The present invention relates to an external power supply system, especially to an external power supply system which provides spindles wireless power transfer by conversion between electric energy and magnetic energy.
A conventional ultrasonic transducer such as the one revealed in Taiwanese Pat. App. No. 097110657 features on a long horn 2, a counterweight 3, two piezoelectric driving parts 4, 5 and a screw 6. The counterweight is fixed on the horn by the screw so that the piezoelectric driving parts are clipped between the horn and the counterweight and arranged at each side of an axis 7 of the ultrasonic converter. The ultrasonic transducer is designed in the way that a tip of a capillary clamped in the horn can vibrate in two different directions.
Refer to Taiwanese Pat. App. No. 094141170, a conventional tool unit for ultrasonically assisted rotary machining of a workpiece mainly includes a converter including at least one electroacoustic transducer for generating and transmitting ultrasonic oscillations, a tool that is coupled to the converter, and a holder in which the converter including the transducer is arranged and which is insertable at least partially in the retainer of a tool spindle and connectable thereto by means of a detachable connection.
As to external power suppliers for spindles available now, please refer to Taiwanese Pat. Pub. No. 591962, No. 1301353, No. 1301354, No. 1380876, No. 1387500, No. 1415691, No. 1513536, No. 1519017, No. 1566062, No. 1651178, No. 1657869, No. 1672192, No. M382663, No. M400930, No. M428011, No. M431039, No. M432499, No. M454888, No. M455583, No. M465987, No. M489750, No. M569670, No. M575744, No. M581960, Chinese Pat. Pub. No. 110038784, No. 208556901, No. 108380473, No. 107662288, No. 106334806, No. 205852411, No. 105234437, No. 104148994, No. 104138831, No. 203901021, No. 202528012, Japanese Pat. Pub. No. JPH05208349, No. JPH03239408, No. 2007030114, No. 2008023693, No. 2008093766, No. 2008093784, No. 2010194650, No. 2011152605, Korean Pat. Pub. No. 20180020865, and US Pat. Pub. No. 2018250758, each of which has its own problems. An external power supply for spindles of the present invention can not only perform wireless charging and wireless power receiving but also carry out energy conversion up to 90%. Thus the present external power supply for spindles is quite practical.
Therefore, it is a primary object of the present invention to provide an external power supply system which generates output voltages stably for providing different electric powers to spindles.
It is another object of the present invention to provide an external power supply system for spindles in which energy supply between an external power source and a load is achieved in a non-contact manner and data transmission at any point during the period with field gap is ensured.
In order to achieve the above objects, an external power supply system for a spindle according to the present invention includes a tool holder, a rectifier circuit, an overvoltage protection circuit, and a buck/boost converter. The spindle is connected to a drive system which generates an electric field with a power factor and transfers the electric field to a positive electrode and a negative electrode.
The tool holder consists of a pull stud, an exterior conical surface, an end ring, a contact positive electrode, and a contact negative electrode. The contact positive and negative electrodes are mounted to the exterior conical surface or a surface of the end ring for transferring an external power source while being aligned with the positive and negative electrodes of the spindle and receiving the external power source with the power factor.
The rectifier circuit is used to convert the external power source into a rectified output signal through step-down transformation. The rectifier circuit allows a transmission level to pass according to a contact potential input by the external power source, applies proportioning control with integral and derivative functions to an output waveform of the transmission level, and then transforms a modulation level which is used for control of the transmission level of the rectified output signal with the power factor to be no larger than a threshold.
The overvoltage protection circuit is used to check whether the rectified output signal is larger than an overvoltage signal. When the rectified output signal is smaller than the overvoltage signal, the overvoltage signal is at an operating potential. The overvoltage signal is at a non-operating potential once the rectified output signal is larger than the overvoltage signal.
The buck/boost converter is coupled to the overvoltage protection circuit for receiving the rectified output signal output at the operating potential and converting the rectified output signal to an output voltage according to the power factor of the rectified output signal. Then the output voltage is provided to a load of a low voltage power supply, a high voltage power supply, or a constant voltage power supply.
