This application is a National Stage completion of PCT/EP2014/074837 filed Nov. 18, 2014, which claims priority from German patent application serial no. 10 2013 226 527.1 filed Dec. 18, 2013.
The present invention concerns the mounting of a transmission shaft, in particular a transmission shaft of a transmission of a wind turbine.
To mount the spur gear stage of a transmission of a wind turbine, it is usual to use fixed and floating bearings. Both the fixed bearing and the floating bearing are in the form of roller bearings. The fixed bearing for absorbing radial and axial forces consists of a pair of aligned conical roller bearings. These can be prestressed, to prevent the occurrence of slip and ‘black spots’. The floating bearing is usually in the form of a cylindrical roller bearing. This is operated without prestress. Thus, the cylindrical roller bearing in particular is liable to sustain damage.
A possible means for making the mounting of shafts more resistant to damage are slide bearings. Thus solutions for wind turbine transmissions are known, in which all the shafts of the spur gear stage are mounted entirely in slide bearings. In this case slide bearings are also used for the fixed bearings. However, slide bearings that can absorb forces in both the radial and axial directions are very costly.
The purpose of the present invention is to design the mounting of a transmission shaft in such manner that the disadvantages of the solutions known from the prior art are avoided.
The invention is based on the idea of combining roller bearings with slide bearings on one and the same shaft. Roller and slide bearings each have specific advantages and disadvantages. Thus, when roller and slide bearings are combined their disadvantages are usually also combined. By virtue of the present invention, however, a mounting is produced in which the disadvantages of the individual bearing types are not noticeable. Instead, the mounting according to the invention for a transmission shaft benefits essentially from the advantages of roller bearings on the one hand and slide bearings on the other hand.
A transmission shaft according to the invention is mounted by means of a fixed bearing and at least one floating bearing. The fixed bearing can absorb radial and axial forces both in the positive and in the negative direction. Thus, all translational degrees of freedom of the shaft are restricted in the fixed bearing.
The floating bearing can absorb only radial forces, in both the positive and the negative direction. Thus, the floating bearing restricts the translational degrees of freedom of the shaft in just one direction. Together with the fixed bearing it also fixes the shaft along its rotational axis, i.e. it restricts rotational degrees of freedom of the shaft that extend perpendicularly to the rotational axis.
In the axial direction between the fixed bearing and the floating bearing is arranged at least one gearwheel fixed on the transmission shaft. The gearwheel is connected solidly to the transmission shaft. Thus, the rotational axis of the gearwheel is identical to the rotational axis of the transmission shaft. Preferably, the gearwheel is a spiral-toothed gear. The arrangement of the gearwheel in the axial direction between the fixed bearing and the floating bearing means that the gearwheel is in the intermediate space between the fixed bearing and the floating bearing. In particular, the orthogonal projections of the gearwheel on the rotational axis of the shaft are all between the orthogonal projections of the floating bearing on the rotational axis of the shaft and the orthogonal projections of the fixed bearing on the rotational axis of the shaft.
The fixed bearing is formed by at least one roller bearing. Preferably, the fixed bearing consists exclusively of roller bearings, in particular of exactly two roller bearings.
According to the invention, the floating bearing is formed by at least one slide bearing, preferably exactly one slide bearing.
In a preferred further development of the invention the fixed bearing is in the form of an in-line mounting arrangement. An in-line mounting comprises two bearings, each able to absorb forces in at least one axial direction. The two directions of the axial force absorption extend oppositely to one another, i.e. away from one another or toward one another. Preferably, the two bearings are arranged in a mirror-image configuration relative to one another. To set the desired bearing play or prestress, a bearing race—an inner or outer race—of one of the two bearings is pushed onto a seating and then fixed. Preferably two conical roller bearings are used. These can be in an O-configuration relative to one another, but are preferably in an X-configuration.
The transmission shaft according to the invention is particularly suitable for use in the spur gear stage of a transmission of a wind turbine. The transmission according to the invention can be used as an intermediate shaft. An intermediate shaft is understood to mean any shaft which is not the input or drive input shaft, or the output or drive output shaft.
Moreover, the transmission shaft according to the invention can be used as the input or drive input shaft, and/or the output or drive output shaft. In particular, use as the input or drive input shaft, and/or the output or drive output shaft in combination with use as an intermediate shaft is possible.
Example embodiments of the invention are explained below with reference to the lone FIG.
In detail the one FIG shows an intermediate shaft mounted by means of a roller bearing and a slide bearing.
On the right-hand side of the representation shown in the FIG, the intermediate shaft 1 is mounted by means of a fixed bearing. The fixed bearing consists of a first conical rover bearing 2 and a second conical rover bearing 3.
On the left-hand side of the FIG, the intermediate shaft 1 is mounted by means of a floating bearing 4. In addition, the intermediate shaft 1 has a gearwheel 5. A further gearwheel 14, diagrammatically shown in the FIG, is fixed on a shaft seating 6 by means of a keyway 7. Thus, in the axial direction the individual elements are arranged on the intermediate shaft 1—from left to right in the FIG—in the following order:
slide bearing 4, shaft seat 6, gearwheel 5, first conical roller bearing 2 and second conical roller bearing 3.
In the axial direction, the first conical roller bearing 2 and the second conical roller bearing 3 are fixed between a shoulder 8 in a transmission housing 9 and a bearing cover 10 bolted onto the transmission housing 9. The FIG shows a fixing arrangement in which there is some play. Alternatively fixing with no play, i.e. with some prestress would be possible.
The FIG shows two alternative possibilities for fixing the slide bearing 4, As shown in the upper part of the FIG, the transmission housing 9 can have a circular groove 11 extending around the rotational axis of the intermediate shaft 1. In this case the slide bearing 4 has on its outer surface a raised portion 12 that extends in the circumferential direction or a circumferential ridge 12 on the outer surface, which fits into the groove 11.
Alternatively, as shown in the lower portion of the FIG, the slide bearing 4 can be fixed by means of a radially directed, circular flange, which is part of the slide bearing 4 and extends around the rotational axis of the intermediate shaft. The flange 13 is bolted onto the transmission housing 9.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2013 226 527 | Dec 2013 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2014/074837 | 11/18/2014 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2015/090791 | 6/25/2015 | WO | A |
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