The present teachings relate to Roots-type blowers, and more particularly, to such blowers in which the lobes are not straight (e.g., parallel to the axis of the rotor shafts), but instead are “twisted” to define a helix angle.
Roots-type blowers may be used for moving volumes of air in applications such as boosting or supercharging vehicle engines. A Roots-type blower supercharger may be configured to transfer, into the engine combustion chambers, volumes of air which are greater than the displacement of the engine, thereby raising (“boosting”) the air pressure within the combustion chambers to achieve greater engine output horsepower. The present disclosure is not limited to a Roots-type blower for use in engine supercharging, but will be described in connection therewith for illustrative purposes.
In some configurations, a Roots-type blower may include two rotors each having two straight lobes. In other configurations, Roots-type blowers may include three lobes and the lobes may be twisted. In some configurations, a Roots-type blower may include two identical rotors, wherein the rotors may be arranged so that, as viewed from one axial end, the lobes of one rotor are twisted clockwise, while the lobes of the meshing rotor are twisted counterclockwise. Twisted lobes on the rotors of a blower may result in a blower having significantly better air handling characteristics, which may include producing significantly less air pulsation and turbulence.
An example of a Roots-type blower is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 2,654,530, assigned to the assignee of the present application and incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. Some Roots-type blowers, which may be used as vehicle engine superchargers, may be of a “rear inlet” and/or “axial inlet” type, e.g., a supercharger may be mechanically driven by means of a pulley that may be disposed toward the front end of the engine compartment while the air inlet to the blower is disposed at the opposite end, e.g., toward the rearward end of the engine compartment. In some Roots-type blowers, the air outlet may be formed in a housing wall, such that the direction of air flow as it flows through the outlet may be radial relative to the axis of the rotors. Such blowers may be referred to as being of the “axial inlet, radial outlet” type. It should be understood that the present disclosure is not limited to use in the axial inlet, radial outlet type, but will be described in connection therewith for example only.
Another example of a Roots-type blower is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,078,583, also assigned to the assignee of the present invention and incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. Roots-type blowers of the “twisted lobe” type may include an outlet port that is generally triangular, and the apex of the triangle may be disposed in a plane containing an outlet cusp defined by the overlapping rotor chambers. Angled sides of the triangular outlet port may define an angle which is substantially equal to the helix angle of the rotors (e.g., the helix angle at the lobe O.D.), such that each lobe, in its turn, may pass by the angled side of the outlet port in a “line-to-line” manner. In accordance with the teachings of the above-incorporated U.S. Pat. No. 5,078,583, some Roots-type blowers include a backflow slot on either side of the outlet port to provide for backflow of outlet air to transfer control volumes of air trapped by adjacent unmeshed lobes of the rotor, just prior to traversal of the angled sides of the outlet port. The present disclosure is not limited to use with a blower housing having a triangular outlet port in which the angle defined by the angled side corresponds to the helix angle of the rotors, but will be described in connection therewith for example only.
Roots-type blowers may include overlapping rotor chambers, with the locations of overlap defining what are typically referred to as a pair of “cusps.” An “inlet cusp” may refer to the cusp adjacent the inlet port and the term “outlet cusp” may refer to the cusp which is interrupted by the outlet port. It should be understood that references to a “helix angle” of the rotor lobes may include the helix angle at the pitch circle of the lobes and/or may be a function of the twist angle and a pitch diameter of the plurality of rotors.
In examples of the present teachings, a Roots-type blower may include a “seal time” wherein the reference to “time” may actually be an angular measurement (e.g., in rotational degrees). Therefore, “seal time” may refer to the number of degrees that a rotor lobe (or a control volume) travels in moving through a particular “phase” of operation, as the various phases will be described hereinafter. In examples of the present teachings, a lobe separation may include the number of degrees between adjacent lobes. In some configurations, for a Roots-type blower having three lobes, the lobe separation (L.S.) may be represented by the equation: L.S.=360/N and with N=3, the lobe separation L.S. may be 120 degrees. A Roots-type blower may include four phases of operation, and for each phase there may be an associated seal time as follows: (1) an “inlet seal time,” which may include the number of degrees of rotation during which the control volume is exposed to the inlet port; (2) a “transfer seal time,” which may include the number of degrees of rotation during which the transfer volume is sealed from both the inlet “event” and the backflow “event”; (3) a “backflow seal time,” which may include the number of degrees during which the transfer volume is open to a backflow port, prior to discharging to the outlet port; and (4) an “outlet seal time,” which may include the number of degrees during which the transfer volume is exposed to the outlet port.