The structure and the technical means adopted by the present invention to achieve the above and other objects can be best understood by referring to the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments and the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Refer to
The spindle 1 is connected to a controlling system 21 which not only provides actuating power to a drive system 22 of the spindle 1 and an equidistant firing control for control of a DC (direct current) trigger to deal with at least one trigger event, but also receives a triggering signal through a first communication module 211. The drive system 22 can generate an electric field (or an electromotive field) which is having a power factor and transferred to a positive electrode 14 and a negative electrode 15 both disposed on a conical surface 12 (or a contact surface 13) of a hollow main bush. A jaw 11 which feeds vertically is disposed on an upper part of the hollow main bush. The drive system 22 is built with a voltage stabilizing circuit 74 therein for keeping a constant potential of the electric field (or the electromotive field). The external power supply system further includes a tool holder 3, a rectifier circuit 4, an overvoltage protection circuit 6, and a buck/boost converter 7.
The tool holder 3 consists of a pull stud 31, an exterior conical surface 32, an end ring 33, a contact positive electrode 34, and a contact negative electrode 35. The contact positive and the contact negative electrodes 34, 35 can be mounted to the exterior conical surface 32 or a surface of the end ring 33 (as shown in
The contact positive electrode 34 (or noncontact positive electrode 34) in combination with the contact negative electrode 35 (or noncontact negative electrode 35) forms a contact induction coil which receives the external power source from the positive electrode 14 and the negative electrode 15 through an electromagnetic induction. Or a noncontact induction coil is formed by the noncontact positive electrode 34 and the noncontact negative electrode 35.
As shown in
The overvoltage protection circuit 6 is used to check whether the rectified output signal with the power factor is larger than an overvoltage signal 61 within a continuous conduction time. When the rectified output signal with the power factor is smaller than the overvoltage signal 61, the value of the overvoltage signal 61 is an operating potential 62. Once the rectified output signal with the power factor is larger than the overvoltage signal 61, the overvoltage signal 61 is at a non-operating potential 63.
The buck/boost converter 7 is coupled to the overvoltage protection circuit 6 for receiving the rectified output signal with the power factor output at the operating potential 62 and converting the rectified output signal to an output voltage according to the power factor. Then the output voltage is provided to a load of a low voltage power supply, a high voltage power supply, or a constant voltage power supply. The buck/boost converter 7 uses a Zener diode to convert the rectified output signal with the power factor to the output voltage required by the load of the low voltage power supply (such as +3.3V power source, −3.3V power source, +5V power source, −5V power source, etc.), of the high voltage power supply (such as 24V power source), or of the constant voltage power supply (such as 12V power source). The buck/boost converter 7 is a voltage regulator circuit.
During normal operation of the drive system 22, transmission of the power factor, and data transmission, the voltage generated by the external power source is larger than the total voltage provided to the contact positive electrode 34 and the contact negative electrode 35 when the electric field (or an electromotive field)) is smaller than a tolerance band. Once the electric field (or the electromotive field) is larger than the tolerance band, the voltage generated by the drive system 22 is decreased and the drive system 22 decouples the electric field (or the electromotive field). Thereby the electric field (or the electromotive field) is not only unable to pull the electric power out of the contact positive electrode 34 and the contact negative electrode 35, but also unable to transfer the electric power to the rectifier circuit 4 through the contact positive electrode 34 and the contact negative electrode 35.
The external power source is an external current or an external field. In practice, the external power source is defined as transfer of the power factor and energy performed by an induced electric signal of a time-varying magnetic field when the positive electrode 14 and the negative electrode 15 are aligned with the contact positive electrode 34 and the contact negative electrode 35. The above external power source (external current or external field) with the power factor is received by the contact positive electrode 34 and the contact negative electrode 35 through electromagnetic induction when the electric field (or the electromotive field) performs transmission through the positive electrode 14 and the negative electrode 15 (as delivery ends) aligned with the contact positive electrode 34 and the contact negative electrode 35 (as receiving ends). In practice, the noncontact induction coil activates the contact positive electrode 34 and the contact negative electrode 35 to receive the external power source (the external current or the external field) by electromagnetic induction.
Refer to
According to a purpose of the present invention, the electric field (or the electromotive field) will not be affected by the contact positive electrode 34 and the contact negative electrode 35 in the tool holder 3. Thus the drive system 22 performs the decoupling of the electric field (or the electromotive field) while the electric field (or the electromotive field) of the tool holder 3 is beyond a tolerance band.
