The invention relates to a free piston type compressor. The invention further relates to an air conditioning system. The invention further relates to a heat pump or liquid pump.
An embodiment of a free piston type compressor is known from U.S. Pat. No. 5,275,542. In the known compressor the piston and a driving linear electromotor are connected by a shaft.
The known free piston type compressor has the following disadvantages:
It is an object of the invention to provide an improved free piston compressor. In particular, it is an object of the invention to provide a free piston compressor which is substantially vibration free.
To this end the free piston type torsion drive compressor according to the invention comprises a first piston and a second piston interconnected with a torsion body and elastic bending elements, said first piston and said second piston being driven by a first motor and a second motor by applying force in opposite circumferential directions, so that in use the first piston and second piston displace along a displacement direction wherein the said motors drive the first piston and the second piston in the circumferential direction transversal to the displacement direction.
It is found that when the free piston is driven by a torsion body the resulting construction is substantially vibration-free due to the fact that the compressor according to the invention comprises two opposite moving pistons which are adapted to move with substantially the same speed. More in particular, it is found that when the pistons are connected with elastic elements a rotational displacement of the pistons is translated into axial displacement accurately.
In an exemplary embodiments of a free piston type compressor/pump it may comprise the first piston and the second piston, positioned in opposite sides and both connected to a torsion body and elastic bending elements. Accordingly, the torsion body may comprise a central torsion rod encircled by a set of elastic bending elements for controlling the axial displacement.
During operation the pistons are driven by the motor(s) which causes them to rotate with alternating direction with a frequency, which is equal to the natural frequency of the mechanical assembly of the pistons and the torsion body. The motor(s) drive the motion by applying driving force in circumference direction. This means the motor(s) takes care for continuous natural torsion vibration. The elastic elements, also connected to the piston convert this alternating rotational displacement in an alternating axial displacement of the piston, which may also be referred to as ‘a piston stroke’. Accordingly, movement of the piston has a rotating component (the driving direction) and an axial component (the stroke). The speed of rotation is higher than the axial speed. Pistons move in axially opposite directions during operation. During operation the torsion body and the elastic bending elements undergo an elastic deformation. In Future embodiments the torsion bar and the elastic bending elements may be integrated.
There are two possibilities to drive the system. First embodiment is the use of two motors. Each piston is directly driven by its own motor and the piston is an integrated part of the electromotor, called the rotor. In the second embodiment of the drive system is the use of single central positioned motor. The motor is positioned in between the pistons.
In the first embodiment the first motor and the second motor may be adapted to rotate with the same frequency having the opposite phases. This results in an opposite axial movement of the pistons. This technical measure is based on the insight that when the first motor and the second motor are adapted to rotate with the same frequency having the opposite phases for both translation and rotation, the overall vibration of the compressor is very small.
In the second embodiment, the motor is positioned centrally between the pistons, whereby each motor side is provided with its own torsion bar and elastic bending elements connected to the piston. The first piston and the second piston are adapted to rotate with the same frequency having synchronous phases. Both pistons move in opposite phase to the central motor. This results in an opposite axial movement of the pistons.
In addition, it is found that the stroke of the compressor is mechanically controlled, which is advantageous. More in particular, it is found that the speed of rotation of the compressor according to the invention is much higher that the speed of translation. Accordingly, a relatively small motor(s) may be used. This may substantially reduce the manufacturing costs of the compressor according to the invention.
More in particular, the torsion based compressor may have the following additional advantages:
Accordingly, the motors of the compressor according to the invention may be adapted to deliver a substantially limited force or energy for compensating for the energy loss of the compression process. Accordingly, the efficiency of the compressor of the invention is increased.
An embodiment of the invention with an integrated motor will be discussed in more detail with reference to
It is found to be advantageous to implement the torsion body because the motion is not directly dependent on the characteristics of the electromotor.
The air conditioning system according to the invention comprises a free piston type compressor according to any one of the preceding claims.
These and other aspects of the invention will be discussed with reference to drawings wherein like reference signs correspond to like elements. It will be appreciated that the drawings are presented for illustrative purposes only and may not be used for limiting the scope of the appended claims.
The capacity of such compressor may easily be adjusted by adjusting the vibration amplitude, by changing driving power/amplitude of the torsion vibration.
The movement of the pistons 2a, 2b in the direction D is enabled by opposite driving directions of the motor In a particular embodiment, the motor 5 rotates with a substantially the same frequency having the opposite phases of the pistons. The motors thus couple the driving force to the pistons via the torsion body 3a, 3b. The torsion rods are implemented from a material which undergoes elastic deformation when driven by the motor. The opposite phase of the motor with the piston enables a well-balanced design.
