The invention pertains to an electric drive unit for generating an oscillating movement. The invention furthermore pertains to a small electric appliance with such a drive unit, as well as a method for manufacturing a corresponding drive unit.
Drive units for generating an oscillating movement are used, for example, in electric toothbrushes or electric razors. For example, DE 28 20 437 A1 discloses an electric toothbrush with an oscillating armature motor. The oscillating armature motor is used for realizing an oscillating rotational movement of a shaft that carries a brush element. The rotational movements are influenced by torsion springs and damping elements such that a desired motion sequence is adjusted.
An oscillating appliance, particularly an electric toothbrush, is also known from U.S. Pat. No. 5,613,259. This appliance features a mechanical oscillator that is driven by an electric motor. The electric motor is controlled in dependence on the oscillating frequency of the mechanical oscillator that is determined by means of a sensor such that the mechanical oscillator also remains resonant under a varying load. The mechanical oscillator is realized in the form of a spring-mass system that may comprise a coil spring or a torsion rod.
In order to achieve a largely optimal operation of the electric drive unit for generating an oscillating movement, the drive unit should be excited with a frequency that largely corresponds or lies close to its resonant frequency. However, the resonant frequency not only changes with the load of the drive unit, but is also detuned due to manufacturing tolerances associated with series production. Although this detuning can be compensated by regulating the excitation frequency, such a control results in increased manufacturing costs. In addition, a change of the excitation frequency is undesirable in certain applications.
Consequently, the invention is based on the objective of realizing a largely optimal electric drive unit for generating an oscillating movement with the least expenditure possible.
This objective is attained with the combination of characteristics disclosed in Claim 1.
The inventive electric drive unit for generating an oscillating movement features a stator, a rotor and a torsion element. The peculiarity of the drive unit according to the invention can be seen in that a tuning element is provided that acts upon the torsion element and serves for mechanically tuning the resonant frequency of the drive unit.
The invention provides the advantage that the drive unit allows an optimal conversion of the electric driving energy into the oscillating movement regardless of possible manufacturing tolerances such that a comparatively low electrical power suffices for the operation of the inventive drive unit.
The drive unit according to the invention is preferably realized such that the tuning element fixes the torsion element at a variable location of the torsion element. In this case, the tuning element may be arranged on the stator such that it can be displaced and fixed in position. The tuning element, in particular, may be displaceable parallel to the longitudinal axis of the drive unit. For this purpose, the tuning element may engage, for example, into at least one groove in the stator. A design of this type can be realized with a relatively low expenditure and makes it possible to easily tune the resonant frequency of the inventive drive unit.
With respect to its simple handling, it is particularly advantageous that the tuning element is realized in the form of a clamping device. In this case, the tuning element may comprise, for example, two parts and at least one connecting element for pulling together the two parts.
The torsion element is usually fixed on the rotor. In one preferred embodiment of the drive unit according to the invention, the rotor features a hollow shaft. In this case, it is particularly advantageous that the torsion element is at least partially arranged within the hollow shaft. This makes it possible to realize the inventive drive unit in a very compact fashion. The torsion element is preferably realized in the form of a torsion rod that can be manufactured with very strict tolerances and hardly requires any structural space, particularly in combination with the hollow shaft.
The inventive drive unit may feature a housing with a recess in the region of the tuning element. This makes it possible to carry out the tuning of the resonant frequency when the drive unit according to the invention is already completely assembled.
In one preferred embodiment of the inventive drive unit, the stator features permanent magnets and at least one coil. The rotor preferably features an armature of a magnetizable material.
The invention furthermore pertains to a small electric appliance equipped with the inventive drive unit. The small appliance according to the invention is preferably realized in the form of an electric toothbrush or an electric razor. Appliances of this type are frequently operated independently of the electric power supply by means of a battery such that the comparatively low power consumption of the inventive drive unit has positive effects on the time of operation that can be achieved with one battery charge.
The inventive method pertains to the manufacture of an electric drive unit for generating an oscillating movement, wherein the drive unit features a stator, a rotor and a torsion element. The peculiarity of the method according to the invention can be seen in that the resonant frequency of the drive unit is mechanically tuned by the torsion element after the assembly of the drive unit.
The scope of the method according to the invention includes embodiments, in which a region of the torsion element that participates in the oscillating movement can be varied in order to adjust the drive unit to a desired resonant frequency. For this purpose, the torsion element can be fixed on a tuning element, wherein the location at which the tuning element engages on the torsion element is chosen such that the drive unit has the desired resonant frequency. In order to achieve a reliable tuning of the resonant frequency, the drive unit is excited such that it carries out an oscillating movement, and the location of the torsion element at which the tuning element needs to be fixed is determined from the oscillating movement of the drive unit. In one preferred embodiment of the inventive method, an excitation by pulses is used for causing the oscillation of the drive unit. The location of the torsion element at which the tuning element needs to be fixed can be determined, for example, from the decay behavior of the oscillating movement. The torsion element is preferably fixed in the rotational position that the rotor assumes when the drive unit is switched off.
The invention is described in greater detail below with reference to the embodiments that are illustrated in the figures and in which the inventive drive unit is respectively intended for use in an electric toothbrush.
The figures show:
The torsion rod 10 is clamped into the adjusting element 6 in the rotational position that it assumes as its idle position due to the effect of the permanent magnets 12 on the armature 9. Before the torsion rod 10 is fixed in position by tightening the screws 20, a preliminary tuning process is carried out by displacing the adjusting element 6 into the position in which the desired resonant frequency of the spring-mass system is presumably reached. In this case, the effective length of the torsion rod 10 is adjusted with the aid of the adjusting element 6 such that the resonant frequency of the spring-mass system is influenced accordingly. The effective length of the torsion rod 10 corresponds to the distance between the location at which the torsion rod 10 is fixed on the connection piece 4 and the location at which the torsion rod 10 is fixed on the adjusting element 6. The resonant frequency rises when the effective length of the torsion rod 10 is shortened, i.e., if the adjusting element 6 is displaced toward the hollow shaft 3. Vice versa, the resonant frequency is lowered if the effective length of the torsion rod 10 is extended by increasing the distance between the adjusting element 6 and the hollow shaft 3. After this preliminary adjustment, the drive unit is excited by pulses such that it carries out an oscillating movement, and the effective resonant frequency of the spring-mass system for the current position of the adjusting element 6 is determined from the decay behavior of the oscillating movement. The deviation between the effective resonant frequency and the desired resonant frequency is then used for determining the distance, by which the adjusting element 6 needs to be displaced in order to reach the desired resonant frequency, for example, with the aid of an empirically prepared table. The adjusting element 6 is then displaced by the determined distance. The position of the adjusting element 6 can be checked with another excitation by pulses. If so required, the adjusting element 6 is readjusted until the effective resonant frequency of the spring-mass system corresponds to the desired resonant frequency with a predetermined accuracy. The adjusting element 6 is then permanently fixed in position.
According to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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103 50 445.1 | Oct 2003 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2004/012000 | 10/23/2004 | WO | 00 | 9/24/2007 |