The present invention relates to a mechanical automotive vacuum pump which is mechanically driven by an internal combustion engine.
DE 10 2008 054 240 A1 describes a rotor of a mechanical automotive vacuum pump. The rotor is defined by a rotor body which is provided with a vane slit for supporting a slidable pump vane. The rotor body is provided with a coupling structure at a coupling-sided end portion of the rotor body and is provided with a cylindrical radial bearing surface at the same coupling-sided end portion. The rotor body is provided with a second radial bearing at the vane-sided end portion of the rotor body. The second radial bearing is provided with a cylindrical bearing portion for defining a second radial friction bearing at the vane-sided end of the rotor body. Production costs are considerable since two separate radial bearings are provided.
An aspect of the present invention is to provide a cost-effective mechanical automotive vacuum pump.
In an embodiment, the present invention provides a mechanical automotive vacuum pump which includes a pump rotor, a housing arrangement, a slidable pump vane, and a backing support cone structure. The pump rotor comprises a rotor body and a rotational axis. The rotor body comprises a vane slit, a conical ring, a coupling-sided end portion, and a vane-sided end portion. The housing arrangement comprises a static conical ring which corresponds to the conical ring of the rotor body. The housing arrangement is configured to enclose a pumping chamber and to rotatably support the pump rotor. The slidable pump vane is supported in the vane slit. The slidable pump vane is configured to separate the pumping chamber into a plurality of rotating pumping compartments. The backing support cone structure is arranged at a front end of the vane-sided end portion. The backing support cone structure is defined by the conical ring of the rotor body and the static conical ring of the housing arrangement. The backing support cone structure comprises a cone angle of between 5° and 85° with respect to the rotational axis of the pump rotor. A coupling structure and a single radial bearing are each arranged at the coupling-sided end portion of the rotor body and a radial bearing is not arranged at the vane-sided end portion of the rotor body so that the rotor body is radially supported cantilevered.
The present invention is described in greater detail below on the basis of embodiments and of the drawings in which:
According to the present invention, the mechanical automotive vacuum pump is provided with a housing arrangement which encloses a pumping chamber and which rotatably supports a pump rotor with a rotor body. The housing arrangement is completely static. The rotor body is provided with at least one vane slit wherein a slidable pump vane is supported. The pump vane separates the pumping chamber, which is defined by the housing arrangement, into several pumping compartments. The pumping compartments also rotate when the pump rotor rotates.
The rotor body is provided with a coupling structure at a coupling-sided end portion. A single radial bearing is also provided at the coupling-sided end portion of the rotor body. No second radial bearing is provided; no other radial bearing is in particular provided at the other axial end portion of the rotor body which is the vane-sided end portion. The rotor body is therefore supported cantilevered. The single radial bearing at the coupling-sided end portion can, for example, be provided as a frictional bearing.
A backing support cone structure is provided at the front end of the vane-sided end portion of the rotor body. The backing support cone structure is defined by an outside conical ring at the rotor body and a corresponding static inside conical ring at the pump housing. The cone structure has a cone angle of between 5° and 85° with respect to the rotational axis of the pump rotor, for example, between 30° and 60°. No other radial or axial bearing is provided at the vane-sided axial end of the pump rotor. The positive conus basis is provided at the rotor body, whereas the housing-sided conical ring defines a negative hollow conus.
The backing support cone structure stabilizes the cantilevered axial end portion of the rotor body, in particular at a high rotational speed of the pump rotor. The backing support cone structure does not require a high accuracy of the conical rings defining the support surfaces at the rotor body and the pump housing which together define the backing support cone structure. No sophisticated machining is therefore necessary to provide some kind of backing support for the cantilevered axial end of the rotor body.
