The present disclosure relates generally to the field of heavy equipment, such as construction and excavation equipment. More specifically, the present disclosure relates to an energy management system for use with hydraulic systems, such as those hydraulic systems generally used with pieces of heavy equipment.
Backhoes, power shovels, and other heavy equipment are used for construction, excavation, and mining. The pieces of heavy equipment operate work implements, such as shovels, buckets, or augers, to perform various tasks. Such equipment may utilize hydraulic systems for maneuvering the work implements in repetitious patterns of working movements. For example, a mining shovel may operate 24 hours per day, raising and lowering a bucket in a repeating cyclic pattern, once approximately every 30 to 60 seconds. Other pieces of heavy equipment, such as drilling rigs, also operate with repeating cycles of raising and lowering a drill or boom but at a slower rate. Energy is required to controllably raise and lower the work implements (e.g., lifting work, braking friction, etc.).
One embodiment relates to equipment having an energy management system. The equipment includes an articulated arm, a work implement, and an energy management system. The articulated arm includes hydraulic actuators designed to maneuver the articulated arm, and the work implement is fastened to the articulated arm. The energy management system is adjustable between a first configuration and a second configuration, and includes a hydraulic rotating machine and an electric rotating machine coupled to the hydraulic rotating machine. When the energy management system is in the first configuration, the hydraulic rotating machine and the electric rotating machine function as an electric motor powering a hydraulic pump. When the energy management system is in the second configuration, the hydraulic rotating machine and the electric rotating machine function as a hydraulic motor powering an electric generator.
Another embodiment relates to equipment having an energy management system. The equipment includes an articulated arm, a bucket, a sensor system, a controller, a bi-directional valve, and an electric rotating machine coupled to a hydraulic rotating machine. The articulated arm is driven by one or more hydraulic actuators, and the bucket is fastened to the arm and maneuverable by operation of the hydraulic actuators. The first sensor system is coupled to the articulated arm. The controller is coupled to the first sensor system, where data from the first sensor system is used to produce an estimate of potential energy stored in the articulated arm and the bucket. The controller is designed to change a direction of a hydraulic fluid through the bi-directional valve when the estimate of potential energy exceeds a threshold value, and the bucket is being lowered. The electric rotating machine and the hydraulic rotating machine are designed to add energy to the hydraulic fluid, and to remove energy from the hydraulic fluid and generate electricity, depending upon the direction of the hydraulic fluid provided by the bi-directional valve.
Yet another embodiment relates to equipment having an energy management system. The equipment includes an articulated arm, a sensor, a controller, and a bi-directional valve system. The articulated arm is driven by one or more hydraulic actuators, and the articulated arm designed to maneuver at least one of a bucket, a breaker, a grapple, or an auger. The sensor system is designed to detect a position of the articulated arm, and the controller is coupled to the sensor system. The controller is designed to reverse a direction of hydraulic fluid through the bi-directional valve system when the sensor system detects the articulated arm to be in a first position.
Alternative exemplary embodiments relate to other features and combinations of features as may be generally recited in the claims.
The disclosure will become more fully understood from the following detailed description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying figures, wherein like reference numerals refer to like elements, in which:
Before turning to the figures, which illustrate the exemplary embodiments in detail, it should be understood that the present application is not limited to the details or methodology set forth in the description or illustrated in the figures. It should also be understood that the terminology is for the purpose of description only and should not be regarded as limiting.
Referring to
A first hydraulic actuator 114 spans the first joint 160, between the body 126 and the first segment 120. A second hydraulic actuator 116 spans the second joint 130, between the first segment 120 and the second segment 122. And, a third hydraulic actuator 118 spans the third joint 132, between either the first segment 120 or the second segment 122 and the bucket 124. In some embodiments, the hydraulic actuators 114, 116, 118 include a rod (e.g., piston) and barrel (e.g., cylinder) arrangement, in which pressurized hydraulic fluid pushes or pulls the rod relative to the barrel to change the axial length of the hydraulic actuators 114, 116, 118.
