The invention relates to a gear pump with variable throughput volume furnished with two meshed gears with external toothing, which are rotatably held in the working chamber of a pump housing, where at least one of the two gears can be driven by a drive shaft and where one of the two gears, preferably the driven gear, can be shifted in the direction of its axis.
Conventional gear pumps with two meshing external gears have a driving gear which is driven from a drive shaft and is driving the second gear. Besides the tooth profile and the number of revolutions per minute of the pump the meshing width determines the throughput volume of the gear pump. Losses, which occur due to the clearance between the gear tips and the pump housing and due to the play allowed for the gap at the front faces of the gears, will affect the efficiency of the gear pump. Gear pumps of this kind are usually employed as oil pumps in internal combustion engines. Conventional oil pumps are coupled to the engine crankshaft at a fixed speed ratio by rigid, non-variable coupling means such as chains, toothed belts or toothed wheels. As engine speed increases the rpm of the oil pump will also increase and thus also the throughput of the pump. Oil pumps are usually designed to guarantee oil supply of the internal combustion engine in the worst case over the total speed range, that is at idling speed with the largest gap cross-section in the bearings, taking into account all additional oil consumers of the engine such as pistons, spray nozzles for piston cooling, turbochargers, etc. Given this design it follows that at higher engine speeds the oil pump will supply an oil volume which is many times greater than that actually required at higher engine speeds. Adapting the oil volume to the amount actually needed in a given engine state is conventionally done by pressure control and discharge of the superfluous amount of oil into the oil sump, or by recirculating the oil into the input passage of the pump. Since the gears of the pump will constantly deliver the maximum volume of oil they constantly require the same high input of driving power, independently of the actually needed output volume. This will have a disadvantageous effect on the efficiency.
From DE 196 31 956 A1 a gear pump with adjustable displacement volume is known. One of the gears of the pump is provided with passages extending from a coaxial bore to the bottom of the spaces between the teeth. The bore contains a rotary valve with at least one web having a partially cylindrical wall and bounding an axial recess of the rotary valve. The valve is non-rotatingly held on the shaft carrying the gear. The wall of the web rests against the inside of the bore and the recess is connected to the low pressure side of the pump. By adjusting the rotary valve the displacement volume of the pump may be adjusted depending on the open cross-section of the passages. The adjustment mechanism is relatively complex and consists of many intricately shaped parts.
It is furthermore known to adjust the throughput volume of a gear pump by changing the meshing width of the gears. In this case at least one of the gears may be shifted in axial direction thus changing the meshing width, which may necessitate the use of filling parts entering between the teeth in order to avoid dead space. Gear pumps of this type are known for instance from GB 2 265 945 A, AT 003 767 U1, DE 41 21 074 A1, or RU 2 177 085 C. In addition to the great number of parts required by this design a further disadvantage lies in the fact that the axial shifting of the gears necessitates a relatively large axial dimension of the device.
DE 19 924 057 A1 describes a gear mechanism with two meshing gears onto whose side faces axially shiftable parts are pressed in order to achieve axial sealing. The two parts are subjected in axial direction to different resulting forces and pressed against the gears, which are thereby shifted in axial direction into a defined position. This should avoid a widened inlet track in the housing.
It is the object of the present invention to avoid the above disadvantages and to achieve control of the throughput volume of a gear-type pump as described above, in as simple a manner as possible.
To achieve this aim it is provided by the invention that a gap-width defined by the distance measured in axial direction between an essentially plane first interior side wall of the working chamber of the pump housing and a first front face of the shiftable gear be adjustable. Preferably, the gap-width should be variable in a range between 0 and d/5, and preferably between 0 and d/50, where d is the exterior diameter of the shiftable gear.
In contrast to known controllable gear pumps with axially adjustable gears, control of the throughput volume is achieved in this case by changing the gap-width and thus the gap losses. No filling parts entering the spaces between the teeth to avoid dead space will be required. Since the gap-width exerts a strong influence on pressure and throughput volume of the gear pump, only very small axial shifts will be necessary to control pressure and throughput volume via changes in the gap-width.
In order to permit a lateral movement of the shiftable gear in a simple manner it is provided that a second plane interior side wall of the working chamber parallel to and opposite of the first interior side wall be furnished with an essentially cylindrical recess concentric with the axis of the gear and situated in the area of the second front face of the shiftable gear facing away from the first front face, the diameter of the recess being larger than the outer diameter of the gear, at least in the area of the shiftable gear.
It is of particular advantage if a preferably disk-shaped sealing plate is placed in the area of the recess, which plate separates the working chamber of the pump housing from the dead space inside the recess, the sealing plate being preferably fixedly attached to the shiftable gear. The preferably disk-shaped sealing plate will effect a lateral seal against the dead space. In order to avoid pressure peaks it is further provided that the sealing plate have radial relief grooves on the side facing the second front face of the gear, which are positioned such that each space between the teeth of the shiftable gear corresponds to at least one relief groove. It is particularly advantageous if an outlet groove is located in the second interior side wall of the working chamber opposite the first interior side wall on the pressure side of the gears, i.e. on the side where the sealing plate is located, which outlet groove should be positioned in such a way that each relief groove communicates at least once with the outlet groove during each revolution of the sealing plate. Pressure peaks can be avoided, in particular when the gears are in their initial unshifted position in which they mesh over their whole width, by means of the relief grooves and the excess oil outlet groove. At higher engine speeds and large gap widths pressure pulsations can also be compensated by the ensuing gap space.
