The invention relates to an electronically commutated direct current motor having a plastic housing.
From DE 10 2009 047 332 A1, a generic direct current (DC) motor is known in which various parts are welded to the plastic housing. However, it is not apparent how the joining partners have to be shaped and how the welding process is to take place.
The present invention relates to an electronically commutated direct current motor comprising a housing consisting of a plastic material, a wound stator, a rotor and a bearing shield consisting of a plastic material.
The object of the invention is to provide a generic DC motor for a connection between the bearing shield and the housing or cover and housing or add-on part and housing, whereby no additional connecting or sealing elements are necessary and a very strong and tight connection can be established.
Due to the difference in diameter between the outer diameter of the bearing plate and the inner diameter of the housing, a pre-stress between the bearing plate and the housing is produced. When the welding regions heat up, this pre-stress leads to the melting of a welding region and to a close connection of the joining partners, since these can move slightly towards one another.
It is particularly advantageous if the welding regions and the width of a laser beam are coordinated with one another so that no non-heated partial regions are possible in the joining region. The diameter of the housing should be able to be reduced completely.
The laser beam welding method is particularly suitable for the welded connection, the housing (5), at least in the housing welding region has housing material that is permeable for laser beams. A laser beam of suitable wavelength can radiate through the wall without appreciably heating the housing (5).
According to a first embodiment, the bearing plate, at least in the bearing plate welding region, can consist of a laser light absorbing material or a laser light absorbing coating. The incoming laser beam is largely absorbed at the surface or in the region near the surface and converted into heat. This is also transmitted to the housing and melts both the welding region of the bearing shield and the welding region of the housing. Once the material is sufficiently soft, the connection releases and the welding areas mix and form a close connection which, after cooling, leads to a very strong mechanical connection, which is also very tight.
The object of the invention is also achieved by a method. In this case, a pre-assembled DC motor, in which the bearing plate is pressed into the housing, is irradiated with a laser beam while a relative feed movement is carried out in the circumferential direction of the housing. Either the laser beam or the DC motor can move. At a rotationally symmetrical weld, it is easiest to let the DC motor rotate.
In order to achieve a high quality of the welded connection, the welding regions and the width of a laser beam are to be coordinated with each other so that no non-heated partial regions are possible in the joining region. The diameter of the housing should thereby be able to be reduced completely in order to be able to form an intimate connection with the bearing shield. For this purpose, the laser beam can carry out an alternating movement in a direction parallel to a motor axis, while the feed movement is performed at a right angle thereto.
As an alternative to the use of different joining partners, it is also possible to carry out both joining partners from a material essentially permeable to the laser light. In this case, special measures are required in order to establish a sufficiently strong and tight connection. The laser beam should be very well focused and its highest energy density should be concentrated in the weld. In order to nevertheless achieve a secure weld connection, the laser beam must also be influenced in such a way that the range of highest energy density is modulated in the z direction. At the same time, care must be taken that the surface of the housing is not deformed. Therefore, an excessively high-energy input cannot occur in the region close to the surface. The welding device used therefore has an adjustable lens mechanism in which a collimation lens or a focusing lens performs an oscillation movement along the z-axis. The degree of transmission or absorption is selected in such a way that sufficient heating of the welding point is possible without damaging the surface of the housing. An infrared laser is suitable for the described welding process from the wavelength range between 0.7 and 2.5 micrometers.
A further effective measure is to modify the laser beam by means of an optical system in such a way that it has an annular or ellipsoidal beam cross-section on the surface which is focused to a circular area or a point as far as the welding area. As a rule, a laser beam leaves the radiation source with a Gaussian radiation profile in which the maximum of the radiation is in the beam center. It is desirable in this case to move the radiation maximum in an annular region, with a minimum of the radiation intensity prevailing at the center of the radiation cone. On the surface, the laser radiation is therefore distributed over a large surface area, but it meets in the welding area in a small circular area—idealized in one point. Even with a low absorption rate of approximately 10 to 20%, sufficient heat can be generated thereby to produce a welded connection.
It is also possible to use more than one laser beam directed at the welding area at different angles of incidence, the beam cross sections of the different laser beams not overlapping or only slightly overlapping the surface of the housing, but creating an additional radiation intensity in the welding area sufficient for a welded connection.
The invention is better understood by reading the following Detailed Description of the Preferred Embodiments with reference to the accompanying drawing figures, in which like reference numerals refer to like elements throughout, and in which:
Reference characters with index and corresponding reference characters without apostrophes denote identical details in the drawings and drawing description. It may also be the use in another embodiment, the prior art or a variant. For the sake of simplicity, the description introduction, and the reference character list contain only reference characters without index.
In describing preferred embodiments of the present invention illustrated in the drawings, specific terminology is employed for the sake of clarity. However, the invention is not intended to be limited to the specific terminology so selected, and it is to be understood that each specific element includes all technical equivalents that operate in a similar manner to accomplish a similar purpose.
It is possible to weld a ring gear of a planetary gear directly onto the shank 15b of the bearing plate 6. For this purpose, the bearing plate welding region 17b is provided. The outer diameter of the bearing plate welding section 17b is larger than the inner diameter of a ring gear welding section before assembly. After pressing the bearing plate 6 into the housing 5, these components are braced against one another. The bracing partially dissolves by heating and melting the welding regions 17a and 21a. In this case, the two parts radially approach one another towards the other and are closely connected to each other. A hermetically sealed weld seam is produced when a fully welded seam is produced. The shoulder surface 16b serves as an axial limit for the ring gear.
It is to be understood that the present invention is not limited to the illustrated embodiments described herein. Various types and styles of user interfaces may be used in accordance with the present invention without limitation. Modifications and variations of the above-described embodiments of the present invention are possible, as appreciated by those skilled in the art in light of the above teachings. It is therefore to be understood that, within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents, the invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2016 206 399.5 | Apr 2016 | DE | national |