Not Applicable
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to hydraulic systems that control fluid flow to a hydraulic actuator which moves a mechanical component on a machine, and in particular to recovering energy from the hydraulic actuator and utilizing the recovered energy subsequently to power the hydraulic actuator.
2. Description of the Related Art
Construction and agricultural equipment employ hydraulic systems to operate different mechanical elements. For example, an excavator is a common construction machine that has boom pivotally coupled at one end to a tractor and having a bucket at the other end for scooping dirt and other material. A cylinder assembly is used to raise and lower the boom and includes a cylinder with a piston therein which defines two chambers in the cylinder. A rod connected to the piston is typically attached to the boom and the cylinder is attached to the body of the excavator. The boom is raised and lowered by extending and retracting the rod out of and into the cylinder.
Other machines use different types of hydraulic actuators to produce motion of a mechanical element. The term “hydraulic actuator”, as used herein, generically refers to any device, such as a cylinder-piston arrangement or a rotational motor for example, that converts hydraulic fluid flow into mechanical motion.
During powered extension and retraction of the cylinder assembly, pressurized fluid from a pump is usually applied by a valve assembly to one cylinder chamber and all the fluid exhausting from the other cylinder chamber flows through the valve assembly into a return conduit that leads to the system tank. Under some conditions, an external load or other force acting on the machine enables extension or retraction of the cylinder assembly without significant fluid pressure from the pump. This is often referred to as an overrunning load. In an excavator for example, when the bucket is filled with heavy material, the boom can be lowered by the force of gravity alone. That external force drives fluid out of one chamber of the boom's hydraulic cylinder through the valve assembly and into the tank. At the same time, an amount of fluid is drawn from the pump through the valve assembly into the other cylinder chamber which is expanding, however because that incoming fluid is not driving the piston, it does not have to be maintained at a significant pressure for this boom motion to occur. In this situation, the fluid is exhausted from the cylinder under relatively high pressure, thereby containing energy that normally is lost when the pressure is metered through the valve assembly.
To optimize efficiency and economical operation of the machine, it is desirable to recover the energy of that exhausting fluid, instead of dissipating it in the valve assembly. Some prior hydraulic systems sent that exhausting fluid to an accumulator, where it was stored under pressure for later use in powering the machine. However, a challenge to efficient energy recovery and reuse is that the stored hydraulic fluid has to be at the proper pressure and volume to power an actuator. The relationship between the pressure and volume of the exhausting fluid and those parameters of the accumulator varies instantaneously and determines whether that fluid can be stored. For example, if the external force acting on the cylinder assembly is insufficient to pressurized the exhausting fluid above the level of pressure in the accumulator, then that fluid cannot be stored.
At another time when use of the fluid in the accumulator is desired, the instantaneous relationship between the pressure and volume of the accumulator and that required of the fluid to power the hydraulic actuator determines whether the accumulator fluid can be used. For example, if the load on the hydraulic actuator requires a greater pressure than the accumulator pressure, then the recovered fluid cannot be employed. Also if the hydraulic actuator needs to move so far as to require a greater volume of fluid than is stored in the accumulator, effective operation may be difficult to achieve. Another limiting factor is that as the hydraulic actuator consumes fluid from the accumulator, the accumulator pressure decreases reducing the ability of the remaining fluid to power the actuator.
Therefore, a need exists to provide an effective techniques for recovering and reusing energy in a hydraulic system.
An energy recovery method is provided for a hydraulic system that includes a first cylinder, a second cylinder, a supply conduit, a return conduit, and an accumulator. The first and second cylinders are functionally connected in parallel to operate a component on a machine and each has first and second chambers.
The energy recovery method comprises a plurality of energy recovery modes, various ones of which may be used on a given machine. A dual cylinder energy recovery mode includes routing fluid from the first chambers of both the first and second hydraulic cylinders into the accumulator, and directing fluid into the second chambers of the first and second hydraulic cylinders. In a split cylinder energy recovery mode fluid is routed from the first chamber of the second hydraulic cylinder into the accumulator, routing fluid from the first chamber of the first hydraulic cylinder into the second chamber of at least one of the first and second hydraulic cylinders.