In an embodiment of the present invention, an axial and radial play of more than 0.1 mm can, for example, be provided which allows the rotor body to minimally move axially. As a result, the rotor-sided conical ring and the static conical ring of the cone structure are not always in contact, but are in particular in contact if the vane-sided end portion of the rotor body is radially vibrating at high rotational speed. No high-quality lubrication of this section is necessary because the conical rings defining the backing support cone structure are not always in direct contact with each other. If the mechanical automotive vacuum pump is designed as a lubricated pump, some lubrication caused by spilling is always present in this area and is sufficient to lubricate the backing support cone structure.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the rotor body can, for example, be cylindrical with one single diameter in the vane-sided end portion and at the coupling-sided end portion. In other words, the complete rotor body is designed as a single cylinder, beside the backing support cone structure. The rotor body can, for example, be made of a single piece, for example, out of plastic.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the conus basis of the backing support cone structure can, for example, have the same diameter as the rotor body. The conus basis has the maximum possible diameter so that frictional wearout is minimized.
The conus basis at the rotor body alternatively has a diameter which is at least 10% smaller than the diameter of the cylindrical section of the rotor body.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the backing support cone structure can, for example, be provided with a hollow cone with a conical ring provided at the rotor body. A central recess is provided within the conical ring. This structure allows a vane slit which to be provided which is axially open at the vane-sided end portion.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the hollow cone can, for example, be provided with an inner cone surface which is supported by a corresponding outer cone surface of the housing arrangement. The inner cone surface is provided at the radial inside of the cone ring in addition to the backing support cone structure at the radial outside of the rotor body's conical ring. As a result, the cantilevered axial end of the rotor body is stabilized by two cone structures. The cone angle of the additional cone structure can be equal or similar to the cone angle of the main backing support cone structure.
Four embodiments of the present invention are described below under reference to the drawings.
The drawings show a mechanical automotive vacuum pump 10 which provides a total pressure of below 100 mbar for supplying, for example, a pneumatic braking force device with the low pressure. The vacuum pump 10 is mechanically driven by an automotive engine, for example, by an internal combustion engine.
The vacuum pump 10 comprises a static housing arrangement 11 which supports and substantially houses a rotatable pump rotor 15. The housing arrangement 11 comprises a pot-shaped housing main body 12 for radially enclosing and rotatably supporting the pump rotor 15 and also comprises a separate housing cover lid 18 for axially closing the vane-sided end of the housing arrangement 11.
The pump rotor 15 comprises a plastic pump rotor body 16 with a substantially cylindrical and stepless outer surface almost over the entire axial length of the rotor body 16. The rotor body 16 is cylindrical and has a diameter D. The rotor body 16 is axially provided with two functional partitions, namely, the vane section 42 with a radial vane slit 21, and a bearing section 44 with a radial bearing 30 which is a frictional radial bearing. The radial bearing 30 is defined by a static housing-sided cylindrical inside bearing surface 32 and by a cylindrical outside bearing surface 34 of the rotor body 16. The vane slit 21 supports a radially shiftable pump vane 20 which is defined by one single vane body which co-rotates with the rotor body 16. The pump vane 20 separates the pumping chamber 14 into two rotating pumping compartments which rotate when the pump rotor 15 rotates.
The vacuum pump 10 and in particular the interior of the vacuum pump 10 is lubricated with oil which is branched off the engine oil supply system.
The rotor body 16 is radially supported by the radial bearing 30, which can be a radial friction bearing, and rotates around a rotational axis 17. The radial bearing 30 is the only radial bearing of the vacuum pump 10.
An axial ring bearing 35 is provided at the bearing-sided front end of the vacuum pump 10. The axial ring bearing 35 comprises a rotor-sided bearing ring surface 38 and a housing-sided axial bearing ring surface 36. The central portion of the housing inside the axial ring bearing 35 is open so that the axial front end of the pump rotor 15 is accessible. The axial bearing is needed only if the vane slit is axially open as in the embodiments shown in
The vacuum pump 10 according to the first embodiment shown in
The vacuum pump 10 according to the second embodiment shown in
The vacuum pump 10 of the first and the second embodiment shown in
The vacuum pump 10 according to the third embodiment shown in
The vacuum pump 10 according to the fourth embodiment shown in
The present invention is not limited to embodiments described herein; reference should be had to the appended claims.
This application is a U.S. National Phase application under 35 U.S.C. § 371 of International Application No. PCT/EP2015/064280, filed on Jun. 24, 2015. The International Application was published in English on Dec. 29, 2016 as WO 2016/206737 A1 under PCT Article 21(2).
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2015/064280 | 6/24/2015 | WO | 00 |