Another parameter of a Roots-type blower may include a twist angle of each lobe (e.g., angular displacement, in degrees), which may occur in “traveling” from the rearward end of the rotor to the forward end of the rotor. In some configurations, a Roots-type blower may include a particular twist angle and that angle may be utilized in designing and developing subsequent blower models. By way of example only, a sixty degree twist angle on the lobes of blower rotors may be employed, and it may correspond to the largest twist angle that a lobe hobbing cutter can accommodate. In examples of the present teachings, the twist angle may be predetermined and the helix angle for the lobe may then be determined, such as described in further detail subsequently. In some configurations, a Roots-type blower may include a greater twist angle (for example, as much as 120 degrees), which may result in a higher/greater helix angle and an improved performance, specifically, a higher thermal compressor efficiency, and lower input power.
In some configurations, air flow characteristics of a Roots-type blower and the speed at which the blower rotors can be rotated may be a function of the lobe geometry, including the helix angle of the lobes. It may be desirable for the linear velocity of the lobe mesh (e.g., the linear velocity of a point at which meshed rotor lobes move out of mesh) to approach the linear velocity of the air entering the rotor chambers through the inlet port. If the linear velocity of the lobe mesh (which may be referred to hereinafter as “V3”) is much greater than the linear velocity of incoming air (which may be referred to hereinafter as “V1”), the movement of the lobe may, in effect, draw at least a partial vacuum on the inlet side. Such a mismatch of V1 and V3 may cause pulsations, turbulence, and/or noise, and creating such requires “work.” Pulsations, turbulence, and/or noise may be may undesirable, such as for an engine supercharger that may rotate at speeds of as much as 15,000 to about 18,000 rpm or more.
It would be desirable to increase the “pressure ratio” of a blower (e.g., the ratio of the outlet pressure (absolute) to inlet pressure (absolute)). A higher pressure ratio may result in a greater horsepower boost for the engine with which the blower is associated. In some configurations, it may be desirable to prevent a Roots-type blower from exceeding a pressure ratio that results in an outlet air temperature in excess of 150 degrees Celsius.
A Roots-type blower may include a housing defining first and second transversely overlapping cylindrical chambers and first and second meshed, lobed rotors disposed, respectively, in said first and second chambers. The housing may include a first end wall defining an inlet port, and an outlet port formed at an intersection of the first and second chambers and adjacent to a second end wall. Each rotor may include a number of lobes, each lobe having first and second axially facing end surfaces sealingly cooperating with said first and second end walls, respectively, and a top land sealingly cooperating with said cylindrical chambers, said lobes defining a control volume between adjacent lobes on a rotor. In examples of the present teachings, the inlet port may be in at least partial communication with two control volumes on each of the first and second rotors.
In examples of the present teachings, the lobes may cooperate with an adjacent surface of the first and second chambers to define at least one internal backflow passage that occurs in a cyclic manner and moves linearly, as the lobe mesh moves linearly, in a direction toward the outlet port. The internal backflow passage may provide adjacent control volumes in communication. At a first rotor rotational speed, the internal backflow passage may provide fluid communication between adjacent control volumes such that there is no internal compression of the fluid within the blower and, at a second rotor rotational speed greater than the first rotor rotational speed, the internal backflow passage may provide fluid communication between adjacent control volumes such that there is internal compression of the fluid within the blower.
