The invention concerns an electromagnetic hydraulic valve comprising a cylindrical armature arranged in a hollow cylindrical armature space of a coil housing which is closed on one side by a bottom and pressurized by hydraulic medium, said armature being displaceable through a stroke length H between a bottom-distal end position and a bottom-proximate end position. In a region of the bottom-proximate end position, the armature comprises a pressure chamber which is formed between the bottom and a first front end of the armature facing the bottom and serves to damp movements of the armature, and the armature further comprises an annular gap serving as a choke. For forming the annular gap at least one inner sealing surface is situated within an axial bore arranged in the armature and extending from the first front end towards a second front end of the armature, and at least one outer sealing surface coaxial to the inner sealing surface is arranged on a sealing body which is fixed at least indirectly on the coil housing, and, said pressure chamber, due to a varying height of the annular gap, is formed only within one or more fractional sections ΔH of the stroke H of the armature so that a sum of the fractional sections is given as Σ ΔH<H.
A hydraulic valve of the pre-cited type is disclosed In EP 1 793 149 A2. The proposed hydraulic valve comprises a valve tappet that is actuated by the armature and whose movement in the region of the bottom-proximate end position, i.e. the end position near the bottom of the coil housing is decelerated, so that the impact of the armature on the bottom is damped. This deceleration of the armature referred to as ‘damping’ in the following is realized through a displacement of fluid out of a pressure chamber via a choking annular gap, said pressure chamber being defined in the region of the bottom-proximate end position by the bottom and by a first front end of the armature facing the bottom. The annular gap is formed by an overlapping of an inner sealing surface arranged within an axial bore of the armature with a coaxial outer sealing surface disposed on a sealing body fixed to the coil housing.
For adjusting the damping characteristic of the armature, the radial width and, above all, the variation of height of the annular gap achieved through the stroke of the armature constitute the choking parameters. Both the pattern of variation of the annular gap height and its position relative to the respective end position offer substantially independent degrees of freedom for optimizing the course of movement of the armature.
Tests carried out by the applicant with such a hydraulic valve have shown that the aforesaid degrees of freedom can still be inadequate for assuring the desired damping characteristic of the armature and, thus also, of the valve tappet.
It is an object of the invention to provide a hydraulic valve of the pre-cited type possessing an improved damping characteristic of the armature in the region of the bottom-proximate end position, as far as possible, without additional costs.
This and other objects and advantages of the invention will become obvious from the following detailed description.
The invention achieves the above objects by the fact that a cavity for receiving hydraulic medium extends outside of the axial bore on the first front end of the armature.
The hydraulic medium flowing into the armature space and collecting in the cavity gets mixed during deceleration and/or upon impact of the armature on the bottom with the air in the pressure chamber and thus forms a gas-liquid mixture with a clearly higher liquid content compared to the hydraulic valve proposed in the pre-cited prior art. The relatively high viscosity of this mixture acts on the one hand as a damping intermediate layer between the bottom and the first front end of the armature that strikes against this bottom and leads, on the other hand, to an enhanced choking and, consequently, damping effect during displacement of the mixture via the annular gap out of the pressure chamber. In order to maximize this effect, the hydraulic valve must ideally be installed exactly in gravity direction with the armature space pointing upwards because it is only then that the largest possible volume of hydraulic medium is situated in the cavity.
According to a further development of the invention, the pressure chamber should act only in the region of the bottom-proximate end position of the armature, the inner sealing surface should be spaced from the outer sealing surface in the bottom-distal end position of the armature by a damping-free stroke section H0, the inner sealing surface should have a height ‘a’ and the outer sealing surface a height ‘d’ for complying with the equation: a ≧H−H0 and d≧H−H0.
As will become clear from the description of examples of embodiment of the invention, this geometric design of the hydraulic valve leads to a continuously increasing height of the annular gap with a correspondingly increasing degree of damping of the armature whose movement in the bottom-proximate end position is damped by the pressure chamber acting only in the region of this position.
In an embodiment of the invention preferred from the manufacturing point of view, the cavity should be configured as a continuous circumferential groove and should particularly extend concentric to the axial bore. Alternatively, however, it is also possible to make a plurality of separate depressions, such as, for example, bores extending parallel to the axial bore.
Further features of the invention result from the following description and the appended drawings in which the invention is illustrated in principle and also with reference to an example of embodiment, identical or functionally identical components being identified by the same reference numerals. The figures show:
During a movement of the armature 2 in direction of the bottom-proximate end position 7, a pressure chamber configured as an overpressure chamber 8 is enclosed in the region of this end position 7. As can be seen from the intermediate position of the armature represented with a dotted line on the left of the center line, the pressure chamber 9 is defined on one side by the bottom 3 and on another side by a first front end 10 of the armature 2 facing the bottom 3 as also by an annular gap 11. The annular gap 11 is formed by an inner sealing surface 12 arranged inside an axial bore 13 extending in the armature 2 and by an outer sealing surface 14 arranged coaxial to the inner sealing surface 14 on a sealing body 15 which extends from the bottom 3 and is fixed on the coil housing 5. The damping of the movement of the armature 2 is based on the pressurization of the gas-fluid mixture situated in the pressure chamber 9, which mixture, after overcoming a choking resistance, is displaced in direction of a second front end 16 of the armature 2 turned away from the bottom 3. However, because the armature 2 and the sealing body 15 move relative to each other during the stroke H of the armature 2 and because, in the bottom-distal end position 6 of the armature 2, the inner sealing surface 12 is spaced from the outer sealing surface 14 at a distance equal to a damping-free stroke section H0, it is possible, in conjunction with a varying height HD of the annular gap 11, to realize a damping characteristic consistent with the stroke coordinate y. Important parameters for this, in addition to the damping-free stroke section H0, a height ‘a’ of the inner sealing surface 12 and a height ‘d’ of the outer sealing surface 14.
