The present invention relates to devices which incorporate a propeller or impeller moving through a liquid, with the object either of moving a boat in which the impeller or propeller is mounted, or accelerating the liquid. The present invention has been developed particularly for use in jet boats, and will be described with special reference to this application; however, it will be appreciated that the invention also is applicable to any propeller- or impeller-driven watercraft, to pumps, and to hydroelectric generation equipment. As used hereinafter, the term “impeller” includes the term “propeller”.
A body accelerating through a liquid is subject to a very high friction or drag, compared to the same body accelerating through air. Example, water creates roughly 1000 times more drag than air. Contact between the surface of an object moving relative to a surrounding liquid and the liquid creates drag, to a degree depending upon the viscosity of the liquid, because a layer of liquid tends to adhere to the surface of the object and be carried with it. As the speed of the object increases, the slower moving liquid adhering to it causes a boundary zone of turbulent flow. As a result of this, the energy required to move an object through a liquid increases with velocity. In the case of an object moving through water, the energy required to move the object through the water increases cubically with velocity.
The present invention is particularly concerned with devices moving relative to water, and further discussion is with specific reference to water. However, the present invention would also be useful applied to devices moving relative to other liquids.
Water borne craft, in particular, tend to be subject to very high frictional losses because for the craft, to travel at a reasonable speed, requires the impellers to displace water at relatively high rotational velocities. The frictional losses increase the energy input required to achieve a given speed. A further cause of problems is the cavitation effect:—cavitation is the generation of cavities (for example bubbles) in liquids by rapid pressure changes. When an impeller rotates at high speed in water, there is a significant drop in pressure in the water immediately adjacent the impeller and small bubbles form on the surface of the impeller. When these bubbles implode, they produce shock waves in the water which can cause serious erosion damage to the impeller's surface.
An object of the present invention is the provision of a propulsion or pumping device which reduces the above described frictional losses and cavitation effects.
The present invention provides a propulsion or pumping device which includes two counter rotating shafts each carrying at least one impeller, wherein each impeller can deflect by a predetermined amount in directions substantially perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the shaft on which that impeller is mounted.
The device of the present invention is particularly well-suited for use in combination with the low pressure jet system disclosed in NZ patent No. 526666, since the system is able to operate with relatively large clearances between the housing and the outer edges of the impellers:—it will be appreciated that if the impellers are to deflect, they require a larger than normal clearance.
The required deflection of each impeller can be achieved in a number of different ways:—
Each impeller may be arranged to deflect in one, two, or more directions. In a preferred embodiment of the invention, each impeller deflects in a first direction substantially perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the shaft, and then in a second direction at 180° to said first direction, during each revolution of the impeller. Typically, each deflection is by a distance in the range 0.70-1.0 millimeter.
By way of example only, a preferred embodiment of the present invention is described in detail, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring to the drawings,
The outer shaft 4 carries an impeller 7 and the inner shaft 3 carries an impeller 8. Both of the impellers 7,8, have the blade or blades on one side of the impeller only, weighted as indicated by broken lines 9. The effect of the weighting is that, as the impellers rotate with their respective shafts, the impellers deflect from their normal path of rotation in directions substantially perpendicular to the longitudinal axes 13 of the shafts, as depicted by
It is preferred that the impellers are coarse-pitched impellers, typically with a pitch in the range 30° to 50° at the tip to reduce the likelihood of cavitation damage.
The deflection of the shafts 3,4 is most marked on the portion of the shafts between the support bearings 16,20; these bearings may be any of a range of known types but preferably are types of bearing which will accommodate the deflection of the drive shafts without undue wear e.g. self-aligning bearings. (Note: In
As shown in
The distance which an impeller deflects depends upon the diameter and speed of rotation of the impeller, as well as upon the amount of imbalance. In a jet drive as shown in
The drive shown in
Preferably, the shafts 3,4 are rotated at the same speed, but this is not essential. Preferably, the shafts 3,4 are made from a relatively stiff material such as high tensile steel. The stiffer the shaft, the more the shaft tends to snap back from the deflection:—a softer material (e.g. stainless steel) for the shaft tends to give a slightly damped or “softer” deflection. The shaft material must also be of a type that does not work harder and consequently fatigue.
