft 5 itself.
The bottom wall 9 of the hub 8 has a radial slot 24 passing through the axis R and designed to receive the peg 25 and, more specifically, the ends of the latter.
The slot 24 is formed on an outside face of the bottom wall 9, that is to say, on the side of the latter opposite the cylindrical perimeter wall 11.
In the embodiment of
In other words, the annular groove 26 is formed in the end portion 6 of the shaft 5 on the side opposite the slot 24, or the through hole 23, with respect to the bottom wall 9.
Advantageously, the distance between the hole 23 and the annular groove 26 substantially corresponds to the thickness of the bottom wall 9.
To prevent impurities and dirt from getting into the box-shaped body 14 through the hole 23 for the passage of the shaft 5, the fan 2 comprises a sealing element 28 located between the bottom wall 9 and the shaft 5.
More specifically, the sealing element 28 is forced into the tube 18, inside the box-shaped body 14, in coaxial manner creating a tight seal against the wall of the tube 18 itself.
In practice, once the fan 3 has been coupled to the shaft 5 using the peg 25 and the fan 3 has been locked to the shaft using the snap ring 26, the seal is enhanced by inserting the element 28 into the tube 18.
The lower portion 18b of the tube 18 thus defines a housing for the sealing element 28.
In the embodiment of
In other words, the shaft passes right through the box-shaped body 14 and the hub 8 is locked by the snap ring 27 and held to the shaft 5 by the peg 25 which rotationally drives the fan 3.
In this case, the sealing action of the seal inside the hub 8 is guaranteed by the gaskets 37, 38 for closing the cover 13.
It should be noted that preferably it is the snap ring 27 that keeps the cover 13 locked to the hub 8 since the shaft 5 passes right through the box-shaped body 14.
In practice, in this embodiment, the ring 27 locks both the hub 8 and the cover 13 to the shaft 5, holding them together in a closed configuration.
As illustrated in
In this case, the fan 3 is coupled to the shaft 5 by an interference fit and the seal that keeps extraneous material out of the box-shaped body 14 is guaranteed by the bushing 29.
More specifically, the seal is guaranteed by the tight coupling between the shaft and the bushing 29.
Preferably, in both of the embodiments, as illustrated in
As illustrated, the ribs 30 are arranged radially and their profile increases from the centre to the periphery of the hub 8 in such a way as to make the hub strong enough to support the added weight of dirt that might settle on the blades 7.
When assembling the ventilator 1, particularly the embodiments of it illustrated in
The spring 22 is fitted round the tube 18 in such a way as to bend the flexible elements 21 towards the axis of rotation R.
Next, after fitting the gasket 15, the cover is coupled to the box-shaped body 14, positioning it so it is coaxial with the latter and inserting the pin 19 between the flexible elements 21 which hold it in position.
The hub 8 made in the above manner, whether with or without the reinforcement ribs 30, is sufficiently stiff to guarantee the correct operation of the ventilator 1.
Placing the motor entirely on the outside of the fan also makes the ventilator particularly efficient for heavy-duty applications because there are no interstices where dirt can accumulate.
Alternatively, in the embodiment of
The box-shaped body 14 is then securely locked axially by the snap ring 27.
In the case of low-power ventilators, for example, less than 100 watts, the fan 3 comprises the hub 8, whose bottom wall 9 allows the fan 3 to be coupled to the shaft 5, and the perimeter portion 11 for mounting the blades 7.
In practice, in the case of low-power units, the box-shaped hub 8 of the embodiments described above, is merely a rigid disc.
In this embodiment, too, the hub 8 does not surround the motor but, to limit axial dimensions and optimize mouldability in connection with the reduced dimensions and power, is in the form of a disc.
Preferably co-moulded in the bottom wall 9, there is a bushing 31 which guarantees the coupling of the fan 3 to the shaft 5 by an interference fit.
Alternatively, in another embodiment that is not illustrated, the hub 8 is made entirely of a plastic material and the end portion 6 of the shaft 5 is machined in such a way as to present longitudinal protrusions.
By way of an example, these protrusions are obtained by “pinching” the cylindrical outside surface of the shaft.
The term “pinching” is used to mean squeezing the cylindrical surface of the shaft according to a direction transversal, in particular perpendicular, to the directrices of the surface itself.
In the hub 8 of
The wall 11 has a substantially cylindrical outside face 32 and an inside face 35 facing the axis of rotation R and connected to the bottom wall 9.
In this embodiment, the hub 8 is defined by a rigid disc 39 comprising the portion 9 and the portion 11 which the blades 7 are associated with.
The wall 11 forms a sort of circular crown 11 which extends on the periphery of the wall 9.
Advantageously, at least the inside face 35 diverges from the bottom wall 9 outwards and away from the axis of rotation R.