In the preferred implementation of this method, directing fluid into the second chambers in the dual cylinder energy recovery mode is accomplished by routing fluid from either the supply conduit or the return conduit into the second chambers of the first and second hydraulic cylinders. In this implementation, the split cylinder energy recovery mode also involves routing fluid from the supply conduit into the second chamber of at least one of the first and second hydraulic cylinders.
The preferred embodiment of this method also has at least one additional energy recovery mode. That additional recovery mode may comprise routing fluid from the first chamber of both the first and second hydraulic cylinders into the second chamber of both the first and second hydraulic cylinders.
Another aspect of the present invention involves determining which energy recovery mode to use based on sensing pressures at different places in the hydraulic system, such as the supply conduit, return conduit, and the first and second chamber of the two hydraulic cylinders.
Several different modes of reusing the fluid stored in the accumulator are also provided in which that stored fluid is directed to different ones of the cylinder chambers.
Although the present invention is being described in the context of use on an excavator, it can be implemented on other types of hydraulically operated equipment.
With initial reference to
With reference to
The boom function 30 raises and lowers the boom 13 by controlling the flow of fluid to and from the boom cylinder assemblies 16 and 17, each having a cylinder, a piston with a rod. The first boom cylinder assembly 16 has a first boom cylinder 31 with a first piston 27 slideably received therein which divides the cylinder interior into a rod chamber 33 and a head chamber 34 on opposite sides of the piston. The second boom cylinder assembly 17 has a second boom cylinder 32 with a second piston 29 slideably received therein which divides the cylinder interior into another rod chamber 36 and head chamber 38 on opposite sides of the piston. The volumes of the rod and head chambers change as the associated piston slides within the respective cylinder. In the exemplary excavator 10 of
The rod chambers 33 and 36 are directly connected together hydraulically. A bidirectional, EHP cylinder separation control valve 39 directly couples the head chambers 34 and 38, and preferably is directly connected to each head chamber. Closing the cylinder separation control valve 39 isolates the head chambers from each other and opening the cylinder separation control valve 39 provides a direct path between the two head chambers. A “control valve” is defined herein to mean a valve that is manually operated by a person or electrically operated. The term “directly connected” as used herein means that the associated components are connected together by a conduit without any intervening element, such as a valve, an orifice or other device, which restricts or controls the flow of fluid beyond the inherent restriction of any conduit. As used herein, stating that a hydraulic component “directly couples” two other elements means that the hydraulic component provides a path for fluid to flow between those two other elements without flowing through a control valve assembly or through the supply or return conduits in which fluid flows to and from other hydraulic functions. A statement herein that a control valve provides a “direct path” between two components or elements of the hydraulic system means that the path does not contain another control valve.
A control valve assembly 40 couples the boom cylinder assemblies 16 and 17 to the supply and return conduits 25 and 26 and controls the flow of fluid there between. When the control valve assembly 40 supplies pressurized fluid to the head chambers 34 and 38 in the boom cylinders 31 and 32 and drains fluid from the rod chambers 33 and 36, each piston rod 35 and 37 is extended from its cylinder, thereby raising the boom 13. Similarly, supplying pressurized hydraulic fluid from the supply conduit 25 to the rod chambers 33 and 36 and draining fluid from the head chambers 34 and 38, retracts the piston rods 35 and 37 into the boom cylinders 31 and 32, thereby lowering the boom 13. At those times that are commonly referred to as powered extension and powered retraction, the cylinder separation control valve 39 is opened to operate both boom cylinder assemblies 16 and 17 in unison.