In some embodiments, the first, second, and third joints 128, 130, 132 are constrained to allow for rotation of the segments 120, 122 only in a vertical plane. In such embodiments, the body 126 of the power shovel 110 may further be configured to rotate horizontally about a joint 134 positioned below the body 126, such as between the body 126 and a drivetrain 136 (e.g., driveshaft coupled to transmission, coupled to wheels, treads, pontoons, etc.). Horizontal rotation of the body 126 also rotates the articulated arm 112 and the bucket 124.
Each of the hydraulic actuators 114, 116, 118 is configured to controllably expand and contract in length. Actuation of the first hydraulic actuator 114 moves the first segment 120 about the first joint 128. Movement of the first segment 120, in turn, moves the second segment 122 and the bucket 124 about the first joint 128. As such, increasing the length of the first hydraulic actuator 114 rotates the first segment 120 vertically upward, about the first joint 128, raising the second segment 122 and the bucket 124. In a similar manner, the second and third hydraulic actuators 116, 118 may be actuated to controllably maneuver the second segment 122 and the bucket 124.
As the segments 120, 122 of the articulated arm 112 and the bucket 124 are raised, potential energy is acquired. According to a simplified example, such potential energy may be roughly proportional to the product of the height of the center of mass of the articulated arm 112 and the bucket 124 (and any material held therein), the mass thereof, and the acceleration of gravity. A more accurate calculation would also factor frictional energy losses, heat, acoustic losses, electric resistance, and other such losses. As the articulated arm 112 and bucket 124 are lowered, potential energy may be lost, or converted to kinetic energy associated with the movement of the segments 120, 122 and the bucket 124. In some instances, excess kinetic energy is controlled via braking to slow or stop the movement of the segments 120, 122 and the bucket 124. According to an exemplary embodiment, a portion or all of the excess kinetic energy may be converted into electricity via an energy management system having a regeneration process.
According to an exemplary embodiment, the power shovel 110 includes sensors 138, 140, 142 configured to detect and/or quantify movement of the articulated arm 112 and bucket 124. In some embodiments, the sensors 138, 140, 142 are configured to directly measure a position of the articulated arm 112 and the bucket 124. In some such embodiments, the sensors 138, 140, 142 are coupled to the joints 128, 130, 132 of the articulated arm 112 and measure the angle between segments 120, 122 coupled to the joints 128, 130, 132, such as an angle A1 between the first segment 120 and the second segment 122. In some embodiments, the sensors 138, 140, 142 include angular position measuring devices such as encoders, resolvers, potentiometers, etc. The position of the articulated arm 112 and bucket 124 may then be computed with a control circuitry 144 (e.g. processor), which may then be used to provide an estimate of potential energy stored in the articulated arm 112 and the bucket 124. In other embodiments, linear voltage differential transducers (LVDTs) or other sensors are used to measure the length of the actuators. In still other embodiments, different types of commercially-available sensors, coupled either directly or indirectly to the articulated arm, are used.
In other embodiments, the sensors 138, 140, 142 measure parameters generally related to the position of the articulated arm 112 and the bucket 124, or other relevant parameters. Based upon measurement of the parameters, the position and/or mass of the articulated arm 112 and the bucket 124 may be estimated, which may then also be used to estimate potential energy. In some such embodiments, strain gauges coupled to the segments 120, 122 of the articulated arm 112 provide information about the weight and orientation of the segments 120, 122 relative to the ground. For example, a first orientation may correlate to increased axial stress, while a second orientation may increase shear stress sensed by strain gauges. In other embodiments, more elaborate systems of sensors may be used (e.g., laser range finders, solid state gyroscopes coupled to the segments, etc.). While the disclosure herein includes a broad range of sensors, such elaborate systems of sensors may be less preferred due to increased cost and complexity. In some embodiments, additional sensors (e.g., pressure sensors, load cells, etc.), sensing pressure of hydraulic fluid in a hydraulic sub-circuit (e.g. sub-circuits 348, 350 as shown in
Still referring to
Referring to
The electrical energy system 212 includes the energy source 216, which may include a prime mover and an alternator, as described with regard to
The flow of electricity between the components of the electrical energy system 212 may be managed via a control circuitry, sensors, and an electric bus. In some embodiments, the electric bus is an AC bus, a DC bus, or a combination thereof (e.g., including rectifiers). When extra energy is required for the energy management system 210, the sensor system 232 may direct the system to draw power from the energy source 216, and additionally draw power from the electrical storage device 220 and supply the power to the electrical rotating machine 218. When excess power is provided on the bus 230, the excess power may be routed to the electrical storage device 220 or grounded.
