The present invention relates generally to an external rotor motor, and more particularly to very small motors typically used in cooling fans installed inside the housings of personal computers.
The assignee of the present invention, ebm-papst St. Georgen GmbH & Co. KG (hereinafter simply “PAPST”) manufactures small motors which serve, for example, for cooling of the processors in computers, for device cooling of other small devices, etc. These motors have small dimensions. For example:
External rotor motors in the form of small or miniature motors are often used to drive fans, e.g. those in computers for cooling of the processors. The components of such motors are so small that they look like toys or parts of watches. This is necessary, in order that such motors can, despite their smallness, be assembled simply, with high precision, and economically, preferably by means of an automated assembly process.
It is therefore an object of the invention to provide a new external rotor motor, wherein the inner stator is supported on a bearing support tube for the shaft of the external rotor, and there is an annular securing ring or disk which secures the bearing support tube and inner stator together. The invention is particularly adapted for use in motors whose rotors are less than about 60 mm in diameter.
The fact that one or more portions of the annular securing disk extend radially into the internal recess of the inner stator, bend themselves during the assembly process, and engage as barbs into the outer surface of the bearing support tube, assures that, when the inner stator and bearing support tube are assembled, they engage securely. The securing disk portions serve as barbs or claws. In case an impact load is placed on the junction of these elements, the barbs dig themselves deeper into the material of the bearing support tube, generally a plastic or an aluminum alloy, so that a secure fastening is created, which as a practical matter can no longer be disassembled. By this means, assembly is simplified, can be done quickly and automatically, and results in a product with the necessary high precision.
The form of the securing disk can vary. It can have one or multiple claws of varying forms, the optimal form being dependent upon the nature of the intended application.
Further details and advantageous refinements of the invention will be apparent from the following description and drawings of preferred embodiments, which are-intended as exemplary only, not as any-limitation of the invention.
Lamination stack 23 is formed with an internal recess 36 which can be assembled onto a bearing support tube 38, as may be seen by comparing
Usually, these motors are electronically commutated, e.g. with the help of a rotary position sensor or a sensor coil. The mode of operation of such motors, which have been made in quantities of millions of units, is familiar to those skilled in the art, and therefore need not be described here. On the outer surface of rotor 42, fan blades or vanes 43 are preferably provided, and may be integrally formed with the external rotor; see
As
Between stator poles 24–30 are located stator slots 50, 52, 54, 56, in which a winding with two phases 58, 60 is wound, whose winding direction and circuit configuration are clearly apparent from
In the region of slots 50 to 56, the outer diameter 70 of securing ring 20 preferably matches the adjacent outer diameter 72 (
Lamination stack 23 is surrounded by an insulating coating or covering 76, which also insulates slots 50–56 and thereby serves as a coil former for the winding phases 58, 60. This coating 76 also secures the terminals 62, 64, 66 in an insulated manner with respect to inner stator 22, and it secures securing ring 20 onto the upper end of lamination stack 23; cf.
Further, coating 76 forms, at the upper end (referring to
Toward its top, referring to
As shown in
As shown in
In this manner, as indicated in
Simultaneously, segments 86, 88, 90 and 92 engage elastically against the outer circumferential surface 98 of bearing support tube 38 and provide additional centering and securing, in order to avoid any possible unsymmetrical assembly of stator 22 onto bearing support tube 38.
One thereby achieves a simple and absolutely secure assembly, of stator 22 on the bearing support tube 38, that is very well adapted for automated production, even when the motor has very small dimensions.
Naturally, within the scope of the inventive concept, many variations and modifications are possible. In particular, employing the teaching of the invention can also be very advantageous in the case of larger external rotor motors.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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203 01 009 U | Jan 2003 | DE | national |
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Number | Date | Country |
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92 05 930.9 | Dec 1992 | DE |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040227420 A1 | Nov 2004 | US |