When the positive electrode 14 and the negative electrode 15 (as delivery ends) are aligned and strongly coupled with the contact positive electrode 34 and the contact negative electrode 35 (as receiving ends), the contact positive electrode 34 and the contact negative electrode 35 can only pull out a little amount of the external power source during transmission of the power factor and data. The external power source is supplied from the positive electrode 14 and the negative electrode 15 to the contact positive electrode 34 and the contact negative electrode 35 during the period with the field gap. The electric field (or the electromotive field) between the spindle 1 and the tool holder 3 can also provide a rectified voltage threshold 51 (or a rectified current threshold 53) required.
As shown in
As shown in
Refer to
As shown in
In another preferred embodiment, the present system is restarted automatically to conduct the rectified output signal with the power factor again after the rectified output signal with the power factor being shut down. The overvoltage protection circuit 6 is used to check whether the rectified output signal with the power factor is larger than the overvoltage signal 61 within the continuous conduction time. When the rectified output signal with the power factor is smaller than the overvoltage signal 61 or a period of the rectified output signal is shorter than the continuous conduction time, the overvoltage signal 61 is at the operating potential 62. The overvoltage signal 61 is at the non-operating potential 63 while the rectified output signal with the power factor is larger than the overvoltage signal 61 or the period of the rectified output signal is longer than the continuous conduction time. The operating potential 62 and the non-operating potential 63 are a transmission high level and a transmission low level complement to each other. When the overvoltage signal 61 is at the operating potential 62, the overvoltage protection circuit 6 works to drive the rectifier circuit 4 into an overvoltage protection mode.
The overvoltage protection circuit 6 is arranged not only to confirm that whether the rectified output signal with the power factor of the rectifier circuit 4 is larger than an overvoltage signal 61, but also to respond and change the overvoltage signal 61 from the operating potential 62 to the non-operating potential 63 once the rectified output signal with the power factor of the rectifier circuit 4 is confirmed to be larger than an overvoltage signal 61. The overvoltage protection circuit 6 is also disposed for receiving the operating potential 62 and responding to change the operating potential 62 into the non-operating potential 63. The overvoltage protection circuit 6 generates a drive signal to make the switch disconnect and keep the switch in the disconnection for protection of the rectifier circuit 4 once the operating potential 62 is checked and changed into the non-operating potential 63 and maintained within a preset time period. As shown in
Refer to
Refer to
The feedback circuit 71 receives the first power factor, the second power factor (or the third/fourth power factor), and an output voltage. While working, the feedback circuit 71 gets a feedback voltage according to the output voltage and the second power factor after receiving the first power factor, the second power factor (or the third/fourth power factor), and the output voltage and then compares the feedback voltage with the first power factor to output a control signal to the drive circuit 72 according to a result of the comparison between the feedback voltage and the first power factor.
The drive circuit 72 is coupled to the feedback circuit 71 and used for output of a drive signal to the power circuit 73 according to the modulated control signal after receiving the control signal output from the feedback circuit 71.
The power circuit 73 is coupled to the drive circuit 72 and used for connecting or disconnecting a path by which the rectifier voltage 41 provides power to the power circuit 73 according to the drive signal received from the drive circuit 72. The power circuit 73 can be a circuit composed of switches, transistors, or other switching elements and thus having switching properties.
The voltage stabilizing circuit 74 is coupled to the power circuit 73. The output voltage from the power circuit 73 is stabilized by the voltage stabilizing circuit 74 and becoming a stable output voltage which is supplied to the load of the low voltage power supply (or the high voltage power supply, the constant voltage power supply). The voltage stabilizing circuit 74 can be formed by inductors and capacitors. The stable output voltage is output to the load after the current being passed through the inductors to charge the capacitors. As shown in
The load further includes a second communication module 75. The output voltage is provided to the second communication module 75 as a power source. The second communication module 75 is electrically coupled to the automatic transmitter for transmission so that the second communication module 75 is connected to the first communication module. The second communication module 75 is mainly connected to the first communication module 211 by narrowband microwave, direct sequence spread spectrum, frequency hopping spread spectrum, shared wireless access protocol and Bluetooth of radio transmission technology while the second communication module 75 simultaneously receives the trigger signal transmitted by the automatic transmitter and delivers the trigger signal from the DC trigger to the first communication module under complete control of the automatic transmitter.
