The present application relates to a handrail-drive system for an escalator or a moving walkway. The handrail-drive system has a handrail drive with drive elements and a belt-form handrail which can be moved in a circulatory manner.
WO 200435451 A1 discloses a linear drive system for handrails with a multi-wedge profile (multiple-spline profile). An essential element of the drive system is a drive belt which has a toothed belt profile on its inner side facing away from the handrail. On its outer side facing the multi-wedge profile, the drive belt has a counter profile corresponding to the multi-wedge profile. By means of said counter profile, the drive power is transmitted to the handrail. This solution is disadvantageous because of significant signs of wear on the wedge profile edges and the need for pressure rollers that press the multi-wedge profile of the handrail against the multi-wedge profile of the drive belt. The use of the aforementioned handrail-drive system requires a specific installation space which severely restricts the possible installation positions of the drive elements in the area of the circulating handrail of the escalator or the moving walkway.
Among others, there can be a need for a handrail-drive system, whose drive elements can be installed at virtually any desired installation position within the escalator or the moving walkway.
Such a need can be met by a handrail-drive system of an escalator or a moving walkway, said handrail-drive system having at least one handrail drive with drive elements and a belt-form handrail which can be moved in a circulatory manner. The handrail is delimited by an outer contour, which is configured in the form of a gripping surface, and by an inner contour, which leaves a cavity free in the handrail, wherein the cavity is open toward the surroundings of the handrail. As a result, the handrail can be produced in a material-saving manner. The handrail-drive system is preferably configured as a linear handrail-drive system, i.e., in the area of the drive elements, the handrail is guided past said drive elements in an essentially straight manner, and the drive elements which are in direct contact with the handrail are arranged in one plane. The driving force is transmitted from the drive elements to the handrail on two mutually opposite side surfaces of the inner contour, wherein, due to a complementary configuration of the side surfaces, and with the exception of the driving force, all the other forces which are caused by the transmission of the driving force and act between the side surfaces are compensated for one another.
According to one aspect, it is proposed that the handrail is made of a soft-elastic elastomeric material and has sliding elements made of a polymer material which is harder than the soft-elastic elastomeric material. In sections, the sliding elements are arranged at discrete distances along the longitudinal extension of the handrail, wherein guide elements and/or tooth profiles are formed on the sliding elements.
With regard to the present application, a complementary configuration of the side surfaces refers to a configuration which, with the exception of the driving force, mutually compensates the forces acting on side surfaces in the area of the driving force transmission, and so no additional components, for example, pressure rollers, are required. The two complementarily configured side surfaces are mirror-symmetrical to one another. In a handrail, which is operationally arranged in a circulatory manner, said side surfaces can be, for example, two side surfaces arranged in vertical planes parallel to one another which mutually support the pressing force required for transmitting the driving force between the handrail and the drive elements.
Possible features and advantages of embodiments of the invention can be considered, among others, to be based on ideas and findings described below.
According to a further aspect, the handrail can have a U-shaped or C-shaped cross-section along its longitudinal extension. In such case, the two side surfaces can be arranged on the two mutually opposite sides of the inner contour of the two legs of the U-shaped or C-shaped cross-section. A center ridge formed in the inner contour, which extends in the longitudinal direction of the handrail and on which the two side surfaces are formed, is also possible. The side surfaces do not necessarily have to be flat surfaces. They can also be concave, convex, or prism-shaped, provided that they have the previously specified, complementary configuration.
In order to improve the traction between the drive elements and the circulatingly arranged handrail, an interlocking transmission of the driving force can be provided. For that purpose, tooth profiles, to which the driving force can be transmitted, are preferably formed on the two mutually opposite sides of the inner contour.
As already mentioned, the inner contour is provided with sliding elements, on which guide elements and/or tooth profiles are formed. In the operational state, the guide elements interact with handrail guide means, such as a handrail guide profile or guide rollers, which are arranged on a balustrade of the escalator or the moving walkway. For this purpose, the guide elements can be, for example, guide grooves adjusted to the handrail guide profile. For example, fabric inserts, sliding friction-reducing surface coatings, or inserted sliding elements made, for example, from a suitable polymeric material, such as PTFE (polytetrafluoroethylene) or POM (polyoxymethylene), or from a metal, such as brass or bronze and the like, can be used as sliding elements. Preferably, the guide elements are combined with the sliding elements.
