The invention relates to an electromotive camshaft adjuster for adjusting the angle of rotation of the camshaft of an internal combustion engine relative to the crankshaft thereof, in particular, according to the preamble of the independent Claim 1.
Electromotive camshaft adjusters are distinguished by quick and exact camshaft adjustment for the entire operating range of the internal combustion engine. This also applies for a cold start and a restart of the internal combustion engine after stalling.
Electrical camshaft adjusters are comprised of an adjustment mechanism connected in a rotationally fixed manner to the camshaft and an electromotive adjusting drive, which is fixed to the adjusting shaft and whose motor shaft attaches to the adjusting shaft of the adjusting mechanism rotating at the camshaft rotational speed.
For the most part, the following triple-shaft gear mechanisms are used as the adjustment mechanism:
Swashplate (or Wobbleplate) Drive.
These drives have a simple construction. Their ability to be manufactured in mass production, however, has not been clarified. In addition, they are susceptible to tolerances, and the manufacture of the teeth parts is associated with high costs, because these parts have to be manufactured with cutting methods due to high loading and for reasons of accuracy.
Double Eccentric Internal Gear Drive.
This type of drive is very functional and quiet running, but generates considerable costs due to the number of components.
Planetary and Cycloid Gears (so-Called Harmonic Drive Gears).
The latter is described in DE 40 227 35 A1, in which an electromotive camshaft adjuster for adjusting the angle of rotation of an internal combustion engine relative to the crankshaft thereof is disclosed, with a triple-shaft transmission, which has a crankshaft-fixed drive wheel constructed as a sprocket or synchronous belt wheel and a camshaft-fixed driven part and also an adjusting shaft, which is connected in a rotationally fixed manner to the rotor of an electric adjustment motor and whose stator is fixed to the internal combustion engine.
This cycloid gear drive is distinguished by low installation space and high function reliability, but requires a large construction expense.
The invention is based on the objective of constructing a triple-shaft gear mechanism for an electromotively driven camshaft adjuster, which provides a relatively low manufacturing expense.
The objective is met according to the invention by the features of the independent device Claim 1.
The swashplate drive and the single eccentric internal gears offer various possibilities for reducing manufacturing costs. Both types of drives can be produced largely without cutting. The swashplate drive also offers the possibility of simple tooth backlash compensation, while the single eccentric internal gears offers many possibilities for reducing the number of components.
It is advantageous that brushless DC motors are provided as electric adjustment motors, especially motors with rare-earth magnets and with bipolar operation. These motors are distinguished through simple construction, high acceleration, and practically wear-free operation due to the lack of a commutator.
The first and second conical gear wheel and also the swashplate of the swashplate drive with teeth on both sides is suitable preferably for powder metallurgical production. The strength and hardness of these components can be increased after sintering, for example, through temper rolling of the teeth or hot pressing or high-pressure pressing without negatively affecting the accuracy of the parts. The components listed above can also be made from a steel blank through wobble pressing or axial rolling.
An important feature for the quality of the adjustment drive is the correct circumferential backlash of the teeth pairs. Through the dynamic camshaft torque, backlash that is too large can lead to rotational vibrations between the two conical gear wheels during operation. Therefore, noise or control problems can be produced. If the backlash is too small, the adjustment gear will jam or its efficiency will be too poor. However, backlash cannot be avoided. The magnitude of backlash is influenced by the quality of the teeth in the swashplate and the conical gear wheels and also by the dimensional tolerances of the gear wheel pairs that determine the axial distance and the alignment.
Limiting the dimensional tolerances to their permissible highest value through high manufacturing accuracy is successful only to a limited extent. For this reason, it is important to make the backlash adjustable. The backlash compensation ensures that the minimum circumferential backlash is produced when reaching the top tolerance limits of the dimensional tolerances of the components. If the dimensions of the components reach the lower tolerance limits or between the lower and upper tolerance limits, theoretically a profile cutting of the teeth is performed. The backlash is then corrected by a plain washer coupled between the first conical gear wheel and the housing.
Alternatively, the teeth can be biased by springs between the sprocket wheel drive and the camshaft driven part and/or the adjustment drive, in order to prevent backlash-dependent noise generation. The difficulty of this method lies in maintaining an optimum biasing, which combines low noise generation with high gear efficiency.