The control valve assembly 40 comprises four electrohydraulic proportional (EHP) control valves 41, 42, 43 and 44 that are connected in a Wheatstone bridge arrangement. Alternatively, a solenoid operated spool valve can be used in place of the four EHP control valves 41-44. Preferably, each EHP control valve 41-44 is a pilot-operated, bidirectional control valve, such as the valve described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,745,992 for example, that if necessary incorporates a conventional anti-cavitation valve. The first EHP control valve 41 directs the flow of hydraulic fluid from the supply conduit 25 to a first workport 46, which is connected by a first actuator conduit 47 to a node 51 between the head chamber 34 of the first cylinder 31 and the cylinder separation control valve 39. The head chamber 38 of the second boom cylinder 32 is connected to the first actuator conduit 47, and thus to the head chamber 34 of the first cylinder 31, by the cylinder separation control valve 39, which thereby isolates the first workport 46 from head chamber 38 and the two head chambers from each other. The second EHP control valve 42 governs the flow of fluid between the first workport 46 to the return conduit 26. The third EHP control valve 43 controls a path for fluid to flow between the supply conduit 25 and both cylinder rod chambers 33 and 36 that are connected to a second workport 48 by a second actuator conduit 49. The fourth EHP control valve 44 is connected between the rod chambers 33 and 36 and the return conduit 26.
The four EHP control valves 41-44, as well as the cylinder separation control valve 39, are solenoid operated independently by electrical signals from a system controller 50. By opening both the first and fourth EHP control valves 41 and 44, along with the cylinder separation control valve 39, pressurized fluid is applied to the head chambers 34 and 38 and fluid drains from the rod chambers 33 and 36 to extend the piston rods 35 and 37 and raise the boom 13. Similarly, opening the second and third EHP control valves 42 and 43, as well as the cylinder separation control valve 39, sends pressurized fluid into the rod chambers 33 and 36 and drains fluid from the head chambers 34 and 38 to retract the piston rods 35 and 37, thereby lowering the boom 13.
The system controller 50 is a microcomputer based device that receives control signals from several joysticks 52 by which a human operator designates desired motion of the hydraulic actuators on the excavator. The system controller 50 also receives signals from a supply conduit pressure sensor 54 and a return conduit pressure sensor 55. Separate pressure sensors 56 and 57 are provided for the cylinder head chambers 34 and 38, respectively, while another pressure sensor 58 measures pressure in the rod chambers 33 and 36 of the boom cylinder assemblies 16 and 17. To simplify electrical wiring, the rod chamber pressure sensor 58 preferably is located proximate to the second workport 48, with the understanding that its pressure measurement may be affected by pressure losses in the second actuator conduit 49. The pressure sensors 56, 57 and 58 for the cylinder chambers produce signals indicating the amount of force F acting on the boom 13. The system controller 50 responds to the pressure measurements by operating the variable displacement first pump 22 to regulate pressure in the supply conduit 25 in order to satisfy the pressure demands of the different hydraulic actuators on the excavator.
The first hydraulic system 20 includes several additional valves and other components that form an apparatus which enable energy recovery and reuse for the boom function 30. Specifically, an accumulator 60 is provided to store fluid recovered from the boom cylinder assemblies 16 and 17. An additional pressure sensor 59 is located at the port 61 of the accumulator 60 and produces a signal to the system controller 50 indicating the pressure within the accumulator. The accumulator 60 is coupled to the head chamber 38 of the second boom cylinder assembly 17 by a bidirectional, EHP recovery control valve 62 and is isolated from the head chamber 34 of the first boom cylinder assembly 16. An electrohydraulic accumulator charging and reuse control valve 66 provides a direct path between the supply conduit 25 and the port 61 of the accumulator 60. An electrohydraulic pump return control valve 68 directly connects the port of the accumulator 60 to the inlet of the first pump 22, and a relief control valve 70 directly connects a node 64 at the second cylinder's head chamber 38 to the tank return conduit 26. The node 64 is isolated by the cylinder separation control valve 39 from the head chamber 34 of the first cylinder 31. An EHP workport shunt control valve 65 provides a direct path between the first and second workports 46 and 48, and preferably is directly connected to each workport. All these additional control valves 39, 62, 65, 66, 68 and 70 are operated by signals from the system controller 50.
