This application is a section 371 of PCT/EP2005/013 260, filed 10 Dec. 2005 and published 31 Aug. 2006 as WO 2006-089 577-A1, and further claims priority from German application DE 20 2005 003 413.4, filed 24 Feb. 2005, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
The invention relates to a method of producing a mini-fan, and it relates to a mini-fan that is obtainable according to said method. Such fans are also referred to as miniature or subminiature fans.
Sensor fans are used for air measurement, e.g. for air-conditioning systems in motor vehicles. These fans have, for example, an outside diameter of 30 mm, i.e. these are what is referred to in technical jargon as mini-fans.
Mini-fans of this kind also serve to cool processors in computers, for equipment cooling in small equipment, etc., and their dimensions are very small. For example:
The power consumption of such fans is 0.4-0.6 W for the 250 series, 0.7 to 0.9 W for the 400F series, and 0.9-3.4 W for the 400 and 600 series. Their weight is, for example, approximately 5 g for the 250 series, between 17 g and 27 g for the 400/400F series, and approximately 85 g for the 600 series.
In fans of this miniature size that must be very inexpensive, it is important to make the production and assembly thereof extremely simple, so that a high degree of automation becomes possible and so that uniformly high quality and low noise in such fans are obtained.
A further complicating factor with such extremely small fans is that their components, entirely analogously to those of a mechanical clock mechanism, are very delicate and therefore not very robust. The rotor shaft, for example, is often only as thick as a knitting needle and therefore can easily be bent if handled carelessly, rendering the fan unusable.
It is therefore an object of the invention to make available a novel method of producing a mini-fan, and a mini-fan according to said method.
According to the invention, this object is achieved by using two-component injection molding to first form an annular plastic supporting part, then form a plastic-matrix permanent-magnet rotor, and finally assemble the rotor into the fan motor and is achieved by a mini-fan in which a portion of a transition zone, between the permanent magnet material and the surrounding plastic supporting part, forms an engaging mechanical connection between these elements. Because the rotor is produced by two-component injection molding, it becomes very stable because the injection-embedded permanent magnet also contributes to the stability of the fan wheel, so that, surprisingly, motor operation becomes very quiet. In addition, there is no waste because of incorrect installation or undesirable noise, since with this type of production the motors are of consistent and very high quality. Miniaturization of such parts is moreover greatly facilitated by this type of production.
Further details and advantageous refinements of the invention are evident from the exemplifying embodiments, in no way to be understood as a limitation of the invention, that are described below and depicted in the drawings. In the drawings:
Proceeding from air inlet opening 14, housing 12 widens via an annular portion 18 into a cylindrical portion 20.
A circuit board 22 rests on annular portion 18, and a sealing ring 24 made of sponge rubber is mounted on that board in the manner depicted.
Circuit board 22 is substantially round and has at its center a crosspiece 26, of which only the rear half is visible in
NTC resistor 28 is connected via conductors 34 to contact pins 36, 38 that are arranged, in the manner depicted, in cylindrical part 20 of external housing 12. These contact pins 36, 38 each have at the bottom a contacting foot 36′, 38′, respectively, each of which has two resilient elements 40, 42 that are depicted in
Cylindrical part 20 of external housing 12 is closed off at the bottom by a circuit plate 50 at whose center is arranged a metal bushing 52. The latter is surrounded by a cylindrical portion 54 that is integral with circuit plate 50 and transitions at its upper end into an annular disk 56 that, together with parts 50 and 54, constitutes a coil former 57 for a stator winding 58. Circuit plate 50 has on its outer rim notches 51 through which contact pins 36 and 38, as well as other contact pins 53, project.
Located inside bushing 52 is a sintered bearing (not shown) for shaft 60 of external rotor 62 of a motor 61. Rotor 62 has a supporting part 64 made of plastic that has at its center a hub 66 into which the upper end of shaft 60 is injection-embedded, said end having a knurled portion 68 for better anchoring. External rotor 62 has approximately the shape of an upside-down bowl, and has at its periphery a rim portion 70 that extends approximately parallel to shaft 60.
As depicted, a permanent magnet 72 is directly injection-embedded into this rim portion 70 using the two-component injection method. Magnet 72 contains hard ferrites in a plastic matrix, and this plastic with its hard-ferrite particles 74 (which of course can be depicted only schematically) can therefore be injection-embedded, for example as a ring, into supporting part 64, in which context the interfaces, which are symbolized by dot-dash lines 76, are intimately joined by contact melting of the plastics. Preferably, the interfaces are so configured, e.g. by keyholing, that a mechanical engaging connection is formed.
Subsequent to the injection-embedding of ring magnet 72, the latter is radially magnetized in a suitable apparatus, as symbolically depicted in
Radially extending fan blades 80 are implemented integrally with supporting part 64, i.e. the fan is preferably a radial one.
A great advantage of the invention is that with this type of production, external rotor 62 is already largely balanced once the plastics have been injected, so that only minor balancing work, at most, is necessary. An economy is also achieved in terms of assembly, since it is just such extremely small parts that are difficult to handle and assemble, and errors might therefore easily occur during assembly. The invention eliminates waste, since the rotor with its rotor magnet is available during assembly as a completed and tested part that simply needs to be installed in the bearing, this usually being done by inserting the shaft into the bearing.
In the fan according to
Many variants and modifications are of course possible, within the scope of the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20 2005 003 413 U | Feb 2005 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2005/013260 | 12/10/2005 | WO | 00 | 8/22/2007 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2006/089577 | 8/31/2006 | WO | A |
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20090232677 A1 | Sep 2009 | US |