1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a bearing and a liquid cooling type screw compressor using the bearing.
2. Description of the Related Art
In the screw compressor, a thrust load and a radial load are imposed on a rotor axis by gas compressed by a pair of male and female screw rotors meshing with each other. Therefore, the rotor axis is supported by a thrust bearing and a radial bearing. In order to reduce the load imposed on the above bearings so as to extend the life of the bearings, an apparatus for reducing the thrust load is proposed in Japanese Patent Publication No. Sho48-33041 and Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. Sho57-153986, and an apparatus for reducing the radial load is proposed in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. Hei3-61714.
The screw compressor disclosed in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. Hei3-61714 is configured such that a high pressure fluid chamber is provided on the side of the imposing direction of the radial load and a constant pressure fluid chamber is provided on the other side. In the case of the above screw chamber, width of bearings is large and hence the compressor has to be large.
In
It is an object of the present invention to provide a bearing having a simple structure and a high compact load capacity and a liquid cooling type screw compressor using the above bearing.
In order to achieve the above object, in the bearing according to the present invention, a groove is provided in the periphery of a pressure receiving area of a pressure receiving surface opposing to a load of axis weight within a bearing surface supporting an axis, and a liquid supply route communicating with the groove is provided, so that liquid is supplied to the groove through the liquid supply route.
The above groove preferably comprises two grooves in the circumferential direction and two grooves in the axial direction.
In this case, the above grooves in the circumferential direction and the above grooves in the axial direction preferably are continuous to each other.
The above grooves in the axial direction may be not continuous in the middle.
The liquid cooling type screw compressor mentioned above according to the present invention comprises pair of male and female screw rotors meshing with each other, a compressor main body housing the screw rotors taking the bearing according to the above configuration of the present invention as a bearing, and a liquid separator for separating liquid from gas discharged from the compressor main body, wherein the liquid separated in the liquid separator is supplied to the liquid supply route of the bearing.
In the liquid cooling type screw compressor of the above configuration, a liquid pump is preferably provided in a liquid supply line for supplying the liquid separated in the liquid separator to the liquid supply route of the bearing so as to increase fluid pressure.
According to the bearing and the liquid cooling type screw compressor of the present invention, the groove is provided in the periphery of the pressure receiving area of the pressure receiving surface opposing to the load of axis weight within the bearing surface supporting the axis and the liquid supply route communicating with the groove is provided so as to supply the liquid to the groove through the liquid supply route. Therefore, pressure on the pressure receiving surface of the bearing is high, and even if hydraulic pressure generated in a gap between the bearing and the axis is leaked to the periphery thereof, the load capacity is not decreased.
Since the groove is only provided in the periphery of the pressure receiving area of the pressure receiving surface opposing to the load of axis weight within the bearing surface supporting the axis, size of the bearing is not increased and compact.
Hereinafter, an embodiment of the present invention will be described with reference to the attached drawings.
As shown in
In general, operation conditions such as axial rotation speed required for a compressor, suction pressure of compressor and discharge pressure are limited within a certain range. The pressure receiving area A in accordance with the above operation conditions is determined as a substantially fixed area.
Next, a description will be given to an effect of the radial bearing 7 of the oil cooling type screw compressor 1. When the high pressure oil is supplied from the oil supply line 15 to the groove 23 of the radial bearing 7 through the oil supply route 24, pressure Ps which is higher than that in the pressure receiving area A is imposed on the groove 23. That is, an amount of oil which is leaked from the pressure receiving area A to the periphery is supplemented and supplied to the groove 23. Therefore, the pressure within the pressure receiving area A becomes high, and a load capacity of the radial bearing 7 is improved. The pressure within the pressure receiving area A is, as shown in
In the screw compressor 1, the load of axis weight W is always imposed in the same direction. Therefore, when the groove 23 is provided rightly surrounding the pressure receiving area A, it is possible to maintain the load capacity under any operation conditions.
