The present invention relates to a compressor having a cylinder in which a piston is movably held by a gas bearing without contact with the cylinder wall.
Such a compressor is known, for example, from U.S. Pat. No. 6,575,716 A1. In this conventional compressor, there is formed in the inner wall of the cylinder a circumferential groove which is supplied with compressed gas via a bore intersecting the cylinder wall. The compressed gas is distributed in the circumferential groove around the entire circumference of the piston and propagates from the groove in the axial direction through a narrow gap between piston and cylinder wall, thereby retaining the piston over its entire circumference without contact with the cylinder wall. When a radial force is exerted on the piston and deflects the latter from its equilibrium position, the gas is not only compressed but also partially expelled on one side of the piston circumference, said expulsion possibly being due, among other things, to the gas escaping back into the groove. While the compressed gas exerts on the piston a restoring force in the direction of the equilibrium position, the ejected gas cannot do so. Because of the escape possibility, the stiffness of the bearing against radial deflection is not overly great.
In order to improve the stiffness of the bearing, it has been proposed to introduce the compressed gas via radial bores with very narrow cross-section into the gap between cylinder wall and piston. Because of the narrow cross-section of the bores, it is only possible for a small amount of gas to flow back when the piston is deflected. A higher radial stiffness of the bearing can therefore be achieved for the same gas throughput.
In order to limit the reverse flow of the compressed gas, the supply bores must have a very small diameter of a similar order of magnitude to the gap width between cylinder wall and piston. In practice this means that the diameter of the supply bores must be no more than a few 10 μm. The production of such narrow bores requires complex processing techniques such as laser ablation, spark erosion or the like. The supply bores can only be produced singly using these techniques, which makes production time-consuming and costly. In addition, the material thickness in which such narrow bores can be produced is limited to a few hundred μm. A workpiece with such a thin wall is easily deformable, so that it is difficult to ensure that the cylinder wall has the dimensional accuracy and stability required for an effective gas bearing.
The object of the present invention is to specify a compressor with a gas bearing supported piston, said compressor being implementable with low cost/complexity and enabling the piston to be supported with good radial stiffness at low compressed gas throughput.
This object is achieved by a compressor having a cylinder and a piston which can be displaced in an oscillating manner in said cylinder and which has transverse play in relation to the direction of movement, an end face of the piston delimiting a compression chamber in the cylinder, characterized in that the piston has a diameter which reduces toward the end face. As the piston's shape tapers toward the end face, some of the gas compressed in the compression chamber by the piston movement is forced into the gap between piston and cylinder wall, and it is the flow of gas escaping from the compression chamber between piston and cylinder wall that provides the gas bearing effect.
In order to ensure precise, rolling-motion-free guiding of the piston, the latter preferably has a guide section of constant diameter in addition to a section having the diameter that reduces toward the end face adjacent to the compression chamber.
In order to drive the compressed gas out of the compression chamber into the gap in a low turbulence manner, the increase in the diameter is preferably constant. It is particularly preferable that the rate of change of the diameter in the direction of the axis is at its maximum directly at the end face and reduces with increasing distance from the end face.
In the simplest case, the inner wall of the cylinder can be completely devoid of supply bores for feeding compressed gas into the gap between inner wall and piston.
In this case, the flow of gas through the gap stops at least once during each oscillation of the piston, so that contact may occur between the piston and the cylinder wall at this time. In order to limit rubbing wear between the piston and the cylinder wall particularly but not exclusively in this case, the piston and/or the inner wall of the cylinder can be provided with a hard coating. The coating can consist of a carbide, e.g. tungsten carbide, DLC (diamond-like carbon) or the like.
In order also to maintain the gas bearing's effectiveness even when the compression chamber is at its maximum extent, supply bores for feeding in the compressed gas can be disposed in an inner wall of the cylinder such that they pressurize a section of the piston facing the compression chamber at the piston movement reversal point at which the compression chamber expansion is at its maximum. This design permits at least a considerable reduction in the number of supply bores compared to a conventional compressor in which the bearing effect is maintained exclusively via compressed gas fed in externally through supply bores.
In order to minimize radial forces on the piston which could force it against the inner wall of the cylinder, the compressor expediently has a drive unit which executes a purely linear motion. Such a drive unit can in particular comprise a magnetic armature which is coupled to the piston and can be driven in a magnetic alternating field, parallel to the direction of movement of the piston.
Further features and advantages of the invention will emerge from the following description of exemplary embodiments and with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
The compressor shown in
The piston has, facing the head plate 23, a flat end face 31 whose diameter is much less than that of the compression chamber 26. At its edges, the end face 31 makes a continuously curved transition to a circumferential surface 32 facing the inside of the tubular section 22. The circumferential surface 32 can be divided into three sections in the movement direction of the piston 25: a cylindrical central section 33 whose diameter is no more than a few 10 μm smaller than that of the compression chamber 26 so that its movement is guided in the tubular section 22 with little play and in an essentially non-rolling manner, and, on either side of the central section 33, an inner and an outer section 34 and 35 respectively, whose diameter continuously decreases with increasing distance from the central section 33.
