This invention relates to a linear compressor, in particular a linear compressor which is suitable for compressing refrigerant in a refrigerating device.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,641,377 B2 discloses a linear compressor with a pumping chamber in which a piston moves back and forth, a frame which is fixedly connected to the pumping chamber and on which an oscillating body, connected to the piston, is fixed by at least one spring such as to move back and forth, and with at least one electromagnet mounted on the frame for driving the back and forth movement of the oscillating body.
The oscillating force exerted by the magnet on the oscillating body generates a corresponding oscillating counter-force which the frame exerts on a support to which it is fastened. If it is not compensated for, this oscillating counter-force may excite the support or other parts connected to it to generate oscillations which are perceived by a user as operating noise.
In order to minimise such oscillations two pistons interact in the linear compressor of prior art, which pistons penetrate the pumping chamber from two different sides. If these pistons have equal masses and are retained by springs of the same strength, it is possible to actuate the driving electromagnet of each piston so that the pistons oscillate in exactly the opposite phases so that the counter-forces caused by the oscillating movement and acting on the frame are mutually compensating.
Such a linear compressor is expensive because the pistons and the driving means assigned to them must always be provided in pairs. However, it is also difficult to guarantee an exactly mirror-symmetrical movement of the two pistons because variation of the oscillating masses due to production conditions, and particularly of the stiffness of the springs retaining them, lead to different natural frequencies of the two pistons. Different amplitudes and phases of the piston movement may result from this if the magnets are excited on both sides with the same alternating current.
Although it is also possible to realise a linear compressor with a single oscillatory piston in which the transmission of counter-forces acting on a frame to a support of the compressor is limited due to the fact that the frame is in turn suspended so that it can oscillate relative to the support, a large number of springs are required for such a linear compressor, thus rendering assembly of the linear compressor time-consuming and expensive.
The object of this invention is to provide a linear compressor which prevents, by simple means, excessive transmission of oscillations to a support to which the linear compressor is fastened.
The object is achieved in that an integral spring connects the oscillating body to the frame on the one hand, and connects the frame to a fastening body on the other, which body serves to fasten the linear compressor to an external support. Thus only a single spring is required to ensure the oscillating capacity of the oscillating body and the piston connected to it relative to the frame and pumping chamber, respectively, and that of the frame and pumping chamber relative to the outer support. A small number of parts is therefore sufficient to protect the support effectively from the oscillations of the linear compressor. This saves on the costs of parts and production.
In order to limit the transmissions of oscillations not only as structural noise but also via the air, the fastening body is preferably designed as a housing surrounding the pumping chamber and frame.
A diaphragm spring is ideally suited for securing to the housing the oscillating body, the frame and the fastening body so that they are mutually oscillating.
To achieve a long stroke when the dimensions of the diaphragm spring are small, it comprises preferably at least one curved spring limb. A spring limb curved in zigzag fashion is particularly preferred because it in any cases generates low torques between mutually oscillating parts.
In order to minimise torques associated with the oscillation, particularly between the frame and the oscillating body, it is also appropriate for the diaphragm spring to comprise at least two curved limbs connecting the frame to the oscillating body, limbs which are mirror symmetrical to each other relative to a plane parallel to the direction of movement of the oscillating body. The torques generated by such limbs act in opposite directions so that they are mutually compensating.
A stable suspension, using a minimum number of components, may be achieved if the spring is connected in a central section to the oscillating body, in two end sections to the fastening body and on sections lying between the central section and the end sections, to the frame.
For a further reduction in the transmission of oscillations to the support, the spring may be connected to the fastening body by means of an oscillation-damping element.
To guarantee exact linear guidance of the oscillating body, the linear compressor is preferably equipped with a second, integral spring connecting the oscillating body to the frame and the frame to the fastening body, the springs engaging on the oscillating body and spaced in the direction of the back and forth movement.
At least one pair of magnets, arranged in an anti-parallel manner and with a field axis orientated toward the direction of movement of the oscillating body on opposite sides of the oscillating body, serve to drive the oscillating movement.
Further features and advantages of the invention are apparent from the following description of an exemplary embodiment with reference to the attached figures, where:
The linear compressor shown in
Four supports for buffers 4 of rubber, elastic foam or other oscillation-absorbent material are formed on the inner wall of shell 1, only two of which supports, which bear against an edge of shell 1 facing towards the observer, are visible. Buffers 4 each have a slot which receives an end section 6 of a spring limb 5. Spring limbs 5 are each part of a diaphragm spring punched integrally from spring steel, which spring is shown in
The diaphragm spring has two spring limbs 5, each of which depart from an elongated intermediate section 7 and comprise two rectilinear sections 8 parallel to intermediate section 7. Further spring limbs 9 extend from opposite longitudinal ends of the two intermediate sections 7 in zigzag fashion to a central section 10 of the spring, on which all four spring limbs 9 converge. Spring limbs 9 each have three rectilinear sections. Each spring limb 9 is the mirror image of the two spring limbs adjacent to it, related to planes of symmetry represented by dash-dot lines I and II in
Bores at the longitudinal ends of intermediate sections 7 serve to fasten a frame, which consists of three elements, two wall sections 11, which extend between intermediate sections 7 of the two diaphragm springs facing each other, and an arc 12 which curved beyond spring limbs 9 of the front diaphragm spring and supports a pumping chamber 13.
Wall sections 11 each support, on their sides facing each other, a soft iron core 14 with three interconnected, parallel legs, the central leg of which is concealed in the figure by a magnetic coil 15, through whose winding it extends.
In a gap between the free ends of soft iron cores 14 facing each other is suspended an oscillating body 16. A permanently magnetic central piece of oscillating body 16 substantially fills the gap between soft iron cores 14. Tapered end sections of oscillating body 16 are each retained on the diaphragm springs by means of screws or rivets 17, which extend through bores 18 in central section 10 of the diaphragm springs. A piston rod 20, which connects oscillating body 16 rigidly to a piston, not shown, moving back and forth in pumping chamber 13, extends through a larger, central bore 19 in the diaphragm spring facing the observer in the figure.
The central section of oscillating body 16 is a permanent bar magnet whose field axis coincides with the longitudinal axis of piston rod 20 and whose poles project in the direction of oscillation from the gap between soft iron cores 14 in the position of equilibrium shown in
Oscillating body 16 is easily displaceable in the direction of piston rod 20 due to the suspension of oscillating body 16 by means of four spring limbs 9 at both its longitudinal ends; in a direction perpendicular to this direction the stiffness of spring limbs 9 is considerably greater, so that oscillating body 16 and with it the piston are reliably guided in the direction of oscillation.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 062 298.1 | Dec 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP05/56443 | 12/2/2005 | WO | 6/21/2007 |