It will be appreciated that in the known conventional free piston designs the piston is directly coupled to the translating electromotor. This has at least two disadvantages: the absence of mechanical piston control and the engine speed that equals the piston speed.
For the compressor efficiency it is very important to have an accurate and fixed top dead centre position, to minimize the dead volume losses. Dead volume reduces the volumetric efficiency, especially at high compression ratios.
Due to absence of transmission between the electromotor and the piston, the relative large compression forces of the piston are directly transmitted to the electromotor, so it has a large negative impact on the size of electromotor. Given the required electromotor power, the size can be reduced by increasing its speed.
A principal disadvantage of a linear motor known from the prior art is that it has to change direction instead of continued rotation. For a conventionally known free piston design the motor is directly coupled to the piston, so the translation speed equals the piston speed. The average speed of the piston of a refrigeration compressor is low, typically 2 m/s for a small commercially available compressor up to 5.5 m/s for a large industrial compressor.
In accordance with the invention, an aspect of which has been illustrated with reference to
The principle of the torsion drive is based on the reduction of the length of a straight flexible elements in X-direction, when it is loaded. When two pistons are connected by a straight flexible element, the pistons create a sliding guide which allows substantially no rotation. Loading causes bending of the flexible (elastic) element. Loading gives vertical displacement Δy and an axial displacement Δx, which is a second order effect. This has a number of advantageous properties:
The torsion drive technology uses the elastic properties of dynamically loaded components. At maximum capacity the material stress is found to be well below the fatigue limit. This means that the elastic elements and the torsion bar have substantially unlimited lifetime. The technology can be combined with common valve plates. It is also mentioned that the lifetime of the compressor is not limited by the frequency of the start/stop cycles.
More details on operation of the free piston type torsion drive compressor (or pump) are given in
In a particular embodiment of
In accordance with the invention when the alternating driving force is applied to the torsion body 23 the free pistons 21, 22 will rotate to and fro and translate back and forth along the translation direction D which is substantially parallel to the longitudinal axis L of the compressor 20.
In view 30b the compressor returns to its original (rest) state when no driving force is applied. The pistons are now in their top dead centre position, approaching the valve plates 24A and 24B.
In view 30c a second shortened condition of the compressor is shown when the free pistons 31a, 31b are driven by the torsion force of the electro motors in opposite direction with respect to the direction shown in view 30a.
The weight of the piston, or more particularly, the torsion inertia of the pistons, and the stiffness of the torsion bar are selected so that the natural torsion vibrating frequency equals about 50 Hz. This substantially improves operating parameters of the device according to the invention.
By suitably alternating the driving directions for the free pistons 31a, 31b a pulse-like translational movement of the compressor may be obtained.
The cylinder liner is part of the hermetically sealed outer shell of the compressor.
It is found that the compressor according to the invention may operate with a refrigeration capacity of 0.5 to 5 kW. This corresponds to a compressor with an effective length of 500 mm and a piston diameter of 65mm. The compressor is hermetic, oil free, compatible with all refrigerants and has a step less capacity from 0 to 100%. This combination is very useful for application with natural refrigerants and enables new combinations of technologies, gas compression and sorption cycles.
The torsion drive compressor is able to increase the efficiency of the compressor itself and of an overall system using the compressor. The low internal friction, the step less capacity control, the absence of a frequency controller and other part load losses gives a significantly improved energetic efficiency of the compressor. The efficiency of the system will be increased by the used of a natural refrigerant like ammonia and the absence of oil. As oil free system has the following positive effects”
An additional effect of the absence of oil is that hydrocarbon will not dissolve in the oil. Accordingly, the 150g refrigerant can be used more effective, increasing the refrigeration capacity.
An important new possibility is the use of hybrid heat pimps, based on vapor compression and absorption technology. Sorption cycles do not function properly with oil circulating in the system, so the absence of oil is advantageous. The hybrid pump may be used to increase efficiency and application range of the compressor. As it may use two independent energy sources (electric and heat), it is easier for heat pumps of the type discussed above to handle peak loads.
It is found that the compressor according to the invention has the following additional advantages:
While specific embodiments have been described above, it will be appreciated that the invention may be practiced otherwise than as described. Moreover, specific items discussed with reference to any of the isolated drawings may freely be inter-changed supplementing each outer in any particular way. The descriptions above are intended to be illustrative, not limiting. Thus, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that modifications may be made to the invention as described in the foregoing without departing from the scope of the claims set out below.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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11167100.4 | May 2011 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/NL2012/050357 | 5/23/2012 | WO | 00 | 12/16/2013 |