The hydraulic energy system 214 includes the hydraulic rotating machine 222, which may include a pump for hydraulic fluid. In some embodiments, the pump is a positive displacement pump, such as an axial cam or triplex piston pump. The pump (e.g., hydraulic rotating machine 222 in a first or forward configuration) is driven by the electrical rotating machine 218 in some embodiments. In other embodiments, the pump is driven by another prime mover. The hydraulic rotating machine 222 may also include a hydraulic motor (or function as a hydraulic motor when the hydraulic rotating machine 222 is in a second or reverse configuration), which converts hydraulic energy into mechanical rotation of a shaft. The hydraulic motor may be coupled to an alternator, such as the alternator of the electrical energy system 212. In some embodiments, the hydraulic rotating machine 222 is configured to operate as both a hydraulic pump and as a hydraulic motor (e.g., bi-directional hydraulic rotating machine).
Still referring to the hydraulic energy system 214 of
As shown in
Referring now to
The energy management system 310 further includes a first rotating-machine pair 334 and a second rotating-machine pair 336, either pair 334, 336 including an electrical rotating machine 322, 324 and a hydraulic rotating machine 338, 340. As described with regard to other embodiments, the electrical rotating machines 322, 324 are configured to drive the hydraulic rotating machines 338, 340 during a first flow of energy through the system 310, and the hydraulic rotating machines 338, 340 are configured to drive the electrical rotating machines 322, 324 during a second flow of energy through the system 310. With the first flow of energy (see
Each of the hydraulic rotating machines 338, 340 is coupled to a hydraulic circuit 342 (e.g., hydraulic system, plumbing, bus, etc.), which additionally includes a hydraulic tank 344 and a bi-directional control valve 346. In some embodiments, the bi-directional control valve 346 includes a number of individual valves (e.g., cartridge valves, spool valves, etc.), sharing a common manifold, with each individual valve coupled to a particular hydraulic sub-circuit 348, 350 (e.g., branch, sub-system, etc.). Each sub-circuit 348, 350 is coupled to a hydraulic actuator 360, 362 configured to drive a work implement 356, 358 (or other hydraulically-driven component). The main controller 330 is coupled to the bi-directional control valve 346, and is configured to operate the bi-directional control valve 346 to manage the flow of hydraulic fluid through the system 310. According to an exemplary embodiment, the directional flow of hydraulic fluid provided by the bi-directional control valve 346 provides an ability to raise and lower the work implements 356, 358, while recapturing potential energy (with the same set of components). Additionally, because potential energy of the work implements 356, 358 is converted to electrical energy and stored instead of being converted to heat (e.g., during braking), the temperature of the hydraulic fluid may be reduced, decreasing power required for heat exchangers to cool the hydraulic fluid, and increasing a usable life of hydraulic components, such as seals.
Still referring to
In some embodiments, the system 310 may include hydraulic actuators 360, 362 (e.g., hydraulic cylinders, telescopic cylinders, plunger cylinders, differential cylinders, rephrasing cylinders, position-sensing “smart” hydraulic cylinders, or other commercially-available actuators) coupled to the work implements 356, 358 or other components, such as segments of an articulated arm (see, e.g.,
According to an exemplary embodiment, position measuring devices 364, 366 (PMD) or other sensors are coupled to each hydraulic actuator 360, 362, which provide data to the main controller 330 relating to the position of the work implements 356, 358 or the state of the hydraulic actuators 360, 362. Additional position measuring devices 368, 370, such as LVDTs or load cells, are optionally coupled to the work implements 356, 358 or related components, which may provide additional data useful to the main controller 330 and/or operator.