Referring now to the drawings, which are not intended to limit the examples of the present teachings,
Blower housing 13 may define an outlet port, generally designated 19 which, as may best be seen in
Referring now to
Referring now primarily to
Referring now primarily to
In various examples of the present teachings, each of the rotors 37 and 39 may have a plurality N of lobes. The rotor 37 may have lobes generally designated 47 and the rotor 39 may have lobes generally designated 49. In examples of the present teachings, the plurality N may be illustrated to be equal to four, such that the rotor 37 may include lobes 47a, 47b, 47c, and 47d. In the same manner, the rotor 39 may include lobes 49a, 49b, 49c, and 49d. The lobes 47 have axially facing end surfaces 47s1 and 47s2, while the lobes 49 have axially facing end surfaces 49s1 and 49s2. It should be noted that in
When viewing the rotors from the inlet end as in
In one aspect of the present teachings, a control volume may include the region or volume between two adjacent unmeshed lobes, after the trailing lobe has traversed the inlet cusp, and before the leading lobe has traversed the outlet cusp. However, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that the region between two adjacent lobes (e.g., lobes 47d and 47a) may also pass through the rotor mesh, such as lobe 49d, which is shown generally in mesh between the lobes 47d and 47a in
The performance of a Roots-type blower may be improved by increasing the twist angle of the rotor lobes. Increasing the twist angle of rotor lobes may not, in and of itself, directly improve the performance of the blower. However, increasing the twist angle of the rotor lobes may permit an increase in the helix angle of each lobe. For each blower configuration, it is possible to determine a maximum ideal twist angle which may then be utilized to determine an optimum helix angle. A maximum ideal twist angle may include the largest possible twist angle for each rotor lobe without opening a leak path from the outlet port 19 back to the inlet port 17 through the lobe mesh.
Referring now primarily to
The cylindrical chambers 27 and 29 may overlap along lines, such as at the inlet cusp 30a and the outlet cusp 30b. In various examples of the present teachings, such as generally illustrated in
Cosine X=CD/OD; or stated another way,
X=Arc cos CD/OD.
From the above, it has been determined that the maximum ideal twist angle (TAM) may be determined as follows:
TAM=360−(2times X)−(360/N); wherein
2 times X=cusp-to-cusp separation
N=the number of lobes per rotor
360/N=lobe-to-lobe separation.
In various examples of the present teachings, the maximum ideal twist angle (TAM) may be determined to be about 170 degrees. It should be understood that, utilizing the above relationship, a twist angle for the lobes 47 and 49 may be calculated that may result in a total maximum seal time for the inlet seal time and the transfer seal time, together, which may include the transfer seal time being equal to zero. Such an allocation of seal times between the inlet and transfer (e.g., transfer seal time=0) may lead to the ideal maximum twist angle, which may be desirable for relatively high speed performance of blower 11. It may be desirable for optimum performance to be at a relatively lower speed of blower 11, the inlet seal time may be reduced, and the transfer seal time may be increased, correspondingly, but the total of inlet and transfer time may remain constant. In other words, the portion/shapes of the rotors 37, 39 of blower 11 may be “tuned” for a particular application (e.g., a particular vehicle and/or engine). A method of designing a rotor for a Roots-type blower may include determining an “optimum” helix angle, at which the “transfer” seal time is zero. Then if improved low-speed efficiency is desired for a particular application, the transfer seal time may be increased, as described above, with the inlet seal time decreasing accordingly, and the maximum ideal twist angle (TAM) also decreasing accordingly.
In accordance with the present teachings, a next step in the design method may include utilizing the maximum ideal twist angle TAM and the lobe length to calculate the helix angle (HA) for each of the lobes 47 or 49. By adjusting the lobe length, the optimal helix angle may be achieved. As was mentioned previously, the helix angle HA may be calculated at the pitch circle (or pitch diameter) of the rotors 37 and 39, as those terms are well understood to those skilled in the gear and rotor art. In various aspects of the present teachings, the maximum ideal twist angle TAM may be calculated to be approximately 170 degrees, the helix angle HA may be calculated as follows:
Helix Angle (HA)=(180/π*arctan(PD/Lead))
wherein: PD=pitch diameter of the rotor lobes; and
In other examples of the present teachings, the helix angle HA may be calculated to be at least 24 degrees, and/or in a range of about 24 to 32 degrees, such as, about 25 degrees and/or about 29 degrees. In further examples, the helix angle HA may be calculated to be less than 24 degrees and/or greater than 32 degrees. In embodiments, the maximum ideal twist angle may be determined to be in a range of about 140 to about 180 degrees, such as between about 150 and about 160 degrees.
