The present disclosure generally relates to hermetic power terminal feed-throughs, and more particularly to hermetic power terminal feed-throughs for use in high-pressure applications.
This section provides background information related to the present disclosure which is not necessarily prior art.
Conventional, hermetically-sealed, electric power terminal feed-throughs (also referred to as “hermetic terminals”) serve to provide an airtight electrical terminal for use in conjunction with hermetically sealed devices, such as air conditioning (A/C) compressors. In such applications, maintaining a hermetic seal is a critical requirement, and leakage through the hermetic terminal must be effectively precluded.
An exemplary conventional hermetic terminal 200 that is well-known in the art is shown in
In a conventional hermetic terminal 200, the terminal body 206 is typically manufactured from cold rolled steel in a stamping operation that forms the cap-like shape of the terminal body 206, as well as the openings 204 through the top wall 214 of the terminal body. As a result of the stamping, the openings 204 through the top wall 214 of the terminal body 206 are formed to create a lip portion 216 that serves as a surface against which the fusible sealing glass 208 can create the hermetic seal. The surface area created by the lip portion 216, which has a length extending about two times or more the thickness of the top wall 214 of the terminal body 206, ensures that a sufficient seal can be made to achieve a desired hermeticity.
In addition to hermeticity, burst pressure is a critical performance specification for hermetic terminals, particularly those used in high-pressure applications. The performance requirements for high-pressure hermetic terminals often demand that the hermetic terminals be capable of maintaining hermeticity at pressures more than 20 MPa (i.e., several thousand pounds per square inch). In high-pressure air conditioning compressors, for example, hermetic terminals can be required to meet burst pressure ratings of 33 MPa (about 4800 psi). Any deformation of the terminal body under high pressure can compromise the integrity of the hermetic seal and result in failure of the hermetic terminal. Consequently, it is generally accepted that high-pressure hermetic terminals require a more robust (i.e., thicker) terminal body.
The dimensions of the hermetic terminal in combination with limitations in stamping technology, however, limit the maximum thickness of a terminal body that can be produced by a metal stamping process to only about 3.5 millimeters. Moreover, as the thickness of the material forming the terminal body increases toward 3.5 millimeters, the ability to form the lip portion in the opening (which provides the surface where hermetic seal can be made) during the stamping operation diminishes. Metal stamping has, therefore, been found to be unsuitable for forming a terminal body for a high-pressure hermetic terminal.
In order to achieve the necessary combination of hermeticity and burst pressure performance in high-pressure applications, then, high-pressure hermetic terminals generally incorporate a thicker terminal body. One exemplary high-pressure hermetic terminal 300 is illustrated in
Consequently, there remains a need for an improved high-pressure hermetic terminal that can meet the necessary combination of hermeticity and burst pressure performance in high-pressure applications and can be manufactured efficiently in a high-volume production environment, such as by stamping.
The present disclosure provides a hermetic power terminal feed-through for use in high-pressure applications. The hermetic power terminal can include a fused pin subassembly comprising a tubular reinforcing member and a current-conducting pin. The current-conducting pin passes through the tubular reinforcing member and can be fixed thereto by a fusible sealing material to create a hermetic seal. The fused pin subassembly can then be permanently joined and hermetically sealed to a terminal body by brazing or soldering.
The construction of the hermetic terminal of the present disclosure enables the terminal body to be made from a metal material that is thinner than the metal material conventionally employed in high-pressure hermetic terminals. Notwithstanding the thinner terminal body, the hermetic seal provided and the strength of the terminal body satisfy the performance demands of a high-pressure operating environment. The reduced thickness of the terminal body makes it suitable for forming in the economical manufacturing process of metal stamping.
Further areas of applicability will become apparent from the description provided herein. The description and specific examples in this summary are intended for purposes of illustration only and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure.
The drawings described herein are for illustrative purposes only of selected embodiments and not all possible implementations, and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure.
Example embodiments will now be described more fully with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Referring now to
With reference to
The terminal body 12 comprises a metal, generally cap-shaped structure and includes a substantially planar top wall 24, a cylindrical sidewall 26, and an annular lip 28 extending radially and outwardly from the sidewall 26. The top wall 24 defines a plurality of openings 30, each having a side wall 31, for receiving the reinforcing members 14 and current-conducting pins 16, enabling the current-conducting pins 16 to pass through the terminal body 12.
The terminal body 12 can be about 25 to about 40 millimeters in diameter. The thickness (T1) of the top wall 24 can be less than about 3.5 millimeters, and is preferably between 2.5 millimeters and 3.5 millimeters, and more preferably between 3.0 millimeters and 3.5 millimeters. The terminal body 12 can be made from cold-rolled or hot-rolled steel in a metal stamping manufacturing process.
The reinforcing members 14 each comprise a body portion 32 having a hollow, tubular configuration extending for a length (L) along a longitudinal axis (X). The body portion 32 has a first, outer diameter, (D) a second, inner diameter (d) and a wall thickness (t). The outer diameter (D) is sized to closely fit within the opening 30 through the top wall 24 of the terminal body 12 such that the exterior surface of the body portion 32 is adjacent to the wall of the opening 30. The inner diameter (d) is sized to accommodate a current-conducting pin 16 passing through the reinforcing member 14 and the fusible sealing material 18 that creates the hermetic seal between the current-conducting pin 16 and the reinforcing member 14. The length (L) of the reinforcing member 14 is typically greater than the thickness (T1) of the upper wall 24 of the terminal body 12. In this configuration, the reinforcing member 14 provides for a seal surface along its inner diameter (d) that extends beyond the thickness (T1) of the upper wall 24 of the terminal body 12 and is, therefore, effective to create a hermetic seal with the fusible sealing material 18 and pin 16 that is suitable for use in a high-pressure operating environment.