An eccentric internal gear drive, which is constructed as a single eccentric internal gear, offers cost advantages in that it has only one internal eccentric for first and second spur gears, which are connected to each other in a rotationally fixed manner and which roll on first and second ring gears. Here, the first spur gear and ring gear are used exclusively for conversion in the phase adjustment and the second spur gear and ring gear are used also or even exclusively as coupling teeth for passing the drive and adjustment power to the camshaft.
The second spur gear here completes the same eccentric motion as the first, because both are connected to each other in a rotationally fixed manner. If the second ring gear/spur gear pair has the same difference in tooth number as the first, it is used only as tooth coupling that does not contribute to the overall modulation of the adjustment gear. However, it is also possible to distribute the overall modulation onto both gear wheel pairs, which gives greater freedom in selecting the teeth.
In principle, like in double eccentric internal gear mechanisms, a claw, segment, or pin coupling, which takes over the coupling function, is also conceivable instead of the tooth coupling. The single eccentric internal gear mechanism then has an even simpler shape, but the pins or claws must slide on their counter surface for compensating for the eccentric motion. Therefore, a lower efficiency than with a tooth coupling is necessary, in which the second spur gear rolls in the second ring gear with low friction.
For further reducing the friction, the single internal eccentric and the two spur gears and optionally the drive wheel are roller supported, wherein the latter preferably has a four-point support. The roller bearing can be a ball bearing, cylinder bearing, or needle bearing. A four-point bearing is suitable especially for absorbing tilting moments, like those that can appear in a drive wheel. If the bearing friction has a small role relative to construction costs and installation space, then all of the roller bearings can be replaced by sliding bearings for a correspondingly dimensioned drive of the adjustment shaft.
Lower production costs are also achieved by constructing the ring gears and spur gears as annular gears with internal and external teeth, respectively, which are cut into the necessary length by tubes with internal and external profiling, respectively. The profiled tubes can be drawn or extruded or sintered, for example.
Another way to reduce costs is to form the hollow and spur gears made from bands profiled with teeth into annular gears, which are closed by welding or clips and then recalibrated.
Production costs can also be reduced by expanding the first spur gear by the width of the second spur gear and by meshing the first spur gear with two ring gears with equal teeth.
Backlash compensation is performed separately for the two spur gear/ring gear pairs in the single eccentric internal gear, with the backlash compensation being performed in the first spur gear/ring gear pair by selecting a matching eccentric and in the second spur gear/ring gear pair by a correspondingly profile-shifted second spur gear/ring gear or by an additional compensating eccentric that can be adjusted independent of the first eccentric and that is locked in rotation on the adjustment shaft. An especially economical form of the backlash compensation is provided in performing this compensation through slightly conically shaped spur gears and ring gears pushed axially one inside the other up to shortly before linear contact, preferably using its manufacturing-specific conical form.
A more economical way for achieving optimum backlash is provided by a run-in operation of the adjustment gear with a wear layer made from, for example, copper or plastic, which runs in under biasing until reaching a given backlash, which is relatively soft and allows sliding, and which is applied to its teeth.
Instead of through backlash compensation, the tooth noise can also be reduced through helical spur gears and ring gears. Through an opposite pitch of the teeth of the two spur gears and ring gears, their axial forces are canceled out, whereby the bearing is simplified.
Similarly for a swashplate drive, for a single eccentric internal gear, a spring biasing of the teeth between the camshaft driven part and the driving wheel and/or the adjustment drive is also possible for reducing the tooth noise.
A construction of the invention that is favorable to production is provided in that the second ring gear can be constructed in one piece with the driven flange and optionally with the intermediate piece and can be produced through, for example, wobble or axial pressing, sintering, or deep drawing. In this way, the number of components can be considerably reduced.
There are advantages in terms of production if the eccentric and the adjustment shaft can be constructed in one or two pieces with the tooth coupling. The one-piece construction offers the advantage of a smaller number of components. It can be realized by sintering, wobble pressing, and deep drawing. The two-part construction offers the advantage that the eccentric can be produced economically from an eccentric tube, in which a tooth coupling plate can be pressed.
