The disclosure relates to an electromechanical disk brake having a parking brake actuator for motor vehicles. Parking brake actuators are used to prevent a vehicle from rolling away from the stationary state. In the case of conventional disk brakes, a brake cylinder assigned to the disk brake is generally equipped with a mechanically actuated parking brake function. The principle of the parking brake function used in a conventional disk brake cannot be used in an electromechanical disk brake.
Solutions for providing a parking brake function in an electromechanically actuated disk brake are known. US 2008/0217117 thus solves the problem with a complex and costly redundant mechanical parking brake actuator.
EP2650557A1 proposes another solution with a latching lug on a cam disk. This actuation principle is associated with the actuation of the disk brake by means of the cam disk and cannot be used for other actuation mechanisms. The latching lug is arranged in a fixed position and is part of the application mechanism. In order not to interfere with the actual operation of the brake kinematics, the latching lug is provided at the point of maximum application. The arrangement of the latching lug has the effect that the parking brake is inevitably actuated with the maximum possible application force. The regularly high application forces that are present and that are also not required for parking unnecessarily load brake and brake shoes and reduce the service life thereof.
DE10138494A1 discloses a solution in which a rotor disk or a motor shaft that is connected to a helical transmission is blocked. This “fixing device” is a bistable magnetic brake. Owing to the direct connection with the transmission, relatively great forces act on the locking bolt, and the fixing device, as an additional component, is not integrated in the electromechanical brake actuator.
A functional integration in the housing of the electromechanical brake actuator is not provided in DE10206786A1 either. The actuating device is flange-mounted here.
By contrast, the transmission of the brake actuator is locked in US 2015/0246662. As a result, relatively great forces act on a locking bolt. Furthermore, the locking device also here is a component which is additionally flange-mounted on the disk brake.
US 2006/0163939 likewise describes the locking or the braking of a rotor of an electric motor via a brake pad in order to realize a parking brake actuator. However, a bolt which is driven by an electric motor is used for the locking.
It is an object of the disclosure to provide an electromechanical disk brake having a parking brake actuator, which is cost-effective and requires little construction space.
This object can, for example, be achieved in that an electromechanical disk brake has a parking brake actuator which is embodied as an electromagnetic linear drive, and wherein an electric motor can be arrested by the electromechanical linear drive. Embodiments according to the disclosure use the main actuation branch of the electromechanical disk brake and extend the same by a linear drive. The main actuation branch should be understood as meaning the electric motor and an actuator which are used for the application of a brake disk via two brake pads. After a desired brake force is set via an actuation operation of the electric motor, the electric motor is arrested in the set position. The electromechanical disk brake maintains the set brake force which without a supply of additional holding energy for holding the electric motor in the set position. That is, the electromechanical disk brake is held exclusively by the form-fitting connection, which is introduced by the arresting operation, between the electric motor and the linear drive.
In an embodiment, the linear drive has a plunger and a rotor of the electric motor has latching grooves. In order to produce a force-fitting connection, the plunger engages in the latching grooves of the rotor while the electric motor is arrested. The latching grooves are advantageously arranged on the rotor at uniform intervals along the circumference of the rotor. The more latching grooves the rotor has, the more positions are provided for arresting the electric motor.
In a further embodiment, the linear drive is embodied as a solenoid. Solenoids are electromagnetic actuators which use an electrically generated magnetic field to exert a force on the plunger, also referred to as plunger core, such that the plunger is movable linearly in two directions. An electrical magnetic field is generated via a coil mounted around the plunger. Depending on the polarity, that is, positive polarity or negative polarity, the plunger is held in a starting position, or the plunger plunges in a form-fitting manner into a latching groove of the rotor and arrests the electric motor in the set position. The starting position is defined as the position of the plunger at which the plunger has not plunged into a latching groove of the rotor. The rotor can therefore fully rotate.
Furthermore, in a further embodiment, the linear drive is arranged radially, in the direction of the latching grooves, in an electric motor housing of the electromechanical disk brake. The linear drive is therefore integrated in the electromechanical disk brake. In more precise terms, the linear drive is arranged axially between a control unit of the electromechanical disk brake and a cam disk of the electromechanical disk brake and radially in the direction of the rotor.