Optionally, at one end of the tubular body portion 32, the reinforcing member 14 can include a flange or rim portion 34. Installed in the terminal body 12, the flange 34 can seat against the top wall 24 of the terminal body 12. For example, as shown in
The reinforcing member 14 can be made from metal, such as cold rolled steel or hot rolled steel. The reinforcing member 14 can have a coefficient of thermal expansion that matches the coefficient of thermal expansion of the fusible sealing material 18, the current-conducting pin 16, and the terminal body 12.
Each current conducting pin 16 extends along the longitudinal axis (X) and is received within the reinforcing member 14. The current-conducting pin 16 is fixed in place relative to the reinforcing member 14 by the fusible sealing material 18. The current conducting pin 16 is preferably made from steel, stainless steel, or a copper-cored steel wire. The current conducting pin 16 can have a coefficient of thermal expansion that matches the coefficient of thermal expansion of the fusible sealing material 18, the reinforcing member 14, and the terminal body 12.
The fusible sealing material 18 can comprise a fusible glass for creating a hermetic, glass-to-metal seal between the current-conducting pin 16 and the reinforcing member 14. Such materials are well-known in the field. The fusible sealing material 18 can have a coefficient of thermal expansion that matches the coefficient of thermal expansion of the reinforcing member 14, the current-conducting pin 16, and the terminal body 12.
A significant advantage to the construction of the hermetic terminal 10 of the present disclosure is that a thinner terminal body 12 than is conventionally employed in a high-pressure hermetic terminal can be used in the hermetic terminal 10 of the present disclosure. Notwithstanding that its thinner, the hermetic seal provided and the strength of the terminal body 12 satisfy the performance demands of a high-pressure operating environment. Further, the reduced thickness of the terminal body 12 makes it suitable for forming the cap-shaped terminal body having one or more openings through the top wall in the more economical manufacturing process of metal stamping, as opposed to machining from bar stock as has been done previously. The metal stamping process can employ less expensive tools that can run at higher production speeds, thereby reducing manufacturing costs and increasing manufacturing output. Still further, terminal bodies formed in a metal stamping process generally do not exhibit the defects in the form of inclusions that can run vertically through the thickness of the top wall as in a machined terminal body.
The process for manufacturing the hermetic terminal 10 of the present disclosure differs from that of prior hermetic terminal devices. In one respect, the current-conducting pin 16 can be hermetically joined to the reinforcing member 14 by the fusible sealing material 18 to create a fused pin subassembly, prior to its assembly with the terminal body 12. First, the fusible sealing material 18 can be configured as a preformed tube. The pin 16, preformed tube 18, and reinforcing component 14 can then be arranged such that the preformed tube 18 is nested within the reinforcing component 14 and the pin 16 passes through the preformed tube 18 and reinforcing member 14. Thereafter, the arrangement is heated to the fusing temperature of the electrically insulating fusible sealing material 18 (i.e., about 1500° F. for fusible sealing glass). After heating, the assembly can then be cooled thereby creating the fused pin subassembly, with the pin 16 and reinforcing member 14 being joined by a hermetic seal created by the fusible sealing material 18.
Thereafter, the fused pin subassembly can be installed in the terminal body 12 through the opening 30 in the top wall 24. Once positioned within the opening 30, the fused pin subassembly can be joined to the terminal body 12 by a joining process like brazing or soldering. The joining process provides a filler material that occupies the closely fitting space between the fused pin subassembly (e.g., the outer diameter (D) of the reinforcing member (14) and the opening 30) and adheres to both the reinforcing member 14 and the terminal body 12. The joining process creates a hermetic seal 39 between the fused pin subassembly and the terminal body 12. The hermetic seal can extend between the reinforcing member 14 and the opening 30 along the entire axial length of the opening 30 (i.e., the thickness of the top wall 24). Additionally, the hermetic seal 39 can extend between the flange 34 of the reinforcing member 14 (if a flange 34 forms part of the reinforcing member 14) and the exterior surface 36 (or interior surface 38—depending on the orientation of the reinforcing member 14 in the opening 30) of the top wall 24 of the terminal body 12. This joining process generally can occur at a much lower temperature (e.g., about 840° F.) than the fusing temperature of the electrically insulating fusible sealing material and, therefore, the integrity of the hermetic seal between the pin 16 and reinforcing member 14 is not affected by the process.
Additional alternatives for the high-pressure hermetic terminal of the present disclosure 10′ and 10″ are shown in
The rigid pad 40 can provide additional structural support to the terminal body 12 further adapting the hermetic terminal 10′ for use in high-pressure applications. As shown in
Moreover, while not illustrated, it is understood that the power terminal feed-throughs according to the present disclosure may also incorporate additional features such as a protective oversurface coating (e.g., silicone rubber) on the terminal body, fuse portions integrated into the pins, additional insulators providing oversurface protection for the pins (e.g., ceramic insulators), and connectors adapted to connect the pins to other components.
The foregoing description of the embodiments has been provided for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the disclosure. Individual elements or features of a particular embodiment are generally not limited to that particular embodiment, but, where applicable, are interchangeable and can be used in a selected embodiment, even if not specifically shown or described. The same may also be varied in many ways. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the disclosure, and all such modifications are intended to be included within the scope of the disclosure.
This application is a 371 National Phase application of PCT/US2013/064788, filed on Oct. 14, 2013, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/788,762, filed on Mar. 15, 2013. The entire disclosures of the above applications are incorporated herein by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2013/064788 | 10/14/2013 | WO | 00 |
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WO2014/143179 | 9/18/2014 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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