The invention relates to a method for determining the erosion of contacts of an electromagnetic switching device. In addition, the invention relates to an electromagnetic switching device with a device for determining the erosion of its contacts.
During the switch-on and switch-off operations of an electromagnetic switching device, arcs occur between the closing or opening contacts. These arcs cause erosion of the contacts over the course of time. It is therefore important for the operational reliability of such a switching device to identify the degree of this erosion in order to be able to draw conclusions on the residual life of the switching device and avoid operational faults by replacing the contacts in good time.
EP 0 694 937 B1 has disclosed a method for determining the erosion and therefore the residual life of contacts in switching devices, in which method the so-called contact resilience is determined as a measure for the contact erosion. This contact resilience is the distance which is covered by the magnet armature as the actuator of the switching movement between the beginning of the switch-off operation, i.e. the time at which the magnet armature, which is resting in the end position on a magnet yoke, releases itself therefrom and the time at which the contacts lift off from one another. The time at which the magnet armature lifts off from the magnet yoke is measured by an auxiliary circuit, in which the magnet armature and the magnet yoke form a switch, which is closed if the magnet armature and the magnet yoke are in contact with one another.
As an alternative to this, it is known, for example, from EP 0 878 015 B1, to determine the time at which the magnet armature separates from the magnet yoke of the magnet drive by measuring the voltage at the magnet coil of the magnet yoke.
In both methods, a further auxiliary circuit is required for detecting the time at which the contacts lift off from one another, for example a complex auxiliary circuit which is DC-decoupled from the main circuit with the aid of optocouplers and which detects the occurrence of an arc voltage, which is produced by the arc forming when the contacts lift off from one another.
As an alternative to the methods known from EP 0 694 937 B1 and EP 0 878 015 B1, in which the switch-off operation is used to determine the erosion or the residual life, WO 2004/057634 A1 has disclosed a method and an apparatus for determining the residual life of a switching device, in which method the change in the contact resilience is measured during the switch-on operation, i.e. when the switching contacts are closed by the magnet drive. With this known apparatus, a position encoder is arranged on the magnet armature, which position encoder contains markings, for example in the form of measuring contacts, in at least three positions, with which markings the time profile of the magnet armature movement can be detected. The determination of the position of the magnet armature when the contacts close is determined by computation from the movement sequence of the magnet armature which is detected with the aid of these position markers. For this purpose, a simple algorithm is used as a result of the low number of position markers assuming that the armature acceleration is constant between a time prior to the closing of the contacts and a time which is between the closing time of the contacts and the time at which the magnet armature is positioned onto the magnet yoke. In practice, however, it has been established that, with such an approach, the time at which the contacts close can only be determined with a low amount of accuracy.
One potential object is to specify a method for determining the erosion of contacts of an electromagnetic switching device, with which method precise determination of the time at which the contacts close and therefore precise determination of the contact erosion is possible. In addition, another potential object is to specify an electromagnetic switching device with a device functioning on the basis of this method.
With a method proposed by the inventors, during the switch-on operation, a mechanical variable, which characterizes the time profile of the relative movement, which is caused by an actuator, between the contacts, is measured and the time at which the contacts close is determined by evaluating the time profile of the relative movement, and the distance covered up to this time by the contacts or that covered from this time by the actuator up to its end position is detected at least indirectly and is compared with a stored reference value.
In this case, the method is based on the consideration that the time profile of the relative movement at the time at which the contacts close is changed significantly as a result of the high spring force of the contact spring which sets in at this time and which brakes the movement of the actuator, with the result that, by analyzing the time profile of the movement, the time at which the contacts meet one another can be determined directly and reliably without an approximation model of the movement sequence being required for this purpose, as is the case with the document WO 2004/057634 A1 mentioned at the outset.
The variable characterizing the movement sequence can be measured directly by measuring the velocity or the acceleration of one of the contacts or both contacts. As an alternative to this, the velocity of an actuator, which causes this relative movement and is coupled mechanically to at least one of the contacts and is actuated by an electromagnetic drive, can also be measured.
If the time profile of the movement is measured by a sensor which is coupled mechanically to the actuator, the measurement can take place using a measurement circuit, which is DC-decoupled from the switched circuit or the circuit of the magnetic drive.
A suitable sensor may be a displacement sensor, a velocity sensor or an acceleration sensor.
