This application is a continuation application of PCT Patent Application No. PCT/CN2014/086056, entitled “Leaf Spring, Leaf Spring Group, and Compressor”, filed on Sep. 5, 2014, which claims priority to Chinese Patent Application No. 201310459756.8, entitled “Leaf Spring, Leaf Spring Group, and Compressor”, filed on Sep. 30, 2013, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present disclosure relates to the technical field of springs, more particularly, to a leaf spring, a leaf spring group comprising multiple leaf springs, and a compressor comprising the leaf spring group.
The leaf spring supporting technology is one of the most important technologies for a linear compressor. Compared with a traditional cylindrical spring, the leaf spring has the greater radial rigidity, thereby avoiding the radial displacement of the piston caused by the vibration when the piston is moving, further avoiding a direct contact between the piston and the cylinder. What's more, the axial rigidity of the leaf spring is far smaller than the radial rigidity, which enables the piston to move to and fro in the cylinder freely. The patent with the publication No. JP2003247580 (A) discloses a leaf spring with vortex arms, and a patent with the patent No. CN201010248988.5 discloses a leaf spring with linear arms and a leaf spring with vortex arms. The leaf springs with vortex arms disclosed in the two patents have problems as follows: the equivalent mass of the leaf spring is too large, and the mass of the components have to be increased in order to meet the rigidity and inherent frequency requirements.
The present disclosure aims to provide a leaf spring, which has smaller equivalent mass. What's more, the present disclosure further provides a leaf spring group comprising multiple leaf springs mentioned, and a compressor comprising the leaf spring group.
The technical schemes of the present disclosure are as follows:
A leaf spring comprises at least two spring arms and an inner fixing hole; the at least two spring arms are evenly distributed around a center of the inner fixing hole; each spring arm is of same structure; and an outer fixing hole is disposed at an outermost end of each spring arm.
In one of the embodiments, each spring arm is contoured by multiple pairs of concentric circular arcs, adjacent circular arcs are tangent to each other; radii of the multiple pairs of concentric circular arcs increase gradually from inside to outside; a tail end of the spring arm is contoured by a pair of concentric circular arcs with the largest radii and a circular arc which is concentric with the outer fixing hole; and the circular arc concentric with the outer fixing hole is tangent to both of the concentric circular arcs.
In one of the embodiments, the radii of the multiple pairs of concentric circular arcs increase from 1 mm to 500 mm.
In one of the embodiments, an arm width of the spring arm is ranged from 5 mm to 50 mm.
In one of the embodiments, each spring arm is contoured by two concentric vortex lines, that is, a first vortex line and a second vortex line; a start end of the spring arm is contoured by connecting start ends of the first vortex line and the second vortex line with circular arcs which are concentric with the inner fixing hole; a tail end of the spring arm is contoured by two or three segments of circular arcs and two concentric vortex lines, and the segments of circular arcs are tangent to the two concentric vortex lines; and a circular arc at the outermost tail end is concentric with the outer fixing hole.
In one of the embodiments, via a first circular arc and a second circular arc, start ends of the two concentric vortex lines are respectively connected to the circular arc which is concentric with the inner fixing hole; two ends of the first circular arc are respectively tangent to the first vortex line and the circular arc which is concentric with the inner fixing hole; and two ends of the second circular arc are respectively tangent to the second vortex line and the circular arc which is concentric with the inner fixing hole.
In one of the embodiments, the two concentric vortex lines meet equations:
x(t)=a*[cos(t)+t*sin(t)],
Y(t)=a*[sin(t)−t*cos(t)]; and
a. x(t)=(a+b)*[cos(t)+(t+α)*sin(t)]
y(t)=(a+b)*[sin(t)−(t+α)*cos(t)];
wherein, X, Y, x, and y are coordinate values, a and a+b are coefficients of radius, t is a variable, α is an initial angle, and 0.5≦a≦30, 0≦b≦10, 0 rad≦t≦30 rad, and 0 rad<α≦150 rad.
In one of the embodiments, a thickness of the leaf spring is ranged from 0.1 mm to 5 mm; and a ratio of the largest outer radius to the thickness is ranged from 5 to 5000.
In one of the embodiments, an arm width of each spring arm is constant.
In one of the embodiments, an arm width of each spring arm increases gradually from inside to outside; and a ratio of maximum arm width to minimum arm width is greater than 1, and less than or equals to 10.
The present disclosure further provides a leaf spring group comprising at least two leaf springs mentioned above; a gasket is arranged between the leaf springs.
The present disclosure further provides a compressor comprising the leaf spring group mentioned above.
The leaf spring provided by the present disclosure has a structure of multiple concentric circular arms or a structure of concentric vortex arms, and the leaf spring has smaller equivalent mass, so that the rigidity and inherent frequency requirements are met without the need of increasing the mass of the components, thereby reducing the product mass and saving the cost. The leaf spring group provided by the present disclosure comprises multiple leaf springs stacked together, which can enhance the rigidity between the components which move relatively to each other. The compressor provided by the present disclosure comprises the leaf spring group, thereby enhancing the rigidity between the components which move relatively to each other, and reducing the product mass.
Firstly, the equivalent mass of a leaf spring is explained as follows:
In the spring vibration system as shown in
The mass of the spring segment with the length dx is msdx/l, so the kinetic energy of the spring is
and the kinetic energy of the whole system is
The reference kinetic energy of the whole system is
and Tmax=ωn2 Tref, the maximum potential energy of the whole system is
According to the law of conservation of mechanical energy, we can get Tmax=Vmax, further get
wherein, α is the extension of the spring, k is the stiffness coefficient of the spring, ωn is the vibration frequency of the spring. It can be obtained that
When m=0, then
wherein mE is the equivalent mass of the spring in the vibration system, ωd is the inherent frequency of the spring. As for a leaf spring, for the same reason, the equivalent mass of the leaf spring is
By analyzing the leaf spring model through CAE simulation, we can obtain the axial rigidity k and the inherent frequency ωd of the axial vibration of the leaf spring, and further obtain the equivalent mass of the leaf spring in the whole vibration system.