A description will further be given to a meaning of providing the groove 23. The pressure within the pressure receiving area A is determined by adding the pressure in the periphery of the pressure receiving area A with dynamic pressure due to a “wedge effect” determined by the operation conditions such as the rotation speed. The present invention is to increase the pressure in the periphery of the pressure receiving area A and hence increase the pressure within the pressure receiving area A. In order to surely increase the pressure in the periphery of the pressure receiving area A, the groove 23 is required. In the case where only the oil supply route 24 is provided without the groove 23, pressure in a narrow area in the periphery of the pressure receiving area A is only increased, and it is not possible to increase the pressure in the periphery of the pressure receiving area A.
In the above embodiment, the oil pump 18 is provided in the oil supply line 15. Therefore, in comparison to the case where the oil pump is not provided, the pressure 1s of the oil supplied to the groove 23 of the radial bearing 7 is increased, and further it is possible to increase the load capacity.
In the above embodiment, although the groove 23 is continuous, there is a fear that strength of the radial bearing 7 is deceased due to existence of the grooves in the axial direction 23c and 23d and hence the radial bearing 7 is deformed. Therefore, as shown in
In
<Common Conditions>
Diameter of rotor axis: 70 mm
Inner diameter of bearing: 70.15 mm
Length ratio of bearing to inner diameter: 1
Rotation speed of rotor axis: 2231 rpm
<Conditions for Radial Bearing with Grooves According to the Present Invention>
Angle from vertical axis to grooves in the axial direction in the rotational direction: 25°
Angle from vertical axis to grooves in the axial direction in the counter-rotational direction: 80°
Gap between grooves in the circumferential direction: 50 mm
Distance from end surface of bearing to edges of grooves in the circumferential direction: 5 mm
Grooves in the circumferential direction: 5 mm in width and 5 mm in depth
Grooves in the axial direction: 5 mm in width and 5 mm in depth
Pressure for supplying water: 2 kg/cm2
Viscosity of supplying water: 1.02e−10 kgs/mm2
As a result, it is found that as for the conventional radial bearing without the grooves, the pressure receiving area which is shown in black is small and the load capacity is low as shown in
It should be noted that although the above embodiment is the bearing of the oil cooling type screw compressor, the present invention can be applied to a bearing of a liquid cooling type screw compressor with using liquid other than oil as a cooling medium.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2006-345441 | Dec 2006 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3388854 | Olofsson et al. | Jun 1968 | A |
3453031 | Bjork et al. | Jul 1969 | A |
3814554 | Jansson et al. | Jun 1974 | A |
3887310 | Gerber | Jun 1975 | A |
3961870 | Vlemmings | Jun 1976 | A |
4307918 | Mohsin | Dec 1981 | A |
4909714 | Cheng | Mar 1990 | A |
4930907 | Smith | Jun 1990 | A |
4989997 | Yoshimura | Feb 1991 | A |
5028221 | Malfit | Jul 1991 | A |
5662463 | Mirzoev et al. | Sep 1997 | A |
5743654 | Ide et al. | Apr 1998 | A |
6059551 | Amano et al. | May 2000 | A |
6302667 | Timuska et al. | Oct 2001 | B1 |
6312239 | Kirsten | Nov 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
86 1 01841 | Oct 1986 | CN |
86 2 04876 | Jun 1987 | CN |
1165554 | Nov 1997 | CN |
1346943 | May 2002 | CN |
48-33041 | Oct 1973 | JP |
57-153986 | Sep 1982 | JP |
60-245825 | Dec 1985 | JP |
63-235723 | Sep 1988 | JP |
2-76923 | Mar 1990 | JP |
3-61714 | Mar 1991 | JP |
4-64714 | Feb 1992 | JP |
5-296247 | Nov 1993 | JP |
10-122168 | May 1998 | JP |
2001-140888 | May 2001 | JP |
2004-98719 | Apr 2004 | JP |
842263 | Jun 1981 | SU |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20080152529 A1 | Jun 2008 | US |