The present invention relates to a regulator having a cooling body (heat sink) for an electric machine, particularly a voltage regulator of a DC generator of a vehicle.
Regulators of electric machines, such as voltage regulator of a DC generator of a motor vehicle, are generally mounted in the vicinity of the electric machine; thus, they have to be cooled in order to avoid damage to heat-sensitive electronic components of the regulator resulting from the heat generated during the operation of the electric machine. For this reason, voltage regulators of motor vehicles mounted on the generator are provided with a cooling body made of a good heat conductive material on their side facing away from the generator, which, during the operation of the generator, has applied to it a cooling air stream from a cooling air fan driven by the generator. In order to improve the cooling performance, the cooling body has a plurality of smooth cooling ribs aligned generally in parallel to one another on its upper side, whose surfaces form a heat exchange surface, together with the surfaces in the interstices between the cooling ribs. This heat exchange surface is aligned, with respect to the cooling air stream, in such a way that the cooling air is conducted all the way through the interstices between the cooling ribs, generally parallel to the upper side of the cooling body, past the heat exchange surface. However, boundary layers form at the heat exchange surface which impair convective heat transmission, and thus the cooling effect.
An object of the present invention is to provide a regulator having a cooling body that has an improved cooling effect.
To attain this object, a regulator having a cooling body is provided. This regulator has a cooling body that has the advantage of having a better cooling effect, and, at constant temperature and flow speed of the cooling air, it makes possible a temperature reduction by several degrees Kelvin on the inside of the regulator, and particularly in the regions that are at the highest temperature.
The different form and flow application to the heat exchange surfaces acts positively on the heat transfer between the heat exchange surface and the cooling air stream, particularly if, in a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the heat exchange surface, in the inflow region, includes one of the following: either a flow-against surface that is generally planar and aligned perpendicular to a main flow direction of the incoming cooling air, or a convexly arched upper side of a saddle-shaped elevation having at least two deflection surfaces that are aligned obliquely to the main flow direction of the incoming air. In this case, the cooling air flow is deflected by the flow-against surface or by the upper side of the elevation in the direction of the outflow region, where the cooling body, similarly to conventional cooling bodies, is preferably provided with protruding, rib-like projections, between which the cooling air is able to flow to an adjacent edge of the cooling body.
According to one preferred embodiment of the present invention, the inflow region is situated generally in the middle of the upper side of the cooling body that is provided with the heat exchange surface, whose lower side faces the regulator, while the outflow region either at least partially surrounds the inflow region or is situated on opposite sides of the inflow region.
A further preferred embodiment of the present invention provides that, within the inflow region, several individual pin-shaped or needle-shaped projections are situated that protrude over the flow-against surface and/or the elevation, whose surfaces form the heat exchange surface in the inflow region together with the flow-against surface and the upper side of the elevation in the inflow region. These pin-like or needle-like projections that protrude over the flow-against surface have the advantage that the incoming cooling air, even before its contact with the incoming flow surface or the upper side of the elevation, flows along the circumferential surfaces of the projections, and, in so doing, absorbs heat from the projections. But because of the pin-type or needle-type shape of the projections, they have relatively large circumferential surfaces around which the cooling air flows, but a relatively small end face that the cooling air flows against, so that the incoming cooling air is not deflected at the projections, or only slightly so, and the size of the flow-against surface or the upper side of the elevation is not noticeably decreased.
One particularly preferred embodiment of the present invention provides that at least a part of the pin-type or needle-type projections be situated at a distance from one another along the saddle-shaped elevation and/or on both sides of the saddle-shaped elevation, since this may be a favorable variant for the inflow region.
The saddle-shaped elevation, in cross section, has a ratio of height to width at the base of approximately 0.8 to 1.2, in this instance, while the ratio of width of the base to width of the apex amounts to about 2.0 to 4.0.
The pin-shaped or needle-shaped projections expediently have a frustoconically tapered shape starting at their base, in which the ratio of height to base diameter amounts to about 1.0 to 2.5, while the ratio of base diameter to head diameter amounts to about 1.8 to 2.2.
In principle, however, the flow-against surface or the saddle-shaped elevation in the inflow region may also be empty, that is, have no protruding projections. By contrast, using rib-like projections in the inflow region may be unfavorable.
Rib-like projections in the outflow regions are preferred, which preferably extend away from the inflow region and in the direction of an adjacent edge of the heat exchange surface, and whose surfaces, together with the floor of the stretched-out interstices between the projections, form the heat exchange surface within the outflow region, and, as a result of the enlargement of the heat exchange surface, compared to a level surface, make possible an improvement in the heat transfer in the outflow region. The interstices between adjacent projections form flow channels there for the cooling air which, after its deflection in the inflow region, flows along the rib-like projections, that is, essentially in parallel to the upper side of the cooling body, all the way through the outflow region to the adjacent edge of the heat exchange surface.
However, instead of the rib-like projections, in the outflow region, pin-type or needle-type projections may also be provided, these being situated in the flow direction of the cooling air in the outflow region, preferably offset to one another. By an offset of the projections, an improved flow around the projections is achieved, and with that, the surfaces of the projections, along which the cooling air has to flow when passing though the outflow region, are enlarged. The positioning of the projections is expediently selected in such a way that the offset of the projections in two rows, situated one after the other in the flow direction of the cooling air, corresponds to one-half the center-to-center distance of the projections in each row, whereas the distance of the two adjacent rows in the flow direction is expediently equivalent to 0.5 to 1.5 times the center-to-center distance of adjacent projections transversely to the flow direction.
In the outflow region, just as in the inflow region, the pin-shaped or needle-shaped projections expediently have a frustoconically tapered shape starting at their base, the ratio of height to base diameter amounting to about 1.0 to 2.5, while the ratio of base diameter to head diameter amounts to about 1.8 to 2.2. The corresponding also applies for the rib-type projections, when observed in the flow direction of the air.
The present invention is explained below in more detail with the aid of a few exemplary embodiments and corresponding figures.
Cooling bodies 2, shown in the drawing, that are made of a material having a good thermal conductivity, such as aluminum, are used for mounting on a voltage regulator (not shown) of a DC generator of a vehicle, in the cooling air stream K of a fan of the DC generator.
The conventional cooling body 2 shown in
Accordingly, cooling body 2 shown in
In the case of cooling body 2 shown in
As is shown in
In cooling body 2 shown in
Outflow region 8 of cooling body 2 shown in
It was also established by experimentation that, in the case of cooling body 2 in
In the place where, other than shown in the figures, on both sides of saddle-shaped elevation 16 several rows of pin-type or needle-type projections 12 are situated in the flow direction of the cooling air, one after the other, in the inflow region and/or the outflow region, projections 12 in these rows are offset to one another transversely to the flow direction of the cooling air, at least in outflow region 8. As is shown in
Moreover, it is further provided, see also
In this embodiment, a “DC generator” means that a DC voltage may be measured at the current output of the generator during operation. This may naturally also be the current output after a rectifier which has rectified an alternating current voltage or a three-phase current voltage.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 019 310 | Apr 2006 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2007/054107 | 4/26/2007 | WO | 00 | 7/16/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2007/122263 | 11/1/2007 | WO | A |
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20100006272 A1 | Jan 2010 | US |