The present disclosure relates to compressors, as well as capacity modulation and variable volume ratio of compressors.
This section provides background information related to the present disclosure which is not necessarily prior art.
Conventional scroll compressors may include one or more of a variety of output adjustment assemblies to vary the operating capacity of the compressor. The output adjustment assemblies may include fluid passages extending through a scroll member to selectively provide fluid communication between compression pockets and another pressure region of the compressor.
This section provides a general summary of the disclosure, and is not comprehensive of its full scope or all of its features.
A compressor is provided and may include a shell assembly defining a suction pressure region and a discharge pressure region. A first scroll member may be disposed within the shell assembly and may include a first spiral wrap extending from a first side thereof and a first end plate defining a first discharge port and a first modulation port. A second scroll member may be disposed within the shell assembly and may include a second spiral wrap extending therefrom and a second end plate defining a first variable volume ratio port. The second spiral wrap may be meshingly engaged with the first spiral wrap to form a suction pocket in fluid communication with the suction pressure region, intermediate compression pockets, and a discharge pocket in fluid communication with the discharge pressure region. A first one of the intermediate compression pockets may be in fluid communication with the first modulation port and a second one of the intermediate compression pockets may be in fluid communication with the first variable volume ratio port.
A capacity modulation valve assembly may be located within the shell assembly and may be in fluid communication with the first modulation port and may be displaceable between open and closed positions to selectively provide communication between the first intermediate compression pocket and the suction pressure region via the first modulation port. A variable volume ratio valve assembly may be located within the shell assembly and may be in fluid communication with the first variable volume ratio port. The variable volume ratio valve assembly may be displaceable between open and closed positions to selectively provide communication between the second intermediate compression pocket and the discharge pressure region via the first variable volume ratio port.
Further areas of applicability will become apparent from the description provided herein. The description and specific examples in this summary are intended for purposes of illustration only and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure.
The drawings described herein are for illustrative purposes only of selected embodiments and not all possible implementations, and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure.
Corresponding reference numerals indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views of the drawings.
The following description is merely exemplary in nature and is not intended to limit the present disclosure, application, or uses. It should be understood that throughout the drawings, corresponding reference numerals indicate like or corresponding parts and features.
The present teachings are suitable for incorporation in many different types of scroll and rotary compressors, including hermetic machines, open drive machines and non-hermetic machines. For exemplary purposes, a compressor 10 is shown as a hermetic scroll refrigerant-compressor of the low-side type, i.e., where the motor and compressor are cooled by suction gas in the hermetic shell, as illustrated in the vertical section shown in
For exemplary purposes, a compressor 10 is shown as a hermetic scroll refrigerant-compressor of the low-side type, i.e., where the motor and compressor are cooled by suction gas in the hermetic shell, as illustrated in the vertical section shown in
With reference to
Shell assembly 12 may generally form a compressor housing and may include a cylindrical shell 30, an end cap 32 at the upper end thereof, a transversely extending partition 34, and a base 36 at a lower end thereof. End cap 32 and partition 34 may generally define a discharge chamber 38. Discharge chamber 38 may generally form a discharge muffler for compressor 10. While illustrated as including discharge chamber 38, it is understood that the present disclosure applies equally to direct discharge configurations. Refrigerant discharge fitting 22 may be attached to shell assembly 12 at opening 40 in end cap 32 and may define a first discharge passage. The suction gas inlet fitting (not shown) may be attached to shell assembly 12 at an opening (not shown). Partition 34 may define a second discharge passage 44 therethrough providing communication between compression mechanism 18 and discharge chamber 38.
Bearing housing assembly 14 may be affixed to shell 30 at a plurality of points in any desirable manner, such as staking. Bearing housing assembly 14 may include a main bearing housing 46, a bearing 48 disposed therein, bushings 50, and fasteners 52. Main bearing housing 46 may house bearing 48 therein and may define an annular flat thrust bearing surface 54 on an axial end surface thereof.