The handrail or the handrail belt is usually made consistently over its longitudinal extension from a soft-elastic elastomeric material, such as SBR (styrene-butadiene rubber), EPM (ethylene-propylene rubber), EPDM (ethylene-propylene terpolymer rubber), NBR (acrylonitrile-butadiene rubber), and the like, wherein tension-bearing elements, such as steel wire strands, carbon fibers, or aramid fiber strands, are embedded in the elastomeric material as reinforcement.
However, it is also possible that the handrail is made of a soft-elastic elastomeric material and the sliding elements are made of a polymer material which is harder than the soft-elastic elastomeric material. In sections, the harder sliding elements are arranged at discrete distances along the longitudinal extension of the handrail and preferably partially embedded in the elastomeric material. The guide elements and/or tooth profiles are formed on the sliding elements. The thus formed handrail belt or handrail has a spine-like structure, so that it has alternating hard- and soft-elastic areas. As a result, the handrail can be easily bent and highly stressed areas, such as sliding surfaces or guide grooves, can be formed on the sliding elements.
In order to also maintain the dimensional stability of the handrail in the longitudinal extension, the sliding elements can be connected to the tension-bearing elements embedded in the soft-elastic elastomeric material.
In order to drive the circulatingly arranged handrail, the drive elements of the handrail-drive system can comprise at least one toothed belt which can be moved in a circulatory manner. In this case, the toothed belt can be in contact with the handrail in order to transmit the driving force to the handrail. The driving force can be transmitted in a purely force-locking manner but is preferably transmitted in a mainly form-locking manner in that a tooth profile complementary to the toothed belt is formed at least on one of the two side surfaces of the inner contour. Since, as described above, the handrail is provided with sliding elements, the two side surfaces with the tooth profiles can also be formed on said sliding elements.
However, the drive elements can also comprise at least one transmission gearwheel, which engages in a corresponding tooth profile of the side surfaces of the inner contour. A multiplicity of arrangements of the drive elements is conceivable, for example, pure toothed belt solutions, pure gearwheel solutions, and combinations of gearwheels and toothed belts.
In one possible arrangement of the drive elements, the toothed belt, with its first run, can be in mesh with the first opposite side of the inner contour, and with its second run, it can be in mesh with the at least one transmission gearwheel. With this arrangement, the movement or rotation direction of the second run can be implemented, so that the circulation direction of the toothed belt runs counter to the direction of rotation of the transmission gearwheel. As a result, the transmission gearwheel can be in mesh with the second opposite side of the inner contour.
In a further possible arrangement of the drive elements, the toothed belt can be guided between and be in operative connection with at least two gearwheels, and so the two gearwheels have an opposing direction of rotation, and the first of the two gearwheels is in mesh with the first opposite side of the inner contour, and the second of the two gearwheels is in mesh with the second opposite side of the inner contour.
For carrying and guiding the handrail which is arranged in a circulating manner, at least one balustrade with a handrail guide means or handrail guide profile is preferably present. At least part of the drive elements can be integrated in the handrail guide means.
The drive elements described above can be driven by an angular gear arranged in the handrail guide means, and a motor, and together they form a handrail drive. Of course, it is also possible that a plurality of such handrail drives is used to drive a single handrail, wherein their speeds must then be matched exactly.
Furthermore, it is not absolutely necessary for all components of the handrail drive to be arranged entirely in the balustrade or in the handrail guide means. For example, the toothed belt can be guided by the handrail guide means through the balustrade, through a balustrade base which connects the balustrade to a supporting structure of the moving walkway or the escalator, and around a drive wheel arranged in the supporting structure. The drive wheel can be driven by the step band or by a motor arranged in the supporting structure.
The handrail-drive system can be used both in an escalator and in a moving walkway. They usually have two balustrades, which are arranged on both sides of a step band or pallet band and each have a circulating handrail. Accordingly, at least two handrail-drive systems are to be provided per escalator or moving walkway.
