Priority is claimed to German Patent Application No. DE 10 2006 002 566.0, filed on Jan. 18, 2006, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated by reference herein.
The present invention relates to a hydraulic system comprising a reservoir for the hydraulic fluid, a pump, a high-pressure line network, a low-pressure line network and operating cylinders, each of which can be connected to the high-pressure line network or low-pressure line network via control units.
Normally, the operating cylinders of such hydraulic systems are at least partially configured in such a way that the volumes displaced by the working strokes on the high-pressure side of the operating cylinder are not equal to those on the low-pressure side. Therefore, the differential volume has to be compensated for which, in prior-art hydraulic systems, is done in that the reservoir that is needed anyway to compensate for losses due to leakage and to compensate for temperature-related volume fluctuations is dimensioned to be so large that it can accommodate these differential volumes as well. If a hydraulic system has several operating cylinders that can be actuated independently of each other, then the reservoir volume that needs to be made available can be quite considerable since the size of the reservoir has to be dimensioned taking into account the sum of all differential volumes, temperature-related fluctuations and margins for leakage. An additional problem arises if the hydraulic systems require several redundant hydraulic circuits, as is the case in aircraft construction due to safety considerations. In order to allow the use of identically designed reservoirs, the hydraulic circuit with the largest fluctuation range is the determining factor for the dimensioning of all of the reservoirs. This results in at times substantial additional requirements in terms of the reservoir volume as well as the amount of fluid for the entire system which, in turn, translates into the severe drawback that a large weight has to be carried by the aircraft.
Austrian patent application AT 401 552 B discloses a device to hold and subsequently release hydraulic fluid from a hydraulic system. This device has an operating cylinder and a feed line located between a pump and the operating cylinder so that hydraulic fluid can be fed in at high pressure at a predefined interval. Moreover, the device comprises a holding cylinder with a piston that, on one side, delimits a fluid space to hold hydraulic fluid from the operating cylinder at a discharge pressure that is considerably lower than the high pressure whereby, on the other side, the piston forms a chamber that contains gas under a low pressure and has a high-pressure cylinder with a fluid space in which a plunger piston moves, whereby the fluid space is connected to the feed line for purposes of holding and releasing hydraulic fluid at high pressure. A piston rod is arranged between the plunger piston and the piston in order to transmit movements from the plunger piston to the piston and vice versa. Furthermore, the area of the piston that is affected by the pressure of the hydraulic fluid is considerably larger than the area of the plunger piston that is influenced by the pressure of the hydraulic fluid.
An object of the present invention is to configure a hydraulic system of the above-mentioned type in such a manner that the central reservoir volumes that need to be made available can be minimized to such an extent that they only need to be sufficiently dimensioned to compensate for losses due to leakage and for temperature-related fluctuations, as a result of which both the physical size and the weight can be reduced.
The present invention provides a hydraulic system having a reservoir for hydraulic fluid, a pump, a high-pressure line network, a low-pressure line network and operating cylinders, each of which can be connected to the high-pressure line network or to the low-pressure line network via control units, at least one of the operating cylinders, but preferably each operating cylinder (insofar as the operating cylinder does not have already the same volume anyway), is associated with a local compensation volume element that is adapted in such a way that it compensates for the differential volume between the high-pressure side and the low-pressure side of the operating cylinder. Therefore, for each operating cylinder and in a manner adapted precisely to its geometry, the differential volume resulting from a stroke movement of the operating piston is added to the compensation volume element or else removed from the compensation volume element and added to the operating cylinder, so that there is no need to make use of the volume of the central reservoir.
As a result, the central reservoir for the hydraulic fluid of the hydraulic system can be considerably reduced. In the case of redundant, additional circuits, compensation volume elements only have to be provided in those areas and in those sizes where this is required for reasons of redundancy and it is not necessary to provide an extremely large reservoir volume arising from the addition of all of the differential volumes. Therefore, when it comes to new hydraulic systems, a substantial amount of installation space and weight can be saved in comparison to conventional systems. In existing systems, the operating cylinders can be locally enlarged with local compensation volume elements without any problem, thus avoiding the need to alter or replace an existing central reservoir volume.
The local compensation volume element preferably has a compensation space as well as an operating element, for instance, in the form of an operating piston, that is arranged movably in the compensation space.
In another embodiment of the invention, it is provided that one or several operating cylinders have a pressure accumulator whose useful piston displacement, as is generally known, is considerably greater than the piston displacement of an operating cylinder, and that the operating cylinder and the pressure accumulator are provided with a compensation volume element configured as a shared compensation volume element which is adapted in such a way that it can accommodate the differential volumes from the operating cylinders and from the pressure accumulator. This solution is very advantageous in terms of the design effort it involves since, when pressure accumulators of buffered operating cylinders are used, the total compensation volume of the pressure accumulator and of one or more operating cylinders only differs slightly, if at all, from the compensation volume of the pressure accumulator alone. In contrast, the entire compensation volume of a pressure accumulator which is used to supply several operating cylinders is relatively large and, as long as this compensation volume does not have to be accommodated by the central reservoir, this entails a significant advantage over conventional systems.
An advantageous embodiment of the invention is one in which, in order to accommodate or release the differential volume, the compensation volume element is actuated by means of a mechanical connection to the operating piston of the operating cylinder or of the pressure accumulator. Such a direct mechanical connection can be constructed very easily and entails the advantage that the dimensions of the compensation volume element can be precisely and easily adapted to the size of the differential volume, and thus does not have to be selected any larger than absolutely necessary.
In an embodiment of the invention, it is advantageous if the mechanical connection is an elongated piston rod that extends from the operating cylinder or pressure accumulator and that is connected to the operating piston of the compensation volume element. This simple design, once again, saves both construction effort and weight. Here, it is particularly advantageous if, as is proposed in another refinement of the invention, the compensation volume element is arranged coaxially with the operating cylinder with which it cooperates.
Embodiments of the invention will be described below making reference to the accompanying drawings. The drawings show the following:
FIG. 1—a first fundamental embodiment of a hydraulic system according to the invention, with two operating cylinders;
FIG. 2—a hydraulic system as shown in
FIG. 3—a conventional hydraulic system according to the state of the art.
In the conventional hydraulic system as shown in
In the fundamental embodiment of a hydraulic system according to the invention as shown in
In the second embodiment of a hydraulic system according to the invention shown in
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 2006 002 566 | Jan 2006 | DE | national |
| Number | Name | Date | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3295420 | Gleason et. al. | Jan 1967 | A |
| 5050380 | Jonsson | Sep 1991 | A |
| 6095028 | Lamås et al. | Aug 2000 | A |
| Number | Date | Country |
|---|---|---|
| 401 552 | Oct 1996 | AT |
| 100 06 13 | Jan 1957 | DE |
| 10006013 | Aug 2001 | DE |
| 1 176 314 | Jan 2002 | EP |
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20070163251 A1 | Jul 2007 | US |