In various examples of the present teachings, it may be possible to increase the size and flow area of the inlet port 17. As may be appreciated by viewing
In examples of the present teachings of blower 11, rotors 37, 39 may include greatly increased helix angles (HA) of their respective lobes 47 and 49. In further aspects of the present teachings, it may be desirable to avoid and/or minimize a “mismatch” between the linear velocities of air entering the rotor chambers through the inlet port 17 and the linear velocity of the lobe mesh. In
V1=linear velocity of inlet air flowing through the inlet port 17;
V2=linear velocity of the rotor lobe in the radial direction; and
V3=linear velocity of the lobe mesh.
In various examples of the present teachings, V1 may be equal to the rotational speed of blower (RPM) multiplied by the displacement of blower 11, all divided by the area of inlet 17. Moreover, V2 may be equal to the rotational speed of blower (RPM) multiplied by the radius of rotor 37 and/or rotor 39. V3 may equal V2 divided by the tangent of the helix angle of rotor 37 and/or rotor 39.
Referring still to
In various examples of the present teachings, it may be seen in
Referring now primarily to
In examples of the present teachings, formation of a blow hole/internal backflow passage 51 may occur in a cyclic manner, which may include one internal backflow passage 51 being formed by two adjacent, meshing lobes 47 and 49, and the internal backflow passage may move linearly as the lobe mesh moves linearly, in a direction toward the outlet port 19. The internal backflow passage 51 may be present until it linearly reaches the outlet port 19. There can be several internal backflow passages 51 generated and present at any one time, depending on the extent of the backflow seal time. A backflow event involving a plurality of internal backflow passages 51 may be desirable as it may create a continuous backflow event that is distributed over several control volumes, which has the potential to even out the transition to the outlet event or phase over a longer time period, which may improve the efficiency of the backflow event.
It will be appreciated in light of the present disclosure that an advantage of the formation of the internal backflow passage 51, which may result from the greater helix angle HA, is that backflow slots on either side of the outlet port 19 (e.g., typically, one parallel to each side surface 23 or 25) may not be included. In some examples of the present teachings, as may best be seen in
It will be appreciated in light of the present disclosure that another advantage of the greater helix angle may include that the blower 11 may be able to operate at a higher pressure ratio, which may include a ratio of the outlet pressure (in psia) to inlet pressure (also in psia). By way of contrast, previous Roots blower superchargers would reach an operating temperature of 150 degrees Celsius (outlet port 19 air temperature) at a pressure ratio of about 2.0. The blower 11 has been found to be capable of operating at a pressure ratio of about 2.4 before reaching the determined “limit” of 150° Celsius outlet air temperature. This greater pressure ratio represents a much greater potential capability to increase the power output of the engine.
In general, a performance difference between screw compressor type superchargers and conventional Roots blower superchargers may include that conventional Roots-type blowers (e.g., with smaller helix angles) do not generate any internal compression (e.g., does not actually compress the air within the blower, but merely transfers the air). In contrast, the typical screw compressor supercharger does internally compress the air. However, examples of the present teachings of Roots-type blower 11 may generate a certain amount of internal compression. At relatively low speeds, when typically less boost is required, the internal backflow passage 51 (or more accurately, the series of internal backflow passages 51) serves as a “leak path” such that there is no internal compression. If the blower speed increases (for example, as the blower rotors are rotating at 10,000 rpm and then 12,000 rpm etc.) and a correspondingly greater amount of air is being moved, the internal backflow passages 51 may still relieve some of the built-up air pressure, but as the speed increases, the internal backflow passages 51 may not be able to relieve enough of the air pressure to prevent the occurrence of internal compression, such that above some particular input speed (blower speed), just as there is a need for more boost to the engine, the internal compression gradually increases. In various examples of the present teachings, certain parameters of blower 11 can be configured to tailor the relationship of internal compression versus blower speed, for example, to suit a particular vehicle engine application. In embodiments, such internal compression behavior may be a result, at least in part, of an increased/optimized helix angle of the rotors.
Referring now primarily to
In contrast, it may be seen in
Although the present teachings have been illustrated and described in connection with a Roots-type blower in which each of the rotors 37 and 39 has an involute, four lobe (N=4) design, it should be understood that the present teachings are not so limited. The involute rotor profile has been used in connection with the aspects set forth in this disclosure by way of example, and the benefits of the present teachings are not limited to any particular rotor profile. For example, and without limitation, some examples of the present teachings of Roots-type blower 11 may include 3, 4, or 5 lobes, such as if the blower is to be used as an automotive engine supercharger.
