The invention relates to a piston/cylinder unit, in particular for a compressor for producing a pressure fluid, comprising a cylinder, a piston which can reciprocate in the axial direction of the cylinder between a first piston position in which the cylinder volume enclosed by the piston and the cylinder is a maximum and a second piston position in which this cylinder volume is a minimum, and a fluid bearing provided between the piston and the cylinder which supports the piston such that it can be displaced axially in the cylinder and which defines a piston-side bearing surface, enclosing the circumference of the piston at least over a part of the axial extension of the piston, the fluid bearing comprising a plurality of outlet nozzles for the fluid provided in the inner circumferential wall of the cylinder.
Such a piston/cylinder unit is known from U.S. Pat. No. 5,525,845 A. In this known piston/cylinder unit outlet nozzles are provided in the cylinder wall which support the piston in its first piston position and in its second piston position. In order to make this possible, the outlet nozzles are located relatively far from the cylinder base, that is from the front inner wall of the cylinder bore. This has the consequence that the fluid cushion formed between the piston circumference and the inner circumference of the cylinder for bearing the piston in the cylinder in the area of the front circumferential region adjacent to the piston base becomes weaker, the further the piston migrates into its second piston position, that is the compression position. As a result of the high pressure produced simultaneously during the compression in the cylinder volume, compressed fluid penetrates from the cylinder volume into the bearing gap between the outer circumference of the piston and the inner circumference of the cylinder which, when this penetrates asymmetrically along the circumference, results in a lateral deflection of the piston and therefore in undesired tipping of the piston.
Known from JP 2002-349 435 A is a piston/cylinder unit which is driven by a linear motor and is guided freely on a gas cushion in the piston-ring-free piston. For stabilising this gas cushion, the piston is provided with a circumferential groove on its circumference. This circumferential groove is designed to reduce the risk of the piston tilting in the cylinder. The circumferential groove not only weakens the transverse force disadvantageously for the bearing of the piston but also the air bearing as a whole so that the effect of the circumferential groove relative to the air bearing is rather disadvantageous.
It is thus the object of the present invention to provide a generic piston/cylinder unit in such a manner that even when the piston moves into the compression position or is located in the compression position, sufficiently reliable mounting of the piston in the cylinder and therefore security against lateral deflection of the piston is ensured.
This object is achieved by a piston/cylinder unit having the features specified in the claims.
The arrangement of the outlet nozzles in such a manner that that when the piston is in the second position thereof, first outlet nozzles provide the front or middle region of the piston-side bearing surface relative to the longitudinal extension of the piston and second outlet nozzles provide the middle region of the piston-side bearing surface relative to the longitudinal extension of the piston with pressure fluid, ensures reliable mounting and radial positioning of the piston in the cylinder without the piston being able to come in contact with the cylinder. As a result of the arrangement of the outlet nozzles in the central region or in the front and central region, it is achieved that during penetration of pressure from the compression chamber into the bearing gap surrounding the piston, the centre of gravity of the bearing remains in the central or front region of the piston and in any case only migrates slightly towards the back, thus ensuring reliable radial support of the piston via the bearing fluid in the middle and also in the front region of the piston so that the influence of the pressure in the compression chamber on the pressure prevailing in the bearing gap is reduced significantly compared with conventional solutions.
It is advantageous in this case if the nozzle arrangements are arranged such that outlet nozzles are also provided in the region of the inner circumferential wall of the cylinder to which the piston lies opposite in the second piston position but not in the first piston position. As a result, in the compression state a fluid cushion is reliably formed between the inner circumferential wall of the cylinder and the outer circumferential wall of the piston without this being expelled from the cylinder volume by penetration of compressed fluid. In this embodiment, the piston is more reliably supported against the inner circumferential wall of the cylinder on the fluid cushion in the second piston position, that is, in the compression position of the piston.
In a preferred embodiment, the outlet nozzles are arranged such that when the piston is located in its second piston position, first outlet nozzles provide the front region of the piston-side bearing surface relative to the longitudinal extension of the piston and second outlet nozzles provide the middle or rear region of the piston-side bearing surface relative to the longitudinal extension of the piston with pressure fluid. If the outlet nozzles are provided in the front and rear region of the piston-side bearing surface in this case, in the compression position of the piston a particularly uniform support of the piston via its longitudinal extension is achieved. However, it is also advantageous if the first outlet nozzles are provided in the front region and the second outlet nozzles in the middle of the piston-side bearing surface, so that the centre of gravity of the bearing extends forwards, that is towards the piston base. As a result, in the area of the front end of the ring gap between the piston and cylinder, that is towards the cylinder volume, a higher pressure is built up in the fluid bearing between the piston and cylinder which offers a higher resistance to the compressive pressure in the cylinder volume and thus more efficiently prevents the compressed pressure fluid from penetrating into the bearing gap from the cylinder volume.
In another optional embodiment, the outlet nozzles are arranged in such a manner that when the piston is located in its first piston position, the second outlet nozzles provide the front region of the piston-side bearing surface relative to the longitudinal extension of the piston and third outlet nozzles provide the rear region of the piston-side bearing surface relative to the longitudinal extension of the piston with pressure fluid. These optionally provided third outlet nozzles in the rear region can effect improved support of the piston in its withdrawn position.
It is particularly preferred if the fluid bearing is formed by a gas pressure bearing, the outlet nozzles being formed by gas outlet nozzles; an advantageous and particularly preferred embodiment is the air bearing.