Motor assembly 16 may generally include a motor stator 58, a rotor 60, and a drive shaft 62. Motor stator 58 may be press fit into shell 30. Drive shaft 62 may be rotatably driven by rotor 60 and may be rotatably supported within bearing 48. Rotor 60 may be press fit on drive shaft 62. Drive shaft 62 may include an eccentric crank pin 64 having a flat 66 thereon.
Compression mechanism 18 may generally include an orbiting scroll 68 and a non-orbiting scroll 70. Orbiting scroll 68 may include an end plate 72 having a spiral vane or wrap 74 on the upper surface thereof and an annular flat thrust surface 76 on the lower surface. Thrust surface 76 may interface with annular flat thrust bearing surface 54 on main bearing housing 46. A cylindrical hub 78 may project downwardly from thrust surface 76 and may have a drive bushing 80 rotatably disposed therein. Drive bushing 80 may include an inner bore in which crank pin 64 is drivingly disposed. Crank pin flat 66 may drivingly engage a flat surface in a portion of the inner bore of drive bushing 80 to provide a radially compliant driving arrangement. An Oldham coupling 82 may be engaged with the orbiting and non-orbiting scrolls 68, 70 to prevent relative rotation therebetween.
Non-orbiting scroll 70 may include an end plate 84 defining a first discharge port 92 and having a spiral wrap 86 extending from a first side thereof, an annular recess 88 extending into a second side thereof opposite the first side, and a series of radially outwardly extending flanged portions 90 (
A first pocket, pocket 94 in
With additional reference to
WR valve assembly 28 may include a valve housing 118, a VVR valve 120 and a biasing member 122. The valve housing 118 may define a valve stop region 124 and an annular wall 126 located within the hub 78 of the orbiting scroll 68 and extending axially from a valve stop region 124. The valve stop region 124 may be located axially between the drive shaft 62 and the end plate 72. An annular recess 128 may be defined in an axial end of the valve stop region 124 facing the orbiting scroll 68 and may form an inner valve guide 130. The hub 78 of the orbiting scroll 68 may form an outer valve guide 132. The axial end surface of the end plate 72 of the orbiting scroll 68 defining the first and second VVR ports 112, 114 may form a valve seat 125 for the VVR valve 120.
A seal 134 may surround the annular wall 126 and may be engaged with the annular wall 126 and the hub 78 to isolate the suction pressure region of the compressor from the first and second WR ports 112, 114 and the second discharge port 116. A drive bearing 136 may be located within the annular wall 126 of the valve housing 118 and may surround the drive bushing 80 and drive shaft 62. A pin 138 may be engaged with the valve housing 118 and the hub 78 of the orbiting scroll 68 to inhibit relative rotation between the valve housing 118 and the orbiting scroll 68.
The VVR valve 120 may be located axially between the valve stop region 124 of the valve housing 118 and the valve seat 125 of end plate 72 of the orbiting scroll 68. The VVR valve 120 may include an annular body 140 radially aligned with the first and second VVR ports 112, 114, surrounding the second discharge port 116 and defining a central aperture 142 radially aligned with the second discharge port 116. The inner valve guide 130 may extend through the central aperture 142 and the outer valve guide 132 may surround an outer perimeter of the annular body 140 to guide axial displacement of the VVR valve 120 between open and closed positions. The biasing member 122 may urge the WR valve 120 to the closed position and the WR valve 120 may be displaced to the open position by pressurized fluid within the intermediate compression pockets via the first and second VVR ports 112, 114.
The WR valve 120 may overlie the first and second WR ports 112, 114 and sealingly engage valve seat 125 to isolate the first and second WR ports 112, 114 from communication with the second discharge port 116 when in the closed position. The VVR valve 120 may be axially offset from the valve seat 125 to provide communication between the first and second VVR ports 112, 114 and the second discharge port 116 when in the open position. The first and second intermediate compression pockets may be placed in communication with the discharge pocket when the VVR valve 120 is in the open position.
More specifically, a flow path may be defined from the first and second intermediate compression pockets to the first discharge port 92 when the VVR valve 120 is in the open position. The flow path may be defined through the first and second VVR ports 112, 114 to a space between the valve housing 118 and the end plate 72 of the orbiting scroll 68 to the second discharge port 116 to the first discharge port 92.