The width of the gap 36 between the circumferential surface 32 and the inner surface of the tubular section 22 increases faster than linearly with increasing distance from the central section 33.
The gap 36 funneling out toward the compression chamber 26 in this way favors the ingress of compressed gas from the compression chamber 26 so that, near the central section 33, the flow of gas through the gap 36 which is narrow at this point is much stronger then in the case of a piston of precisely cylindrical form. This gas flow makes it possible to implement a bearing effect corresponding to that of a conventional gas bearing with gas fed into the gap via supply bores.
The gas bearing effect is only briefly interrupted when no pressure difference exists between the compression chamber 26 and the rear of the piston 25. For a compressor in which the entire cylinder 21 is hermetically sealed in the conventional manner and the rear of the piston 25 communicates with the suction-side chamber 29, this may be the case at the piston movement reversal point facing away from the head plate 23.
If there are flow obstructions on the path of the gas from the rear of the piston via the suction-side chamber 29 and its valve 27 into the compression chamber 26, causing the pressure in the compression chamber 26 to fall below the pressure at the rear of the piston during an outward movement of the piston 25—such a flow obstruction can be, in particular, the valve 27 itself—the flow of gas in the gap 36 is interrupted twice in each movement cycle of the piston—shortly before it reaches the reversal point facing away from the head plate 23 and thereafter—resulting in a temporary reversal of the direction of flow of the gas in the gap 36 between piston 25 and tubular section 22. In order also to amplify this gas flow directed into the compression chamber 26 such that it has a bearing effect, the diameter of the piston continuously decreases from the central section 33 toward a rear end face 37 in the outer section 35 also.
In order to minimize rubbing wear due to the contact between piston 25 and tubular section 22 at the time of stoppage of the gas flow in the gap 36, the circumferential surface 32 of the piston 25 at least in its central section 33 and/or the inner surface of the tubular section 22 is provided with a hard, abrasion resistant coating, e.g. of tungsten carbide, DLC or the like.
In the air gap 2, an armature 10 is suspended in a reversibly movable manner from two springs 11 between an upper and a lower reversal point (or rather a right and left reversal point in the diagram in
The essentially rod-shaped armature 10 incorporates a four-pole permanent magnet 14 in its central region. Whereas in a relaxed position of the springs 11 in which the arms 12 of each spring 11 lie essentially in the same plane the magnet 14 is placed centrally in the air gap 2 and a boundary line 15 between its left and right poles in
Supply bores 43 with a diameter of a few 10 μm intersect the bushing 39. The axial position of the supply bores 43 is selected such that, at the piston movement reversal point facing away from the head plate 23, shown in the Figure by a dashed outline of the piston 25, the supply bores 42 are near the central section 33 of the piston, whereas, at the piston movement reversal point facing the head plate 23, there does not necessarily have to be axial overlapping of the positions of the supply bores 43 and the piston 25. When the piston 25 is close to said reversal point facing the head plate 23, the overpressure in the compression chamber 26 is sufficient to maintain a sufficient gas flow through the gap 36 for the desired bearing effect. When the piston 25 is close to the reversal point facing away from the head plate 23 at which there is no overpressure in the compression chamber 26 to drive a gas stream through the gap 36, the gas bearing effect is maintained by the supply bores 43, so that no contact with the bushing 39 occurs at any phase of the oscillatory movement of the piston 25.
Due to the effect of the valve 28, a continuous overpressure is maintained in the chamber 30 even while the piston 25 is moving away from the head plate 23. This continuous overpressure allows the supply bores 43 to be continuously fed compressed gas. However, it is also conceivable for the transmission characteristics of the bore 42 and the cavity 40 to be optimized such that a pressure surge, which occurs in the chamber 30 whenever the valve 28 opens and fresh compressed gas from the compression chamber 26 flows into the chamber 30, propagates through the bore 42 and the cavity 40 and reaches the supply bores 43 when the piston 25 is in front of said supply bores 43. This enables the amount of compressed gas required for supporting the piston 25 to be reduced still further.
As only a relatively small number of supply bores 43 are required, here too a reduction in manufacturing complexity can be achieved compared to a conventional gas bearing compressor with axially distributed supply bores.
In this embodiment a hard coating as described above can also be provided on the piston 25 and/or the tubular section 22 in order to avoid rubbing wear each time the compressor is started up, when the pressure in the chamber 30 is not yet sufficient to produce the bearing effect at the supply bores 43.
Analogously to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 052 430.6 | Nov 2006 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2007/061726 | 10/31/2007 | WO | 00 | 5/6/2009 |