A simple construction, low friction, and freedom of play are achieved in that the single eccentric internal gear has a so-called ball orbital coupling instead of a ring gear/spur gear pair transmitting the camshaft torque, in which balls are guided on each half in circuit tracks of two equal steel plates biased axially and balance the eccentric motion. One steel plate is connected in a rotationally fixed manner to a spur gear and the other steel plate is connected to a camshaft-fixed part.
A single eccentric internal drive with small axial length is achieved in that a driving wheel and a driven part, a first and a second ring gear, and also a first and a second spur gear are arranged coaxial, wherein the driving wheel is connected in a rotationally fixed manner to the first ring gear, the first spur gear is connected in a rotationally fixed manner through a flange to the second ring gear, and also the second spur gear is connected in a rotationally fixed manner to the driven part and the first ring gear meshes with the first spur gear and the second ring gear meshes with the second spur gear.
For certain applications, it can be advantageous that in a single eccentric internal gear, the second ring gear is constructed as a second spur gear and the second spur gear is constructed as a second ring gear, wherein the second ring gear and the second spur gear mutually engage each other.
It is also conceivable that the spur gears and ring gears of the single eccentric internal gear are replaced by corresponding friction wheels. These are distinguished through low noise and resistance to wear, but require sufficient contact force.
Additional features of the invention will be understood from the following description and the drawings, in which an embodiment of the invention is shown schematically. Shown are:
In
The gear housing 3 has on its free end an outer flange 4 with threaded bores 5, on which a first conical gear wheel 6 is connected by means of screws 7. On the driving wheel-side end of the gear housing 3 there is an inner flange 8, which is used for radial and axial support or position fixing of the gear housing 3 and the driving wheel 2. The radial support of the housing takes place on a step 9 of a second conical gear wheel 10, while its axial position fixing is realized by a shoulder 11 of the housing in connection with a stopping plate 12, which is pressed and/or welded to the driving wheel 2.
The second conical gear wheel 10 is connected in a rotationally fixed manner to a camshaft 14 by a central tension screw 13. A hollow flange 15 on the free end of the camshaft 14 is used for the axial and radial position fixing of the second conical gear wheel 10 and the stopping plate 12.
Between the conical gear wheels 6, 10 there is an inclined swashplate 16 with teeth on both sides. The inclination of the swashplate 16 is selected so that the teeth of each side are continuously engaged with one of the two conical gear wheels 6, 10. The swashplate 16 is supported by two deep groove ball bearings 17 constructed as fixed bearings on an adjustment shaft 18, which is supported, in turn, on a cylindrical part 20 of the second conical gear wheel 10 with two needle bearings 19 constructed as movable bearings.
The adjustment shaft 18 is connected in a rotationally fixed manner to a not-shown rotor of a brushless, reversible DC motor.
The two conical gear wheels 6, 10 and the swashplate 16 are fabricated using powder metallurgy. Their teeth are post-treated for increasing the strength for constant spacing accuracy through, for example, temper rolling of the teeth or hot or high-pressure pressing.
The swashplate gear 1 is fed via oil lines 21, which start from a camshaft bearing 22 and lead up to an annular space 23 and further through a not-shown, radial bore to the bearings 19 and 17 and also to the teeth. A corresponding shape of the first conical gear wheel 6 guarantees a sufficient oil level in the swashplate gear 1.
The backlash can be adjusted easily in the swashplate gear 1. Through a fitting shim 24, which can be placed between the outer flange 4 of the gear housing 3 and the first conical gear wheel 6, the backlash is set to zero. By replacing this shim by one of increased thickness, the backlash is adjusted.
The swashplate drive 1 functions in the following way:
In regular operation, that is, at constant phase position, the swashplate drive 1 including the rotor of the not-shown electric adjustment motor turns as a whole at the camshaft rotational speed. For adjusting the control times for a retarded or advanced position, the adjustment motor accelerates or decelerates its rotor relative to the camshaft 14. In this way, the adjustment shaft 18 turns in front of or behind relative to the gear housing 3, whereby the swashplate 16 rolls on the conical gear wheels 6, 10 according to the low difference in tooth number between the swashplate and the conical gear wheels with large modulation and completes the phase adjustment.