That way, any dirt that settles on the hub 8, in particular on the bottom wall 9 may be expelled by centrifugal force without encountering obstacles.
The crown 11 contributes to conferring on the fan 3 the rigidity necessary for its correct operation.
As illustrated in particular in
The surface connecting each blade 7 to the base wall 9 is therefore defined by a portion of the perimeter wall 11 and by the corresponding base 11a.
This configuration, too, is particularly suitable for heavy-duty applications because it does not have interstices where extraneous material can accumulate.
More specifically, none of the surfaces of the bases 11a extends in a direction at right angles to the centrifugal (radial) direction.
a show a yet further preferred embodiment of the ventilator according to the invention.
As illustrated, the hub 8 is defined by the rigid disc 39 comprising the bottom wall 9 which allows the fan 3 to be coupled to the shaft 5.
Preferably, the hub 8 has walls which are smooth in the geometrical sense and still more preferably, it is made by revolving a substantially triangular section to form a frustoconical body which confers strength and rigidity on the hub 8 itself.
More in detail, as illustrated in
Advantageously, the concavity of the bottom wall 9 faces the motor 2.
In other words, the frustoconical hub 8 formed substantially by the bottom wall 9, is defined as a portion of a conical surface whose vertex is on the axis of rotation R and whose concavity faces the motor 2.
Preferably, the conicity is such as to guarantee that dirt of any kind and nature can be expelled by the centrifugal force generated during rotation of the fan 3.
More in detail, in the solution illustrated, the motor 2 has facing it the inside surface of the hub 2 which is substantially conical and which facilitates the expulsion of dirt.
It should be noted that, as already mentioned, dirt may give rise to static and/or dynamic imbalance which may lead to vibrations and noise and reduce the working life of the ventilator itself.
This shape is optimal also for moulding the fan.
Preferably, as illustrated, and unlike the prior art solution shown in
The absence of such surfaces guarantee that not only dirt but any kind of material, whether solid, such as dust, sand, fine particles of straw or hay, or liquid, mainly rainwater or condensate, may be trapped inside the hub, whatever the assembly position.
The solution described is particularly advantageous for use in roof-mounted applications such as in buses and vans, since any condensate and rainwater that may collect can be immediately expelled by centrifugal force as soon as the ventilator is switched on, thus preventing noise, imbalances and oxidization and/or corrosion of metallic parts, if any.
In order to allow the blades 7 to be connected to the hub 8, a plurality of bases 11a extend from the bottom wall 9 on the opposite side with respect to the motor 2 substantially at each blade 7.
The surface connecting each blade 7 to the base wall 9 is therefore defined by the corresponding base 11a.
In other words, the hub 8 is provided with a plurality of undercuts 40, between each blade 7 and the blade 7 adjacent to it.
The undercuts 40 are defined between adjacent bases 11a.
This configuration is particularly suitable for heavy-duty applications because it does not have interstices where extraneous material can accumulate. Any extraneous material can be expelled through the undercuts 40 as soon as the fan 3 starts turning.
Advantageously, also, as mentioned above, the face of the hub 8 facing the motor 2 is completely smooth and defined by the base wall 9 so as to facilitate expulsion of any dirt that may have accumulated between the fan and the motor.
With reference in particular to
The axial dimensions of the ventilator are thus reduced.
Preferably, each undercut 40 is located at the trailing edge of the respective blade 7.
Preferably, in order to make the air moved by the fan 3 strike the motor 2 directly to guarantee cooling, the diameter of the rigid disc 39 is approximately equal to the outside diameter of the motor 2.
In other words, the hub 8 is substantially equal in diameter to the motor 2.
Preferably, the largest diameter of the bottom wall 9 in the frustoconical configuration is substantially equal to the diameter of the motor 2.
In the embodiments illustrated in
It should be observed that the embodiment illustrated in
This is the case mainly when the diameter of the hub 8 is almost equal to the diameter of the motor 2.
Generally speaking, the frustoconical shape of the hub is created preferably when the disc 39 is larger enough in diameter than the motor 2 and, still more preferably, when the bases 11a protrude from the wall 9 on the side opposite the motor.
In other words, the frustoconical shape of the bottom wall 9 is preferable when the axial dimensions of the bases 11a, extending on the side opposite the motor 2 are smaller than the axial dimensions of the wall 9 itself.
The invention brings important advantages. The hubs described have smooth surfaces which facilitate expulsion of dirt by centrifugal force in such a way as to protect the fan for example from imbalances.
The hub is well clear of the motor, with enough space between them to avoid creating gaps and interstices where dirt can accumulate and lead to ventilator malfunctioning.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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BO2009A000694 | Oct 2009 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB10/54836 | 10/26/2010 | WO | 00 | 4/12/2012 |