In the gear pump described here pressure and volume control are achieved wholly without control plungers or valves, which will permit a very compact design. Since controlling is effected by varying the gap losses and reduced suction/pressure performance is required in the control range, the gear pump's power consumption is greatly reduced in the control range. Due to the very small lateral displacement of the gears the load on the teeth is distributed over almost their whole width, which results in substantially reduced wear as compared to conventional pumps controlled via the meshing width.
In a very advantageous variant of the invention it is provided that a leakage channel departs from the dead space, this channel being preferably configured as a helical groove in the pump housing adjacent to the control shaft. Oil leaking into the dead space from between the sealing plate and the pump housing may thus be reliably removed.
In order to avoid pressure peaks in the dead space and to reliably guarantee pressure relief, a preferred variant of the invention provides that the dead space be flow-connected via a relief passage with a pressure sink, preferably with the suction side of the pump or the pump environment, the relief passage being preferably furnished with a pressure relief valve, which opens in the direction of the pressure sink. The pressure relief valve is designed to prevent any pressure increase in the dead space. A malfunction of the control mechanism of the gear pump can thus be avoided, which is of particular importance during cold-start and when the sealing plate is radially closed.
According to a particularly advantageous variant the sealing plate has at least one sealing groove in its side wall, which groove extends along the entire circumference. If such a sealing groove is provided radial relief grooves may be dispensed with.
Shifting of the gear may be achieved in a simple manner by rigidly mounting the gear, and preferably also the sealing plate, on a control shaft which rotates in the pump housing and can be shifted in the direction of its axis. In a particularly preferred variant it is provided that the control shaft be furnished with at least one pressure plunger to effect the axial shift, which plunger cooperates with a pressure chamber containing a pressure medium, where preferably the pressure medium is identical with the medium to be pumped and where the pressure chamber is flow-connected with the pressure side of the gear pump. Alternatively the pressure chamber may be connected with an external pressure source or a clean-oil control device. This will permit external control. A restoring spring, configured for instance as a compression spring, may be used to reposition the control shaft. In an alternative variant it could be provided that the control shaft be moved, at least in one direction, by an electric motor.
The invention will now be further described with reference to the enclosed drawings, wherein
Functionally identical parts bear the same reference numbers in all variants.
The gear pump 1 has two externally toothed meshing gears 2, 3 which are rotatably held in the working chamber 11 of a pump housing 4. The gear 3 is driven by a drive shaft 5 and in turn drives the gear 2. The driven gear 2 is mounted, together with a sealing plate 6, on a control shaft 7 and can be shifted in the direction of the axis 2′ of the gear 2 together with the shaft 7, as indicated by the arrow P. Reference number 8 indicates the suction side, reference number 9 the pressure side of the gear pump 1 and the arrows S show the flow direction of the medium.
By shifting the control shaft 7 and thus the shiftable gear 2 the gap-width 10 as shown in
Control of the pressure, respectively the throughput volume, is achieved by altering the gap-width 10 and thus the gap losses. In this way no filling parts to fill the spaces 14 between the teeth will be needed. A small shift of the shiftable gear 2 will be sufficient to alter the gap-width 10 to the degree required.
In order to permit a lateral movement of the gear 2, the second interior side wall 11b opposite of the first interior side wall 11a, is furnished with an essentially cylindrical recess 22 concentric with the axis 2′, whose diameter D in the area of the second front face 2b of the shiftable gear 2, is larger than the outer diameter d of the gear 2.
The disk-shaped or annular sealing plate 6 located in the recess 22 serves to seal the working chamber 11 containing the gears 2, 3 against the dead space 12 in the recess 22, which is required for the shifting of the gear 2. In order to avoid pressure increase in the dead space 12 the latter is connected via a relief passage 25 indicated by dashed lines in
Each radial relief groove 13 is positioned in the area of a space 14 between the teeth of the shiftable gear 2 and communicates during a revolution of the gear 2 with an outlet groove 15 which is formed in the pump housing 4 in the pressure-side meshing area 23 of the two gears 2, 3. The relief grooves 13 and the outlet groove 15 serve to avoid pressure peaks, especially at low speed in the initial state of the gear pump 1 when control is not active.
If, as shown in
Reference number 4a indicates a pump housing cover held by screws 16 on the pump housing 4.
The leakage groove indicated by reference number 29 serves to remove oil leaking into the dead space 12 through the annular gap between sealing plate 6 and pump housing 4. The leakage groove 29 is for instance configured as a helical groove connecting the dead space 12 with a spring chamber 30. In order to reliably remove leakages during normal operation the sum of the cross-section areas of the leakage groove 29 and the bearing clearance of the control shaft 7 must at least equal the area of the annular gap between sealing plate 6 and pump housing 4.
The control shaft 7 is furnished with a pressure plunger 17, which is sealed against the pump housing cover 4a by a sealing ring 18. The plunger 17 enters a pressure chamber 19, which is closed by a screw 20. Into the pressure chamber 19 opens an inlet for pressurized oil 21, which is either flow-connected with the pressure side 9 of the gear pump 1 (
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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A 493/2003 | Mar 2003 | AT | national |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040191103 A1 | Sep 2004 | US |