Embodiments of the present application can be particularly advantageous because the handrail-drive system has a very small configuration and can thus be installed at any point of the balustrade. Due to the circulating arrangement of the handrail, a handrail advance and a handrail return is present, wherein the user can hold on to the handrail in the area of the handrail advance. Depending on the section, very different tensile forces thus act on the handrail. Since the handrail-drive system is not tied to the available installation space, it can be installed at the installation location ideal with regard to the expected load. In an escalator connecting a lower level of a structure to an upper level of a structure, the tensile forces in the handrail advance are highest at the upper level when the escalator conveys from the lower level to the upper level. Therefore, the drive elements are preferably arranged at said upper level.
It must be noted that some of the possible features and advantages of the invention are described herein with reference to different embodiments. A person skilled in the art recognizes that the features can be combined, adapted, or interchanged in a suitable manner in order to arrive at further embodiments of the invention.
In the following, embodiments shall be described with reference to the attached drawings, wherein neither the drawings nor the description are to be interpreted as delimiting the invention.
The drawings are only schematic and not to scale. In the different drawings, the same reference signs denote the same or identically acting features.
The escalator 1 further comprises two annularly closed, circulating conveyor chains 11, wherein only one is visible due to the side view. The two conveyor chains 11 consist of a multiplicity of chain links. The two conveyor chains 11 can be moved in travel directions along a travel path 8. The conveyor chains 11 run parallel to one another and are spaced apart from one another in a direction transverse to the travel direction. In end areas adjacent to the levels E1, E2, the conveyor chains 11 are deflected by deflection chain wheels 15, 16.
Between the two conveyor chains 11, a plurality of tread elements 9 in the form of steps are arranged, which connect the conveyor chains 11 to one another transversely to the travel path 8. With the help of the conveyor chains 11, the tread elements 9 can be moved in the travel directions along the travel path 8. In this case, the tread elements 9 guided on the conveyor chains 11 form a stepped belt 10, in which the tread elements 9 are arranged one behind the other along the travel path 8 and can be stepped on by users at least in a conveying area 19. The circulating step belt 10 is guided by schematically depicted guide rails 12 and supported against gravity. These guide rails 12 are arranged in the supporting structure 2 in a stationary manner.
In order to be able to move the conveyor chains 11, the chain wheels 16 of the upper level E2 are connected to the drive arrangement 25. The drive arrangement 25 is controlled by means of a control 24 (which, in
The handrail 5 or the circulating handrail belt 5 is driven by drive elements 6 which, for example, can be operatively connected to the drive arrangement 25 of the escalator 1 in a mechanical manner. The handrail 5 and the drive elements 6 are essential parts of a handrail-drive system 20. If the handrail-drive system 20 has its own motor, a handrail control 23 is also included which, in the present example, is integrated in the escalator control 24. The correct tension of the handrail 5 is maintained by means of an only schematically depicted handrail tensioning device 7.
However, there is also a requirement regarding the aesthetics of the balustrade, particularly a glass balustrade, as is commonly used in escalators and moving walkways for department stores and airports. As a result, only one handrail-drive system 30 with drive elements 36 can be used, which have significantly smaller dimensions than the drive elements 6 of the handrail-drive system 20 shown in
As a first embodiment,
The motor 38 and the angular gear 39 are integrated in the glass balustrade 3, wherein the housing is attached by means of corresponding flange lugs 41 to a glass panel 40 of the glass balustrade 3. The motor 38 is connected via electrical lines 54, for example, to the handrail control 23 shown in
The handrail 35 is delimited by an outer contour 61 configured as a gripping surface and by an inner contour 62 which leaves a cavity 60 free in the handrail 35. The cavity 60 is open toward the surroundings of the handrail 35, and so said handrail 35 has a C-shaped cross-section 70. On the inner contour 62, two mutually opposite side surfaces 63, 64 are present. The two side surfaces 63, 64 each have a tooth profile which extends in the longitudinal extension L of the handrail 35 and has the same tooth profile module as the toothed belt 45 and the transmission gearwheels 47. Furthermore, 62 guide elements 44 are formed on the inner contour, which are adjusted to the handrail guide means 42, 43.
The driving force is transmitted from the drive elements 36 to the handrail 35 at the two mutually opposite side surfaces 63, 64 of the inner contour 62. In order to transmit the driving force, the toothed belt 45 meshes with its first run 52 with the first opposite side surface 63 of the inner contour 62, and the transmission gearwheels 47 mesh with the second opposite side surface 64.