In the longitudinal section of
The first ring gear 26 meshes with a first spur gear 27, which is connected in a rotationally fixed manner to a second spur gear 28 through an interference fit. This is supported by a first needle bearing 29 on a single internal eccentric 30, which is in rotationally fixed connection with a not-shown rotor of an electric adjustment motor via a tooth coupling 31. The internal eccentric 30 is supported by a second needle bearing 32 on an intermediate piece 33, which can be tensioned in a rotationally fixed manner by a not-shown central tension screw to the similarly not-shown camshaft via a driven flange 34. The second spur gear 28 meshes with a second ring gear 35, on whose periphery the first ring gear 26 is supported with the driving wheel 2a in a sliding manner.
The second ring gear 35 is connected in a rotationally fixed manner to the camshaft-fixed driven flange 34. Both contact a stop plate 36 axially, which is connected in a rotationally fixed manner to the first ring gear 26.
The driven flange 34 has a tab 37, which can pivot in an annular section 38 of the stop plate 36 defining the adjustment region of the single eccentric internal gear drive 25 between two stops 39, 40, as also emerges from
A sheet-metal cover 41, which is pressed into a recess 42 and which limits the axial movement of the two spur gears 27, 28 and an adjustment shaft 18′, is provided on the adjustment motor side of the single eccentric internal gear drive 25.
The single eccentric internal gear drive 25 functions as follows:
In regular operation, the single eccentric internal gear drive 25 and the rotor of the adjustment motor rotate as a whole at the camshaft rotational speed. When the camshaft is adjusted to a retarded or advanced position, the adjustment motor accelerates or decelerates the adjustment shaft 18′ with the internal eccentric 30. In this way, the spur gears 27, 28 roll on the ring gears 26, 35 and produce the phase adjustment with large modulation due to the low difference in tooth number of the associated spur gears/ring gears.
A second ring gear 35′ is connected to a driven flange 34′ by an interference fit and by welding. Both components can be produced advantageously also in one piece through sintering.
A first spur gear 27′ is expanded by the width of a second spur gear 28′. The teeth of the ring gears 26′, 35′ have a constant internal diameter thanks to the profile shift despite different tooth numbers and thus makes it possible to mesh with the first spur gear 27′. The first spur gear 27′ can be produced through sintering but also through wobble pressing, cold pressing, or extrusion.
The first spur gear 27′ is supported by means of a first needle bearing 29′ on a single internal eccentric 30′ and this is supported by means of a second needle bearing 32′ on an intermediate piece 33′. This can be produced through, among other things, sintering, extrusion, or deep drawing. Its reduced outer and inner diameter relative to the intermediate piece 33 makes contact of the screw head of the central tensioning screw necessary on an end surface 43 of the intermediate piece 33′. This results in the modified form of an adjustment shaft 18″. This same can be produced through extrusion or deep drawing and a teeth coupling 31′ through stamping.
The sheet-metal cover 41′ is also used in this variant as an axial stop for the first spur gear 27′ and the adjustment shaft 18″ and also as a lubricating oil guide. A snap ring 44 is used as an axial stop for the second ring gear 35′ on the driven side.
The single eccentric internal gear drive 25″ shown in
Another difference lies in a two-part single internal eccentric 30″, which can be cut from a correspondingly shaped, extruded tube and which can be pressed and welded with a stamped tooth coupling 31″.
In a sintered driven flange 34″, a radial lubricating oil channel 47 is engraved, which provides the needle bearing 32″, 29″ and the teeth of the spur gears and ring gears 27″, 28″, 26″, 35″ with lubricating oil. The two spur gears 27″, 28″ are sintered in one piece, including their teeth.
The single eccentric internal gear drive 25′″ according to
A one-piece driving wheel 2a″/first ring gear 26′″ is suitable as a wobble pressed part due to its dimensions;
A deep-drawn stop plate 36″ is connected in a rotationally fixed manner to the driving wheel 2a″ by an interference seat and laser welding. It is used with its inner periphery as a sliding bearing for the driving wheel 2a″ and for the first ring gear 26′″ and also as an axial stop for a second ring gear 35′″ and the driven flange 34′″ connected to it.
The single eccentric internal gear drive 25″″ shown in
The first ring gear 26′″ is pressed into the driving wheel 2a′″, while a second ring gear 35′″ is supported in the driving wheel 2a′″ in a sliding way and guided axially by a stop plate 36′″ welded to the same.
In
In
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 038 681.1 | Aug 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2005/007583 | 7/13/2005 | WO | 00 | 2/9/2007 |