In examples of the present teachings, the number of lobes per rotor (N) may be less than 3 or greater than 5. Moreover, the maximum ideal twist angle (TAM) may change for different numbers (N) of lobes per rotor. In referring back to the equation:
TAM=360−(2times X)−(360/N)
and assuming that CD and OD remain constant as the number of lobes N is varied, it may be seen in the equation that the first part (360) and the second part (2 times X) may not be affected by the variation in the number of lobes, but instead, only the third part, (360/N) may change.
In examples of the present teachings, as the number of lobes N changes from 3 to 4 to 5, the change in the maximum ideal twist angle TAM (and assuming the same CD and OD as used previously) may, for example, vary as follows:
for N=3, TAM=360−(2 times 50)−(360/3)=140°;
for N=4, TAM=360−(2 times 50)−(360/4)=170°; and
for N=5, TAM=360−(2 times 50)−(360/5)=188°
Moreover, once the maximum ideal twist angle TAM is determined/calculated, the helix angle HA may be calculated knowing the length, based upon the diameter (PD) at the pitch circle, and the Lead.
Various embodiments are described herein to various apparatuses, systems, and/or methods. Numerous specific details are set forth to provide a thorough understanding of the overall structure, function, manufacture, and use of the embodiments as described in the specification and illustrated in the accompanying drawings. It will be understood by those skilled in the art, however, that the embodiments may be practiced without such specific details. In other instances, well-known operations, components, and elements have not been described in detail so as not to obscure the embodiments described in the specification. Those of ordinary skill in the art will understand that the embodiments described and illustrated herein are non-limiting examples, and thus it can be appreciated that the specific structural and functional details disclosed herein may be representative and do not necessarily limit the scope of the embodiments.
Reference throughout the specification to “various embodiments,” “embodiments,” “one embodiment,” or “an embodiment,” or the like, means that a particular feature, structure, or characteristic described in connection with the embodiment is included in at least one embodiment. Thus, appearances of the phrases “in various embodiments,” “in embodiments,” “in one embodiment,” “with embodiments” or “in an embodiment,” or the like, in places throughout the specification are not necessarily all referring to the same embodiment. Furthermore, the particular features, structures, or characteristics may be combined in any suitable manner in one or more embodiments. Thus, the particular features, structures, or characteristics illustrated or described in connection with one embodiment may be combined, in whole or in part, with the features, structures, or characteristics of one or more other embodiments without limitation given that such combination is not illogical or non-functional.
It should be understood that references to a single element are not so limited and may include one or more of such element. All directional references (e.g., plus, minus, upper, lower, upward, downward, left, right, leftward, rightward, top, bottom, above, below, vertical, horizontal, clockwise, and counterclockwise) are only used for identification purposes to aid the reader's understanding of the present disclosure, and do not create limitations, particularly as to the position, orientation, or use of embodiments.
Joinder references (e.g., attached, coupled, connected, and the like) are to be construed broadly and may include intermediate members between a connection of elements and relative movement between elements. As such, joinder references do not necessarily imply that two elements are directly connected/coupled and in fixed relation to each other. The use of “e.g.” throughout the specification is to be construed broadly and is used to provide non-limiting examples of embodiments of the disclosure, and the disclosure is not limited to such examples. It is intended that all matter contained in the above description or shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative only and not limiting. Changes in detail or structure may be made without departing from the present disclosure.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/158,163, filed on Jan. 17, 2014, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/915,996, filed on Oct. 29, 2010, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,632,324, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/331,911 filed on Dec. 10, 2008, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,866,966, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/135,220, filed on May 23, 2005, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,488,164. The entire disclosures of all the above applications are hereby incorporated by reference herein as though fully set forth in their entireties.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12915996 | Oct 2010 | US |
Child | 14158163 | US | |
Parent | 12331911 | Dec 2008 | US |
Child | 12915996 | US | |
Parent | 11135220 | May 2005 | US |
Child | 12331911 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 14158163 | Jan 2014 | US |
Child | 15354234 | US |