Due to a complementary configuration of the side surfaces 63, 64, all further forces P1, P2, P3, P4, required and/or caused by the transmission of the driving force and acting between the side surfaces 63, 64, are compensated for one another. This means that a complementary configuration of the side surfaces 63, 64 refers to a configuration which, with the exception of the driving force, mutually compensates all the forces P1, P2, P3, P4 acting on side surfaces 63, 64 in the area of the driving force transmission, and so no additional components, for example, pressure rollers known from the prior art, are required. Preferably, the two complementarily configured side surfaces 63, 64 are mirror-symmetrical to one another. In a handrail 35, which is operationally arranged in a circulatory manner, they can be, for example, two side surfaces 63, 64 arranged in vertical planes parallel to one another which mutually support the force P1, P2 or the pressing force required for transmitting the driving force, or, as in the present example, forces P1, P2, P3, P4 generated by tooth edges. With respect to the forces P1, P2 acting on the side surfaces 63, 64, the cross-section 70 of the handrail 35 is preferably configured in a sufficiently deformation-resistant manner, so that said forces P1, P2 do not spread the C-shaped cross-section 70.
In the following,
Furthermore, sliding elements 106 are partially embedded in the elastomeric material 107 of the handrail 105, which are harder than the soft-elastic elastomeric material 107. The sliding elements 106 can be made of a hard-elastic polymer material or a non-ferrous metal, which have a low coefficient of friction with other materials such as steel. Such materials can be, for example, PTFE (polytetrafluoroethylene), POM (polyoxymethylene), brass, or bronze, and the like.
In sections, the harder sliding elements 106 are arranged at discrete distances along the longitudinal extension L of the handrail 105. The thus formed handrail 105 or handrail belt has a spine-like structure, so that it has alternating hard- and soft-elastic areas along its longitudinal extension L. As a result, the handrail 105 can be easily bent, and highly stressed areas such as sliding surfaces 113 and/or guide grooves can be formed on the sliding elements 106. In the present embodiment, the sliding elements 106 are provided with guide elements 109 configured as grooves. In the operational state, the guide elements 109 interact with handrail guide means which are arranged on a balustrade 3 of the escalator 1 or the moving walkway, such as the handrail guide profile 90 shown in
In order to also maintain the dimensional stability of the handrail 105 in its longitudinal extension, the sliding elements 106 are connected to the tension-bearing elements 108 embedded in the soft-elastic elastomeric material 107.
In the above-described embodiments of
As the embodiment of
In order to improve the traction between the drive elements 126 of the handrail-drive system 120 and the handrail 125, which is arranged in a circulatory manner, an interlocking transmission of the driving force is provided, and so, on the two mutually opposite sides of the inner contour 122, tooth profiles 127 are formed, to which the driving force can be transferred.
The drive elements 126 comprise six transmission gearwheels 131 which are arranged in pairs, wherein the central ridge 121 is guided between the individual gearwheel pairs, and so the teeth of the transmission gearwheels 131 mesh with the tooth profiles 127 of the handrail 125. The other components of the drive elements 126, such as the motor and transmission parts, by means of which the transmission gearwheels 131 are driven, are housed together as a handrail drive 130 in a drive housing 138 and therefore not visible. Handrail guide means 132 and flange lugs 133 are formed on the drive housing 138. With the flange lugs 133, the drive housing 138 can be attached to a glass panel 92 of the glass balustrade 3. This creates a solid base for the handrail guide means 132, on which the guide elements 129 of the handrail 125 are guided. The drive housing 138 can further comprise connection points 135 to handrail guide means (not depicted) of the balustrade 3. The motor arranged in the drive housing 138 is connected via electrical lines 134, for example, to the handrail control 23 shown in
Although the invention has been described by way of depicting specific embodiments, it is obvious that numerous further embodiments can be created with the knowledge of the present invention, for example, by combining the features of the individual embodiments and/or interchanging individual functional units of the embodiments. For example, the handrail 125 shown in
Finally, it should be noted that terms such as “having,” “comprising,” etc., do not exclude other elements or steps, and terms such as “a” or “an” do not exclude a multitude. Reference signs in the claims are not to be interpreted as delimiting.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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17185725 | Aug 2017 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2018/070169 | 7/25/2018 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2019/029992 | 2/14/2019 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20200207587 A1 | Jul 2020 | US |