By selectively operating various combinations of these valves fluid is routed to and from boom cylinder assemblies 16 and 17 and the first pump 22, the tank 23 and the accumulator 60. Fluid exhausting from the boom cylinder assemblies, during gravitational lowering of the boom 13, can be stored under pressure in the accumulator and then subsequently used instead of fluid from the first pump, thereby saving the energy that otherwise would be required to drive that pump. The different modes of energy recovery resulting from operating various combinations of valves will be described later.
The present recovery system also can charge the accumulator 60 with fluid directly from the first pump 22 when none of the hydraulic functions on the machine is being used or when the hydraulic functions that are operating require only a relatively small amount of pump fluid. At those times, the accumulator charging and reuse control valve 66 is opened to connect the supply conduit 25 directly to the port 61 of the accumulator 60. The pressure sensors 54 and 59 indicate when the pressure of the supply conduit is greater than the existing pressure in the accumulator 60 so that charging will occur.
Another mode that reuses the stored energy involves opening the pump return control valve 68, thereby routing stored pressurized fluid from the accumulator 60 to the inlet of the first pump 22. This is particularly useful when the inlet of the pump has a high pressure inlet capability. This energy recovery unloads the torque on the engine which is driving the first pump 22 even though the accumulator pressure is less than the load pressure of the cylinder assemblies 16 and 17 and thus can not be used to power the cylinder assemblies directly. In this case, the first pump only has to use torque from the engine to fulfill the pressure difference between the accumulator 60 and the load pressure on the cylinder assemblies.
With continuing reference to
The two ports of the motor 86 also are connected to the inputs of a shuttle valve 88 that has an outlet coupled by a pressure operated valve 90 to the port 61 of the accumulator 60. The pressure operated valve 90 opens when pressure at the outlet of the shuttle valve 88 exceeds a given level that occurs when the rotation of the cab 11 is coming to a stop. At that time, the pressurized fluid is routed to the accumulator 60 instead of through the valve assembly 84 to the tank 23. Therefore, the energy of the fluid exhausting from the motor 86 at these times is stored in the accumulator 60.
The stored fluid may be used by the boom function 30, as described previously, or may be used to power the swing function motor 86. To accomplish the latter operation, a bidirectional, electrohydraulic supply control valve 92 is opened to convey fluid from the accumulator 60 to the inlet of the valve assembly 84. This accumulator fluid is used in place of or as a supplement to fluid from the second pump 82.
By tying the first and second boom cylinder assemblies 16 and 17 together, the loading on those cylinders is equalized on the production system, but a degree of control freedom is lost. Greater efficiency can be achieved by separating the head chambers 34 and 38 of the two boom cylinder assemblies 16 and 17 to minimize pressure compensation losses on the machine's hydraulic system.
Assume that the first pump 22 supplies fluid to other hydraulic functions on the machine and is running at 300 bar pressure to satisfy the highest demand of those functions. In addition, assume that still other hydraulic functions are connected to the second pump 82, which is running at 200 bar pressure to satisfy its highest fluid demand. Further assume that 250 bar pressure is required to lift the load on the boom 13.
With a conventional system, the first pump 22 would stay at 300 bar and the extra 50 bar would be “burned” as pressure compensation losses. In that conventional system, the pressure of the second pump 82 would rise to 250 bar and its other hydraulic functions would produce pressure compensation losses, due to the pressure being greater than required at those functions.
With the system shown in
Assume that there is another hydraulic function connected to the first pump 22 that already has consumed all that pump's output flow. If raising the boom 13 is commanded, then the second pump 82 can furnish all the power to the boom through supply control valve 98 and the second cylinder assembly 17, while fluid for the head chamber 34 of first cylinder 31 is drawn from the return conduit 26 through the anti-cavitation check valve in the second EHP control valve 42.