Preferably, a plurality of outlet nozzles form nozzle arrangements in each case.
The nozzle arrangements are preferably spaced apart from one another in the axial direction of the piston/cylinder unit and are preferably formed in a ring shape around the cylinder axis. A particularly uniform fluid or gas cushion is hereby formed between the piston and the cylinder.
It is also advantageous for the formation of a particularly uniform fluid or gas cushion between the piston and the cylinder if each nozzle ring comprises a plurality of outlet nozzles uniformly spaced apart from one another in the circumferential direction.
The outlet nozzles are formed preferably formed by micro-holes drilled by an energetic beam, which are preferably configured as conical, wherein the narrowest cross-section is located at the mouth into the cylinder-side bearing surface. The micro-holes produced in this way produce a fluid or gas cushion having high uniformity and high bearing capacity.
These micro-holes are preferably drilled by means of a laser beam.
If the pressure fluid for supplying the outlet nozzles is removed from a fluid flow compressed by compression of the cylinder volume, for example, from the outlet channel, a simple structure of the piston-cylinder unit can be achieved and at the same, an additional pressure generator for the pressure fluid for supplying the outlet nozzles can be dispensed with, helping to make such a piston/cylinder unit cost-effective to produce.
This piston/cylinder unit is particularly preferred if the piston is acted upon by a movable part of a linear drive for the reciprocating drive.
An advantageous application of the piston-cylinder unit according to the invention which is particularly to be stressed, is in a compressor for generating a pressure fluid, preferably in a linear compressor driven by a linear motor.
Further advantageous embodiments of the invention are specified in the remaining dependent claims.
The invention is explained in detail hereinafter using an example with reference to the drawings; in the figures:
An inlet channel 22 provided with a valve 20 shown schematically opens into the head-side front wall 12 of the cylinder bore 10. Also provided in the head-side front wall 12 is an outlet channel 24 which has a corresponding valve 26; this outlet channel also opens into the cylinder bore 10.
During a movement of the piston 2 to the left in
Some of the expelled gaseous fluid is guided from the outlet channel 24 through a connecting channel 28 provided in the cylinder head 23 and in the housing 21 of the cylinder 2, into ring channels 30, 32, 34 which are likewise provided in the housing 21 of the cylinder 2 and which surround the cylinder bore 10 in an annular configuration. The ring channels 30, 32, 34 are spaced apart from one another in the direction of the longitudinal axis X of the cylinder bore 10. Each of the ring channels 30, 32, 34 is provided with a plurality of micro-holes 30′, 32′, 34′ which are distributed uniformly over the circumference of the cylinder bore 10 and connect the respective ring channel 30, 32, 34 to the interior of the cylinder bore 10 and thereby penetrate through the inner wall 14 of the cylinder. The micro-holes 30′, 32′, 34′ of each ring channel 30, 32, 34 thus form a respective annular nozzle arrangement 30″, 32″, 34″. Pressurised gas is passed through the connecting channel 28 into the ring channels 30, 32, 34 and can thus escape through the micro-holes 30′, 32′, 34′ and form a gas cushion which laterally supports the piston between the cylinder-side bearing surface 15 on the inner circumferential wall 4 of the cylinder 2 and a piston-side bearing surface 38 on the outer circumferential wall 36 of the piston 3.
The first ring channel 30 with the micro-holes 30′ assigned thereto is located in a region in which the piston only covers the micro-holes 30′ when it is close to the compression position, that is when the cylinder volume 18 is minimised, as shown in
In the position shown in
The second ring channel 32 is arranged so that the micro-holes 32′ allocated to it are always covered by the piston 3 so that over the entire axial movement path of the piston 3 the micro-holes 32′ contribute to the formation of the gas cushion between the inner circumferential wall 14 of the cylinder 2 and the outer circumferential wall 36 of the piston 3.
The third ring channel 34 is furthest removed from the head-side front wall 12 of the cylinder bore. The micro-holes 34′ allocated to the third ring channel 34 are thus only covered by the piston 3 and specifically by the bearing surface 38 in the rear region 3′ of the piston when the piston 3 is located in the area of its withdrawn position in which the cylinder volume 18 is greatest. The provision of the third ring channel 34 with the micro-holes 34′ allocated to it is optional and is merely used to further improve the running properties of the piston 3 in the cylinder bore 10.
In this case, the rear region 3′ of the piston is defined as a region facing away from the piston base 16 relative to a central plane M (
Further annular nozzle arrangements having a similar structure can be provided in the inner wall 14 of the cylinder bore 10 between the ring channels 30, 32, 34 with their allocated micro-holes 30′, 32′, 34′, each forming the annular nozzle arrangements 30″, 32″, 34″.
In one embodiment of the piston/cylinder unit according to the invention which has proved useful in practice, the first outlet nozzles 30′ and the second outlet nozzles 32′ are arranged such that in the second front piston position shown in
The invention is not restricted to the above exemplary embodiment which merely serves to give a general explanation of the basic idea of the invention. Rather, the device according to the invention can have embodiments other than those described above within the scope of protection. In particular, the device can have features which represent a combination of the respective individual features of the claims.
Reference numerals in the claims, the description and the drawings merely serve to give a better understanding of the invention and should not restrict the scope of protection.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2004 061 940.9 | Dec 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP05/13864 | 12/22/2005 | WO | 6/21/2007 |