Refer to
The feedback control circuit 8 provides a time-sharing combination of a synchronous rectification conversion operation and the modulation level 5 for controlling the first equalizer circuit 55 and the second equalizer circuit 56 to adjust the transmission level of the voltage feedback signal 81 corresponding to the rated D.C. output voltage 52 and adjust the transmission level of the current feedback signal 82 corresponding to the rated D.C. output current 54 respectively. Thereby a rectifier output regulation mode is achieved. According to the rectified voltage 41 and the rectified current 42, the feedback control circuit 8 controls the first equalizer circuit 55 and the second equalizer circuit 56 to perform the synchronous rectification conversion. In the synchronous rectification conversion, the feedback control circuit 8 controls one of the first equalizer circuit 55 and the second equalizer circuit 56 to carry out synchronous rectification conversion while the other one of the first equalizer circuit 55 and the second equalizer circuit 56 is conductive.
The time-sharing combination of the synchronous rectification conversion and the modulation level 5 means the first equalizer circuit 55 and the second equalizer circuit 56 to carry out the synchronous rectification conversion and the modulation level 5 with a preset duty cycle in a periodic and time-sharing manner. For example, the duty cycle includes a first time portion and a second time portion, each of which is a period of time no larger than the duty cycle and no less than zero. The first equalizer circuit 55 and the second equalizer circuit 56 perform the synchronous rectification conversion and the modulation level 5 in the first time portion and the second time portion respectively and alternately. When the first equalizer circuit 55 performs the synchronous rectification conversion in the first time portion, the conversion second equalizer circuit 56 performs the modulation level 5 in the first time portion. When the first equalizer circuit 55 carries out the modulation level 5 in the second time portion, the conversion second equalizer circuit 56 carries out the synchronous rectification conversion in the second time portion. Thereby the above time-sharing combinations are run according to the preset duty cycle.
In the above embodiment, the first time portion and the second time portion can be arranged in turn, but not limited to. The preset duty cycle can be a fixed value or an adjustable variable value. The preset duty cycle is not limited to a fixed cycle, a time cycle generated by a frequency generator, or a duty cycle derived from operation of the modulation level 5 in the fixed first time portion or the fixed second time portion (similar to a fixed conduction), or an uncertain duty cycle.
Additional advantages and modifications will readily occur to those skilled in the art. Therefore, the invention in its broader aspects is not limited to the specific details, and representative devices shown and described herein. Accordingly, various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit or scope of the general inventive concept as defined by the appended claims and their equivalent.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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109125743 | Jul 2020 | TW | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
20180250758 | Jiang et al. | Sep 2018 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
202528012 | Nov 2012 | CN |
203901021 | Oct 2014 | CN |
104138831 | Nov 2014 | CN |
104148994 | Nov 2014 | CN |
105234437 | Jan 2016 | CN |
106334806 | Jan 2017 | CN |
205852411 | Jan 2017 | CN |
107662288 | Feb 2018 | CN |
108380473 | Aug 2018 | CN |
208556901 | Mar 2019 | CN |
110038784 | Jul 2019 | CN |
H03239408 | Oct 1991 | JP |
H05208349 | Aug 1993 | JP |
2007030114 | Feb 2007 | JP |
2008023693 | Feb 2008 | JP |
2008093766 | Apr 2008 | JP |
2008093784 | Apr 2008 | JP |
2010194650 | Sep 2010 | JP |
2011152605 | Aug 2011 | JP |
20180020865 | Feb 2018 | KR |
591962 | Jun 2004 | TW |
I301353 | Sep 2008 | TW |
I301354 | Sep 2008 | TW |
M382663 | Jun 2010 | TW |
M400930 | Apr 2011 | TW |
M428011 | May 2012 | TW |
M431039 | Jun 2012 | TW |
M432499 | Jul 2012 | TW |
I380876 | Jan 2013 | TW |
I387500 | Mar 2013 | TW |
M454888 | Jun 2013 | TW |
M455583 | Jun 2013 | TW |
I415691 | Nov 2013 | TW |
M465987 | Nov 2013 | TW |
M489750 | Nov 2014 | TW |
I513536 | Dec 2015 | TW |
I519017 | Jan 2016 | TW |
I566062 | Jan 2017 | TW |
M569670 | Nov 2018 | TW |
I651178 | Feb 2019 | TW |
M575744 | Mar 2019 | TW |
I657869 | May 2019 | TW |
M581960 | Aug 2019 | TW |
I672192 | Sep 2019 | TW |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20220037874 A1 | Feb 2022 | US |