The functionality of examples 1 and 2 can be provided by a third hydraulic system 100 that uses solenoid operated spool valves, such as depicted in
The third hydraulic system 100 has a hydraulic fluid source 21 formed by first and second pumps 22 and 82 which draw fluid from a tank 23 and operates the boom function 102, a swing function 80, and other functions on the machine which are not illustrated. The output of the first pump 22 feeds a first supply conduit 25 that is connected to an inlet of a three-position, four-way, solenoid operated first spool valve 104 that constitutes a control valve assembly of the boom function. An outlet of the first spool valve 104 is connected to the return conduit 26 that leads to the tank 23. The first spool valve 104 has two workports, one 48 connected directly to the rod chambers 33 and 36 of the two hydraulic cylinders and the other workport 46 connected directly to the head chamber 34 of the first hydraulic cylinder 31. A first relief valve 106 is connected between the first workport 46 and the return conduit 26.
The outlet of the second pump 82 feeds a second supply conduit 83 that is connected to the inlet of a three-position, four-way, solenoid operated second spool valve 108 that forms a supply control valve. The outlet of the second spool valve 108 is connected to the return conduit 26. The second spool valve 108 has a pair of workports one of which is connected directly to the rod chambers 33 and 36 of the hydraulic cylinders and the other workport is directly connected to the head chamber 38 of the second hydraulic cylinder 32. A second relief valve 110 is coupled between the head chamber 38 and the return conduit 26. The two spool valves 104 and 108 can be operated independently to apply fluid from each of the two pumps 22 and 82 to the two first and second cylinders 31 and 32 in much the same way as control valves 41-44 and 98 functioned in the second hydraulic system 96 in
The third hydraulic system 100 also has an accumulator 112 connected by a bi-directional, electrohydraulic valve 114 to the head chamber 38 of the second cylinder 32. This accumulator 112 can be used to store and recycle energy with respect to the first and second hydraulic cylinders 31 and 32 in much the same manner as described with respect to the accumulators in the hydraulic systems in
Energy Recovery
The boom function can be operated in several modes, in some of which energy is recovered from an overrunning load. An overrunning load condition occurs on the exemplary excavator 10 when the load and weight of the boom assembly 12 exerts a force that tends to retract the piston rods 35 and 37 into the boom cylinders 31 and 32, thereby forcing fluid out of the head chambers 34 and 38 without pressurizing the rod chambers 33 and 36. At that time, instead of sending the exhausting fluid to the tank 23, it is directed into the accumulator 60 where the fluid is stored under pressure. The present energy recovery and reuse techniques involve operating the hydraulic circuit in several of the different energy recovery modes as the excavator boom 13 is lowered. Selection of a particular energy recovery mode is based on the pressures within the head and rod chambers of the boom cylinders 31 and 32 and the existing pressure within the accumulator 60. The pressure relationships must be such that the fluid will flow in the proper directions as described for each particular energy recovery mode as described hereinafter. The accumulator pressure is indicated by pressure sensor 59, pressures in the head chambers 34 and 38 are measured by sensors 56 and 57, respectively, and the pressure in both rod chambers 33 and 36 is measured by sensor 58.
Several of the energy recovery modes are depicted in
Assume that the initial position of the boom assembly 12 is relatively high, thereby having a relatively large amount of potential energy. As a result, the boom exerts a force on each cylinder assembly 16 and 17 that produces sufficient pressure in their head chambers 34 and 38 to charge the accumulator 60 as shown in the dual cylinder energy recovery mode of
P59<(P56+P57)/2−P58/R
Here, P59 is the pressure at the accumulator from sensor 59, P56 is the pressure at the head chamber 34 of the first cylinder assembly 16 from sensor 56; P57 is the pressure at the head chamber 38 of the second cylinder assembly 17 from pressure at sensor 57; and P58 is the pressure in the rod chambers 33 and 36 of the boom cylinder assemblies 16 and 17, from sensor 58 (See
R=πrA2/(πrA2−πrROD2)
Here, rA is the radius of the head chambers 34 and 38, and rROD is the radius of the piston rods 35 and 37. R is a constant for the selected cylinder assemblies 16 and 17 chosen for the hydraulic circuit. The term (P56+P57)/2−P58/R is referred to as the dual cylinder energy recovery mode differential pressure herein. In addition, it should be noted that the above inequality may be modified to include losses due to friction and other factors.