According to an exemplary embodiment, the main controller 330 uses the data provided by the position measuring devices 364, 366, 368, 370 to estimate a quantity of potential energy stored in the work implements 356, 358. If an instruction is provided to adjust the work implements 356, 358 in a manner that would release the potential energy (e.g. lower a shovel work implement, etc.), then a processor of the main controller 330 (e.g., control circuitry, control logic) is configured to compute whether to reverse the bi-directional control valve 346 to allow the hydraulic fluid to drive the hydraulic rotating machines 338, 340, to in turn drive the electrical rotating machines 322, 324, to generate electricity. For example, if the main controller 330 estimates that the electricity gained will exceed the energy cost associated with reversing the bi-directional control valve 346, then the main controller 330 may reverse the bi-directional control valve 346. Electrical energy generated from the potential energy of the work implements 356, 358 may then be directed over the bus 316 to the electrical energy storage device 328, and later used.
Referring to
Yet another step 416 includes estimating a potential energy gain (or absence of such) based upon the position estimation. In other embodiments, the step further or alternatively includes estimating a potential energy gain based upon a computation of energy to be generated by maneuvering the attachment in a repeating pattern. If the estimate shows that energy may be recoverable, then a first sequence 418 of additional steps may be performed. But if the estimate shows that energy may not be recoverable, a second sequence 420 of additional steps may be performed. In other embodiments, if the estimate shows that the recoverable energy exceeds a predetermined threshold value, the first sequence 418 of additional steps will be performed. The threshold may correspond to energy costs associated with reversing the bi-directional valve, or other costs (e.g., momentum of hydraulic fluid, friction, etc.).
If the estimate of recoverable energy provided by the estimating step is positive, then control circuitry of the system may provide several instructions, resulting in the performance of the first sequence 418 of additional steps. One step 422 includes operating a bi-directional valve of the energy management system to receive hydraulic fluid from the actuators. Another step 424 includes operating hydraulic rotating machines, coupled to the bi-directional valve, as hydraulic motors. As such, the step 424 further includes receiving the hydraulic fluid and converting energy in the hydraulic fluid into rotation of a shaft of a hydraulic rotating machine. Yet another step 426 includes operating the electrical rotation machines as electric generators. As such, the step 426 further includes receiving rotational mechanical energy from the hydraulic rotating machines, and converting the rotational mechanical energy into electricity. Yet another step 428 may include storing or using the electricity.
If the estimate of recoverable energy provided by the estimating step is negative, then control circuitry of the system may provide several instructions, resulting in the performance of the second sequence 420 of additional steps. One step 430 includes operating the bi-directional valve of the energy management system to provide hydraulic fluid to the actuators. Another step 432 includes operating the electric rotating machines as electric motors, where electricity is converted into rotational mechanical energy in the form of a rotating shaft of the motors. Yet another step 434 includes operating the hydraulic rotating machines a hydraulic pumps, adding energy to a flow of hydraulic fluid (e.g., pressurizing the fluid). Yet another step 436 includes using the hydraulic fluid to drive a work implement.
Referring to
The construction and arrangements of the energy management systems and equipment, as shown in the various exemplary embodiments, are illustrative only. Although only a few embodiments have been described in detail in this disclosure, many modifications are possible (e.g., variations in sizes, dimensions, structures, shapes and proportions of the various elements, values of parameters, mounting arrangements, use of materials, colors, orientations, etc.) without materially departing from the novel teachings and advantages of the subject matter described herein. For example, in some embodiments, rotational momentum of the equipment may be regenerated into electrical energy. In another example, pneumatic actuators and pumps may be substituted for hydraulic actuators and pumps as described herein. Some elements shown as integrally formed may be constructed of multiple parts or elements, the position of elements may be reversed or otherwise varied, and the nature or number of discrete elements or positions may be altered or varied. The order or sequence of any process, logical algorithm, or method steps may be varied or re-sequenced according to alternative embodiments. Other substitutions, modifications, changes and omissions may also be made in the design, operating conditions and arrangement of the various exemplary embodiments without departing from the scope of the present disclosure.
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