If a velocity sensor or an acceleration sensor is used as the sensor, it is particularly easy to determine the time at which the contacts close from this measurement signal. In order in this case to obtain information on the distance covered, its measurement signals still need to be integrated singularly or twofold.
As an alternative to the use of such a sensor, it is also possible to measure the mechanical variable by evaluating an electrical or magnetic variable of the electromagnetic drive which is measured during the switch-on operation.
The inventors also propose an electromagnetic switching device.
These and other objects and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent and more readily appreciated from the following description of the preferred embodiments, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings of which:
Reference will now be made in detail to the preferred embodiments of the present invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals refer to like elements throughout.
As shown in
The contact link 14 and the stationary contact carrier 16 are each provided with contact pieces or contacts 18, which when new have a thickness D0. The switching contact formed by the moveable contact link 14 and the stationary contact carrier 16 is located in the open position. In this switched-off state, the contacts 18 are at a spacing s0 and the pole faces 20 and 60 of the magnet yoke or the magnet armature 6 are located at a spacing H.
When the magnet coils 4 are switched on, the magnet armature 6 is set in motion, counter to the action of the compression springs 8, in the direction towards the magnet yoke 2, as is illustrated by the arrows in the drawings.
As things proceed, the magnetic force acting on the magnet armature 6 is greater than the spring force exerted by the compression spring 8 and the contact spring 12, and the magnet armature 6 can move further in the direction towards the magnet yoke 2 until it finally, as is illustrated in
Correspondingly, the contact pieces 18 in the switched-off state are located at a spacing s1 which is considerably greater than the spacing s0 in the new state. If the magnet coils 4 are now excited, i.e. the switch-on operation is introduced, the magnet armature 6 moves with increasing velocity in the direction towards the magnet yoke 2 until, after a distance as shown in
In the graph shown in
This can clearly be seen in the graph in
In the graph shown in
In
The graphs illustrated in
As shown in
As an alternative to this, a sensor 24 can be arranged on the moveable contact link 14. In the case of a displacement sensor, the distances s0 and s1 can be measured directly. In the event of a velocity sensor, the velocity v can be determined directly as a function of time. In this case, the closing time tk is the time at which the movement ends and the velocity v of the moveable contact 18 is equal to zero.
In the exemplary embodiment, the sensors 22, 24 are coupled mechanically to the moving parts, the magnet armature 6 or the moveable contact 18. In principle, however, sensors which function in contactless fashion can also be used, which sensors measure the spacing between the relevant moving part and a stationary housing part.
As an alternative to this, it is also possible to measure the current I flowing through the magnet coils 4 and the magnetic flux φ with an induction coil 26, in order to determine from this the acceleration acting on the magnet armature 6, by a method known for example from DE 195 44 207 C2.
If the time tk at which the contacts close is known, this can be used to determine, depending on the sensor used, either directly or indirectly the distance s covered up to this time by the magnet armature 6 and therefore by the contacts 18.
If the distance s1 is known for the example in
D
0
−D
1=(s1−s0)/2
with the precondition that the erosion D0-D1 is distributed uniformly over the contacts which are positioned opposite one another. As a mathematical equivalent to this, the spacing d1 of the pole faces from the magnet yoke and the magnet armature can also be calculated from the distance s1. This then results from the difference from the stored value H for the spacing of the pole faces in the open state and the distance covered, where
d
1
=H−s
1.
In this case, the following equation applies for the erosion D0-D1
D
0
−D
1=(d0−d1)/2.
If the spacing d1 is measured directly as the distance, which is covered by the actuator (magnet armature) from the time tk up to its end position, the erosion D0-D1 can be calculated directly with the above equation if the spacing d0 (contact resilience) in the case of unused contacts is stored as the reference value.
The invention has been described in detail with particular reference to preferred embodiments thereof and examples, but it will be understood that variations and modifications can be effected within the spirit and scope of the invention covered by the claims which may include the phrase “at least one of A, B and C” as an alternative expression that means one or more of A, B and C may be used, contrary to the holding in Superguide v. DIRECTV, 69 USPQ2d 1865 (Fed. Cir. 2004).
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2005 045 095.4 | Sep 2005 | DE | national |
This application is based on and hereby claims priority to German Application No. 10 2005 045 095.4 filed on Sep. 21, 2005 and PCT Application No. PCT/EP2006/066166 filed on Sep. 8, 2006, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2006/066166 | 9/8/2006 | WO | 00 | 1/28/2009 |