In the dual cylinder energy recovery mode 121, the fluid exhausting from the head chambers 34 and 38 is combined by an open cylinder separation control valve 39 and flows through an open recovery control valve 62 to charge the accumulator 60. The recovery control valve 62 is modulated to proportionally control the velocity of the boom. Fluid required to fill the expanding rod chambers 33 and 36 as the boom descends is drawn through the control valve assembly 40. Specifically, fluid from other functions of the machine is drawn from the return conduit 26 through the anti-cavitation check valve in the fourth EHP control valve 44. Because the force of gravity is lowering the boom, the fluid drawn from the return conduit 26 does not have to be at a high pressure. If this anti-cavitation flow is insufficient, the third EHP control valve 43 can be opened to furnish fluid from the first pump 22 to the rod chambers 33 and 36. The descent of the boom 13 reaches a position at which the force exerted on the two cylinder assemblies 16 and 17 no longer produces sufficient pressure in both head chambers to continue charging the accumulator 60. When the pressure at the accumulator is below the threshold provided by the following inequality:
P59<((P56+P57)/2−P58/R)*2
the energy recovery transitions into a split cylinder energy recovery mode 122 depicted in
The head chamber 38 of the second cylinder 32 produces a sufficiently high pressure therein to continue charging the accumulator 60. Thus fluid from that head chamber 38 is directed through the recovery control valve 62 into the accumulator 60. During this split cylinder energy recovery mode 122, the recovery control valve 62 and the second EHP control valve 42 are modulated to control the rate at which the boom 13 continues to lower.
In the split cylinder energy recovery mode 122, if the amount of the head chamber fluid is inadequate to fill both rod chambers 33 and 36, the third EHP control valve 43 can be opened to furnish supplemental fluid from the first pump 22. That supplemental fluid does not have to be at a particular pressure as it is not used to drive the cylinder assemblies 16 and 17, but only to fill the expanding rod chambers. On the other hand, if the head chamber 34 of the first cylinder 31 contains more fluid than is needed to fill both rod chambers 33 and 36, as occurs with a very large diameter piston rods, the excess fluid can be sent to the return conduit 26 by selectively opening the second EHP control valve 42.
Because the flow of fluid from each head chamber 34 and 38 is controlled separately in the split cylinder energy recovery mode 122, the forces on each side of the boom 13 may be unequal producing a twisting action thereon. To avoid that condition, a pseudo-split cylinder energy recovery mode 123 shown in
P59<(R/R−1)*((P56+P57)/2−P58/R)
The right side of this inequality is referred to as the pseudo-split cylinder energy recovery mode differential pressure herein. It should be noted that the above inequality may be modified to include losses due to line losses, friction and other factors.
In this mode, the cylinder separation control valve 39 remains open to communicate pressure between the two head chambers 34 and 38. The EHP workport shunt control valve 65 opens to convey pressurized fluid from the head chamber 34 of the first boom cylinder 31 to both rod chambers 33 and 36.
On a typical excavator, the boom cylinder assemblies 16 and 17 have large diameter piston rods 35 and 37, so that as the piston moves the volume of each rod chamber 33 and 36 may change half the amount that the volume of each head chamber changes, for example. This means that in the pseudo-split cylinder energy recovery mode 123, the fluid exhausting the first cylinder's head chamber 34 is sufficient to fill both of the expanding rod chambers 33 and 36. Therefore, fluid does not flow through the open cylinder separation control valve 39, however if that one to two volume relationship does not exist, any additional fluid needed to fill the rod chambers 33 and 36 can come through the cylinder separation control valve from the second cylinder's head chamber 38. Nevertheless, most, if not all, of the fluid in head chamber 38 of the second cylinder 32 flows into the accumulator 60.