It will be appreciated that a larger than usual clearance between the impeller and the housing is required to permit the deflection. Jet-drives usually are built with very small tolerances between the impellers and the housing wall:—typically about 0.1 to a maximum of 0.5 millimeter on about 200 millimeter diameter impeller. In this respect, a system of the general type described in New Zealand patent No. 526666, which can provide larger tolerances, is suitable for adaptation in accordance with the present invention, since the design described in New Zealand patent No. 526666 typically accommodates about 1-3 millimeter clearance between the impeller and the housing for about a 200 millimeter diameter impeller set. These tolerances may increase as the pump diameter increases. The impeller to housing wall clearances may vary depending on the design parameters required, i.e. the greater water velocity through a high speed jet propulsion pump will require a different amount of deflection than a stationary pump.
In the design of the jet boat drive, it is an important consideration that air is not allowed to enter through the outlet of the pump:—this can cause ventilation and will in turn cause the pump to de-prime and lose thrust. Thus, it is necessary to match the outlet cross-section to the change in velocity of the water generated by the impeller blades:—if the outlet is too small, this will create excessive back pressure and reduce efficiency. The optimum outlet size is that which allows the pump to remain primed whilst maintaining a minimum back pressure. It has been found that when the impellers deflect, the pump outlet must reduce in cross-sectional area to about 33% of the overall impeller cross-sectional area to avoid ventilation. This is because the change in velocity increases by a factor of about three, indicating that the water is accelerating to a much greater final velocity at the impeller interface.
The required deflection of the impellers can be achieved in a number of different ways:—as described above, some of the impeller blades can be weighted. Another possibility is to weight the impeller boss or the shafts unevenly, either by adding weight to one side of the boss/shafts and/or by removing material from the boss/shafts.
A further possibility is to manufacture one or more of the blades of each impeller of a magnetic material or to incorporate magnetic material in one or more blades, and operate the impeller in a magnetic field so as to pull the impeller to one side of the shaft as it enters the field.
Another method of achieving the desired deflection is as shown in
A drive of the above described type has been found to have a significant improvement in efficiency:—typically an improvement of between 40% and 50% could be achieved with either a stationary pump or a jet drive unit by incorporating the present invention.
Experiment 1. A twin counter-rotating shaft impeller jet pump, designed for high mass/low pressure operation, with each shaft carrying an impeller of the same diameter and pitch was installed in a four meter boat. In normal operation, with both of the shafts rotated at the same speed, the top speed of the boat was about 25 kilometers per hour, with a horsepower input to achieve this of about 450 horsepower.
The impeller tips on both impellers were machined to reduce their diameter and to create a deflection, and the top speed of the boat when retested was approximately 90 kilometers an hour.
Experiment 2. A jet drive was designed in accordance with the present invention and then progressively modified to reduce the degree of deflection of the impellers; the variation in efficiency was measured.
The drive was fitted to a five meter boat with a two liter capacity engine. With the impellers oscillating in accordance with the present invention, the top speed of the boat was approximately 90 kilometers per hour. In addition, the acceleration of the boat was exceptional:—0-90 kilometers per hour in six seconds.
The deflection effect was then reduced through better balancing of the shafts and impellers, whereupon the boat speed dropped to a top speed of 80 kilometers per hour, and the fuel consumption increased.
Further reduction in the deflection reduced to the top boat speed to about 75 kilometers per hour, and when the deflection was entirely removed, by providing a totally rigid shaft construction, the boat top speed dropped to about 55 kilometers per hour.
Experiment 3. A stationary pump was designed using counter-rotating shafts each carrying an impeller, designed to permit deflection; efficiencies of between 83%-93% were achieved.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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539561 | May 2005 | NZ | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/NZ2006/000119 | 5/18/2006 | WO | 00 | 11/19/2007 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2006/126893 | 11/30/2006 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5634831 | Davies et al. | Jun 1997 | A |
5679035 | Jordan | Oct 1997 | A |
6422904 | Davies et al. | Jul 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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240674 | Oct 1987 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080200082 A1 | Aug 2008 | US |