As can be known from the above, the equivalent mass of the leaf spring is determined by the actual structure of the leaf spring, i.e., by the inherent frequency and the axial rigidity of the leaf spring. It is preferable that the ratio of the equivalent mass mE of the leaf spring to the mass ms of the leaf spring is as small as possible. The ratio for the leaf spring in the prior art, which comprises concentric vortex arms with the equal arm width, is about 50%, whereas the ratio for the leaf spring comprising eccentric vortex arms is larger. The present invention aims at reducing the ratio mE/ms to the range from 25% to 50% by reducing the relative material amount in the intermediate region of the leaf spring.
As shown in
Preferably, the number of the spring arms may be two or three; the leaf spring may be a spring having equal or unequal arm width; the spring arm may be contoured with circular arcs or vortex lines; which will be respectively described below:
The outer fixing hole 122 is disposed in the spring arm 120 to fix the leaf spring 100. The spring arm 120 is contoured by multiple pairs of concentric circular arcs, wherein adjacent circular arcs are tangent to each other. As shown in
The outer fixing hole 222 is disposed in the spring arm 220 to fix the leaf spring 200. The spring arm 220 is contoured by multiple pairs of concentric circular arcs, wherein adjacent circular arcs are tangent to each other. As shown in
The outer fixing hole 322 is disposed in the spring arm 320. The spring arm 320 is contoured by two concentric vortex lines, namely, the first vortex line 324 and the second vortex line 326. The start end of the spring arm 320 is contoured by connecting the start ends of the first vortex line 324 and the second vortex line 326 with the circular arcs which are concentric with the inner fixing hole 310. Preferably, the first vortex line 324 is connected, via a first circular arc 328, to a circular arc which is concentric with the inner fixing hole 310. Two ends of the first circular arc 328 are respectively tangent to the start end of the first vortex line 324 and the circular arc which is concentric with the inner fixing hole 310. The second vortex line 326 is connected, via a second circular arc 329, to the circular arc which is concentric with the inner fixing hole 310. Two ends of the second circular arc 329 are respectively tangent to the start end of the second vortex line and the circular arc which is concentric with the inner fixing hole 310. The tail end of the spring arm 320 is contoured by two or three segments of circular arcs and the vortex lines 324 and 326, and the segments of circular arcs are tangent to the vortex lines. The circular arc 327 at the outermost tail end is concentric with the outer fixing hole. The first vortex line 324 and the second vortex line 326 respectively meet the following equations:
X(t)=a*[cos(t)+t*sin(t)],
Y(t)=a*[sin(t)−t*cos(t)]; and the equations
x(t)=(a+b)*[cos(t)+(t+α)*sin(t)],
y(t)=(a+b)*[sin(t)−(t+α)*cos(t)];
Wherein, X, Y, x, and y are coordinate values, a and a+b are coefficients of radius, t is a variable, α is an initial angle, and 0.5≦a≦30, 0≦b≦10, 0 rad<t≦30 rad, and 0 rad<α≦150 rad.
As shown in
The leaf spring provided by the present disclosure has a structure of multiple concentric circular arms or a structure of concentric vortex arms, and the leaf spring has smaller equivalent mass (25%˜50%), so that the rigidity and the inherent frequency requirements are met without the need of increasing mass of the components, thereby reducing the product mass and saving the cost. What's more, under the conditions of the same outer radius, the leaf spring with the structure of the present disclosure has a larger linear working range, which is beneficial for making the leaf spring compact in structure.
The present disclosure further provides a leaf spring group 000, which comprises at least two leaf springs mentioned above. Multiple leaf springs mentioned above are stacked together, which can enhance the rigidity between the components which move relatively to each other. Preferably, gaskets 400 are arranged between two adjacent leaf springs.
As shown in
What described above are several embodiments of the present invention, and they are specific and in details, but not intended to limit the scope of the present invention. It will be understood by those skilled in the art that various modifications and improvements can be made without departing from the conception of the present disclosure, and all these modifications and improvements are within the scope of the present invention. Therefore, the scope of the present invention should be subject to the claims attached.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2013 1 0459756 | Sep 2013 | CN | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/CN2014/086056 | 9/5/2014 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2015/043371 | 4/2/2015 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5351490 | Ohishi | Oct 1994 | A |
5522214 | Beckett | Jun 1996 | A |
5525845 | Beale | Jun 1996 | A |
6050556 | Masuda | Apr 2000 | A |
6056519 | Morita | May 2000 | A |
7078832 | Inagaki | Jul 2006 | B2 |
7367786 | Kang | May 2008 | B2 |
7614856 | Inagaki | Nov 2009 | B2 |
8960655 | Wood | Feb 2015 | B2 |
20090007560 | Inoshiri | Jan 2009 | A1 |
20140008557 | Vandamme | Jan 2014 | A1 |
20160102724 | Potter | Apr 2016 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2675950 | Feb 2005 | CN |
201198826 | Feb 2009 | CN |
103256203 | Aug 2013 | CN |
0909895 | Apr 1999 | EP |
1167765 | Jan 2002 | EP |
1780440 | May 2007 | EP |
2003247580 | Sep 2003 | JP |
2006013377 | Feb 2006 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20160290427 A1 | Oct 2016 | US |