In a further embodiment, the electric motor is embodied as an external-rotor motor, wherein the latching grooves are arranged on the rotor in a form-fitting manner in a radial direction. Electric motors have a stator and a rotor. An external-rotor motor refers to electric motors in which the stator, that is, the stationary part, is located in the interior of the electric motor, and the rotor, that is, the movable part, surrounds the stator. In contrast to a conventional constructional form of the electric motor as an internal-rotor motor, a circumferential surface of the external-rotor motor is directly accessible and predominantly does not carry out an electromagnetic function.
Furthermore, in a further embodiment, for the electrical activation of the linear drive, the linear drive is connected to a motor control unit via a cable connection. The motor control unit is configured for activation of the electric motor and can advantageously be arranged inside the electric motor. In particular, the motor control unit is arranged downstream of the linear drive, axially in the direction of the cam disk, such that a short cable connection is sufficient for the electrical connection of the linear drive. Furthermore, with the use of the motor control unit, no additional control unit is necessary for controlling the linear drive, as a result of which the cost of the electromechanical disk brake is reduced.
In an alternative embodiment, the linear drive is advantageously arranged axially parallel to an electric motor axis, in the direction of the latching grooves, in the electric motor housing of the electromechanical disk brake. In the alternative embodiment, the linear drive is embedded directly in the electric motor between the control unit and the rotor. The extra construction space in a vehicle because of the integration of the linear drive can be used in some other way. Furthermore, the linear drive is also protected better since the linear drive is arranged in the electric motor rather than on the electric motor.
Also in the alternative embodiment of the linear drive, the electric motor is embodied, in a further embodiment, as an external-rotor motor. The latching grooves are arranged on the rotor in a form-fitting manner in an axially parallel direction. The operating principle is the same as in the first embodiment, in which the linear drive engages radially in the latching grooves of the rotor.
In a further alternative embodiment, the linear drive is connected directly to the motor control unit. An additional external cable connection, that is, a cable connection arranged outside the electric motor housing, is omitted. Undesirable cable breakages due to actions outside the electric motor housing are eliminated.
In a further embodiment, the motor control unit for the alternative linear drive has a baseplate, wherein the baseplate is at least in sections part of the electric motor housing. The baseplate firstly ensures that the motor control unit is hermetically sealed, and secondly, the baseplate of the motor control unit integrates the solenoid, which is embodied as the linear drive, as an arresting device. The integration of the linear drive is achieved in particular by the fact that, during the manufacturing, the coil of the solenoid is inserted from the motor side, that is, the side on which the electric motor is flange-mounted on the cam disk.
In a further advantageous embodiment, the baseplate of the alternative linear drive has bores for the passage of a connecting line. The bores are furthermore filled with a thermoplastic compound for sealing the clearances of the bores. A clearance should be understood as meaning that space in the bores which is not filled by connecting lines.
So that the alternative linear drive is firmly fixed in the electric motor housing, in a further embodiment the bore holes and the coil of the electric motor, which coil is at least partially arranged in the motor control unit, are potted with the thermoplastic compound.
In a final embodiment, for the conversion of the rotating movement of the electric motor into a translatory movement, a transmission of the electromechanical disk brake has a cam disk. In addition, the electromechanical disk brake is embodied as a sliding calliper disk brake. The integration of the cam disk in the electromechanical disk brake makes it possible to omit a brake cylinder, or, in other words, the cam disk with the electric motor and the transmission replaces the brake cylinder. The compact configuration of the electromechanical sliding calliper disk brake equipped with the cam disk permits new fields of use in automotive engineering.
The invention will now be described with reference to the drawings wherein:
It is understood that the foregoing description is that of the preferred embodiments of the invention and that various changes and modifications may be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2019 127 901.1 | Oct 2019 | DE | national |
This application is a continuation application of international patent application PCT/EP2020/077905, filed Oct. 6, 2020 designating the United States and claiming priority from German application 10 2019 127 901.1, filed Oct. 16, 2019, and the entire content of both applications is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/EP2020/077905 | Oct 2020 | US |
Child | 17695542 | US |