With additional reference to
The non-orbiting scroll member 70 may include an annular hub 148 having first and second portions 150, 152 axially spaced from one another forming a stepped region 154 therebetween. First portion 150 may be located axially between second portion 152 and end plate 84 and may have an outer radial surface 156 defining a first diameter (D1) greater than or equal to a second diameter (D2) defined by an outer radial surface 158 of second portion 152.
Capacity modulation valve assembly 26 may include a modulation valve ring 160, a modulation lift ring 162, a retaining ring 164, and a modulation control valve assembly 166. Modulation valve ring 160 may include an inner radial surface 168, an outer radial surface 170, a first axial end surface 172 defining an annular recess 174 and a valve portion 176, and first and second passages 178, 180. Inner radial surface 168 may include first and second portions 182, 184 defining a second axial end surface 186 therebetween. First portion 182 may define a third diameter (D3) less than a fourth diameter (D4) defined by the second portion 184. The first and third diameters (D1, D3) may be approximately equal to one another and the first portions 150, 182 may be sealingly engaged with one another via a seal 188 located radially therebetween. More specifically, seal 188 may include an o-ring seal and may be located within an annular recess 190 in first portion 182 of modulation valve ring 160. Alternatively, the o-ring seal could be located in an annular recess in annular hub 148.
Modulation lift ring 162 may be located within annular recess 174 and may include an annular body defining inner and outer radial surfaces 192, 194, and first and second axial end surfaces 196, 198. Inner and outer radial surfaces 192, 194 may be sealingly engaged with sidewalls 200, 202 of annular recess 174 via first and second seals 204, 206. More specifically, first and second seals 204, 206 may include o-ring seals and may be located within annular recesses 208, 210 in inner and outer radial surfaces 192, 194 of modulation lift ring 162. Modulation valve ring 160 and modulation lift ring 162 may cooperate to define a modulation control chamber 212 between annular recess 174 and first axial end surface 196. First passage 178 may be in fluid communication with modulation control chamber 212. Second axial end surface 198 may face end plate 84 and may include a series of protrusions 214 defining radial flow passages 216 therebetween.
Seal assembly 20 may form a floating seal assembly and may be sealingly engaged with non-orbiting scroll 70 and modulation valve ring 160 to define an axial biasing chamber 218. More specifically, seal assembly 20 may be sealingly engaged with outer radial surface 158 of annular hub 148 and second portion 184 of modulation valve ring 160. Axial biasing chamber 218 may be defined axially between an axial end surface 220 of seal assembly 20 and second axial end surface 186 of modulation valve ring 160 and stepped region 154 of annular hub 148. Second passage 180 may be in fluid communication with axial biasing chamber 218.
Retaining ring 164 may be axially fixed relative to non-orbiting scroll 70 and may be located within axial biasing chamber 218. More specifically, retaining ring 164 may be located within a recess in first portion 150 of annular hub 148 axially between seal assembly 20 and modulation valve ring 160. Retaining ring 164 may form an axial stop for modulation valve ring 160. Modulation control valve assembly 166 may include a solenoid operated valve and may be in fluid communication with first and second passages 178, 180 in modulation valve ring 160 and suction pressure region 106.
During compressor operation, modulation control valve assembly 166 may be operated in first and second modes. In the first mode (
The pressure provided by the axial biasing chamber 218 may urge the modulation valve ring 160 upward and provide communication between the first and second modulation ports 144, 146 and the suction pressure region 106. The partial capacity may be approximately fifty percent of the full capacity. The compressor 10 may be operated at a capacity between the partial capacity and the full capacity through pulse width modulation of the capacity modulation valve assembly 26 between the first and second modes.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/073,246, filed Nov. 6, 2013, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/731,594, filed on Nov. 30, 2012. The entire disclosure of the above application is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61731594 | Nov 2012 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 14073246 | Nov 2013 | US |
Child | 14846877 | US |