When operation in a split cylinder energy recovery mode 122 or 123 reaches a point at which there no longer is sufficient pressure available from the head chamber 38 of the second cylinder 32 to charge the accumulator, but is greater than zero, as given by the following equation:
(P56+P57)/2−P58/R>0
the boom operation transitions into a cross chamber energy recovery mode 124 depicted in
It should be noted that the energy recovery modes 121, 122, 123, and 124 do not need to follow the sequence as described above. The selection of one of the energy recovery modes 121, 122, 123, and 124 should be based on the recovery efficiency benefits that each mode would provide at a given time. Accordingly, any energy recovery mode may transition to any of the other energy recovery modes, and an appropriate selection can be made by the system controller 50 based on the equations provided herein.
In the cross chamber energy recovery mode 124, the accumulator reaches peak storage capability. In addition, as the cylinder separation control valve 39 opens, pressure in the two cylinder head chambers 34 and 38 begins to equalize again. Although the preferred embodiment incorporates the workport shunt control valve 65, that valve could be eliminated as a cost saving measure if the split cylinder energy recovery mode 123 is not used. In that case, at the times when the workport shunt control valve would be opened, the control valve assembly 40 is operated by opening the second and fourth EHP control valves 42 and 44 to convey fluid through one of those pairs between the two workports 46 and 48 along with opening the isolation valve 39.
Eventually the boom 13 reaches such a low position that the forces due to gravity alone are insufficient to continue lowering the boom fast enough for efficient operation of the excavator. Pressure from a pump now is needed to further lower the boom. At this juncture, the operation transitions to a powered energy mode 125 shown in
The positions of the boom 13 and arm 14 of the excavator 10 affect the amount of force that the boom exerts on the cylinder assemblies 16 and 17 and thus the amount of energy that can be recovered. The amount of force corresponds to the cylinder chamber pressures as measured by the sensors 56, 57 and 58. Therefore, the signals from those sensors along with the accumulator pressure sensor 59 enable the system controller 50 to determine which of the energy recovery modes are practical and which one will recover the most energy.
Energy Reuse
When it comes time to extend the piston rods from the boom cylinders 31 and 32 and raise the boom 13 against a load force F acting downward, fluid can be recycled from the accumulator 60 in place of or in addition to using pressurized fluid from the first pump 22. In a first energy reuse mode 131 shown in
It should be understood that often the accumulator 60 is not charged to a pressure level that is sufficient to drive both cylinder assemblies 16 and 17. In addition, the quantity of fluid stored in the accumulator also may not be sufficient to fill both head chambers 34 and 38. In such instances, a second energy reuse mode 132 depicted in
The second pump 82 may be connected by a second supply valve 99 to the port of the head chamber 34 for the first boom cylinder 31, in which case pressurized fluid from the second pump can be supplied to that head chamber to augment fluid from the first pump 22. To accomplish this, the second supply valve 99 meters fluid to the head chamber 34 for the first boom cylinder 31, while the first EHP control valve 41 is used to meter fluid flow.
Eventually, fluid from the accumulator 60 is depleted and can no longer be utilized to drive the second cylinder 32. At that time, the hydraulic system operation may enter a third energy reuse mode 133 illustrated in
In the first through fifth energy reuse modes 131-135 the force acting on the boom 13 tended to lower the boom. In other operational states of the excavator 10, an external force tends to raise the boom 13. For example with reference to
While this upward force is being exerted on the boom 13, the portion of the hydraulic system for the boom cylinder assemblies 16 and 17 can be configured as depicted in
Although the hydraulic system is described above as including a cylinder separation control valve 39, advantages of the invention related to recovery and reuse of energy in the accumulator as discussed above can also be achieved without this valve. Here, the head chamber 34 of the first cylinder assembly 16 and head chamber 38 of the second cylinder assembly 17 are tied together in fluid communication, rather than coupled to the cylinder separation control valve 39. During a recovery operation, in which excess pressure is provided to the accumulator, a circuit constructed in this way would operate as described above with respect to
The foregoing description was primarily directed to preferred embodiments of the present invention. Although some attention was given to various alternatives within the scope of the invention, it is anticipated that one skilled in the art will likely realize additional alternatives that are now apparent from disclosure of embodiments of the invention.
This application claims benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/865,710 filed on Nov. 14, 2006 and U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/913,457 filed on Apr. 23, 2007.
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