Referring at the same time to
The dotted curve of the height HD of the annular gap 11 shown in
In contrast to the example of embodiment shown in
In analogy to the embodiments concerning
From
An electromagnetic hydraulic valve 18 disclosed in
As also disclosed in the detail X illustrated in
The armature space 4 is defined by a bushing 29 made of a non-magnetic material that lines the coil housing 5 and forms the bottom 3. This bushing 29 shields the armature 2 mounted for sliding in the bushing 29 from interfering electromagnetic forces. The sealing body 15 extending from the bottom 3 and .comprising the outer sealing surface 14 is made in one piece with the bushing 29 by a deep drawing method.
The valve tappet 22 is a shaped part made of plastic and comprises axial guide ribs 30 which center the valve tappet 22 radially in the valve housing 21 and bear through axial shoulders 31 merging into a centering peg 32 float-mounted in the continuous axial bore 13 of the tube-shaped armature 2, against the second front end 16 of the armature 2. The axial shoulders 31 serve as a force-transmitting surface 33 of the valve tappet 22, and the second front end 16 serves as a force-transmitting surface 34 of the armature 2 which is in a loose pressure connection with the valve tappet 22 in traction force direction. A relationship between a distance LV, a distance LA, and a distance LL is given as: LL>(LV+LA), wherein
This distance and component length relationship takes into account unavoidable component length tolerances and guarantees that the sealing surface 35 of the first closing body 25 always bears completely against the first sealing seat 26 before the armature 2 reaches the upper end position 7 after an idle stroke. The idle stroke results from the difference LL−(LV+LA) and is identical to the distance between the force-transmitting surface 33 of the valve tappet 22 and the force-transmitting surface 34 of the armature 2 when the sealing surface 35 of the first closing body 25 bears against the first sealing seat 26 and the armature 2 bears against the bottom 3.
In the case of the hydraulic valve 18 disclosed herein, the movement of the armature 2 and the valve tappet 22 from the bottom-distal end position 6 in direction of the bottom-proximate end position 7 is effected solely through the pressure force prevailing on the front-end pressure take-off port P and acting on the valve tappet 22. In the case of a non-damped armature there would be a risk of the armature rebounding on the bottom 3 in the bottom-proximate end position 7 and striking anew against the valve tappet 22, so that the first closing body 25 would be excited into vibrations relative to the first sealing seat 26. Such vibrations can last for a relatively long time and lead to the aforesaid disturbing effects with regard to the development of pressure in the hydraulic system to be controlled by the hydraulic valve. In particular, the repeatedly established connection between the pressure take-off port P and the work port A can lead to a creeping pressure decrease at the work port A which would impair the displacement dynamics of the adjusting elements of the valve train considerably with the consequence of faulty positioning of the hydraulically displaceable adjusting elements of the valve train.
This is prevented by the damping characteristic of the hydraulic valve 18 described below. The annular gap 11 defining the pressure chamber 9 is formed by the inner sealing surface 12 of the axial bore 13 and the outer sealing surface 14 of the sealing body 15 only when the sealing surface 35 of the first closing body 25 of the valve tappet 22 already bears against the first sealing seat 26. Thus, the fractional section ΔH, in which the damping of the movement of the armature 2 is realized by a partial displacement of the air-oil mixture situated in the pressure chamber 9 through the annular gap 11, lies completely within the idle stroke LL−(LV+LA), so that the equation ΔH≦LL−(LV+LA) applies. Simultaneously, the height HD of the annular gap 11 increases continuously during the fractional section ΔH in keeping with the chain-dotted curve shown in
Following this, the armature 2 can slide back to the valve tappet 22 under the action of gravity and set down relatively softly on the axial shoulders 31 of the axial guide ribs 30. Because the inner sealing surface 12 of the axial bore 13 and the outer sealing surface 14 of the sealing body 15 do not overlap each other in this position, the damping of the movement of the armature 2 is also only effective outside of the stroke range of the valve tappet 22. In this way, the dynamics of the hydraulic valve 18, too, i.e. the switching time of the valve tappet 22, is impaired neither during the closing process nor during the opening process when the connection between the pressure take-off port P and the work port A is closed or opened, and is comparable with the dynamics of a hydraulic valve with a non-damped armature.
An important feature of the present invention is constituted by a cavity which extends on the first front end 10 of the armature 2 outside of the axial bore 13 and is configured in the present example as a circumferential groove concentric to the axial bore 13. The cavity identified at 36 serves to receive hydraulic medium that flows into the armature space 4 and, as shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2008 029 434.9 | Jun 2008 | DE | national |