The invention relates to propellers that may be used, for example, for aircraft, watercraft, turbines, unmanned aerial vehicles and air circulation devices.
Embodiments of the invention provide a propeller that has a plurality of blades and a means for generating non-axial lift, which creates non-axial fluid flow, and a means for redirecting non-axial fluid flow to create axial fluid movement or thrust. The propeller may include a hub or be of a rim or “hubless” form. The plurality of blades either extends outward from the hub or inward from the rim. Each blade may form a loop-type structure that may be open or closed, and having an intake portion, and exhaust portion and a tip portion extending radially outward from to the hub or inward from a rim or “hubless” form. The means for generating non-axial lift and non-axial fluid flow to create axial thrust may be a configuration of the blades wherein in a cross-sectional-profile of each of the plurality of blades, the distance from the rotational axis to the leading edge of the blade is greater than the distance from the rotational axis to the trailing edge of the blade in at least part of the tip portion.
The blades may have an intake portion, an exhaust portion, and a tip portion that connects the intake and exhaust portions, but is not necessarily a discrete component. The propeller has an intake root and an exhaust root, which are at either the rim or hub, for example. The tip portion may include a roll angle of ninety degrees, wherein a roll angle of zero is at the intake root. The tip portion vertical angle and pitch angle may be positive throughout. In an exemplary embodiment the tip portion produces more non-axial lift than either the intake or the exhaust portion.
In an illustrative embodiment the transition from the intake portion to the tip portion occurs when the amount of non-axial lift produced by a given parameter section of the blade is greater than the axial lift produced.
For further detail regarding illustrative embodiments of the disclosed propeller, reference is made to the detailed description provided below, in conjunction with the following illustrations: All figures are of illustrative embodiments of the disclosed propeller.
The blades have a means for generating non-axial lift and non-axial fluid flow and a means for redirecting the non-axial fluid flow to axial fluid flow. In illustrative embodiments, the means for generating non-axial lift and non-axial fluid flow is the configuration of the tip portion of the blade, which will be described further below. In illustrative embodiments the means for redirecting the non-axial fluid flow to axial fluid flow is the configuration of the tip and intake portion, and may also include the exhaust portion, which will also be described in more detail below.
The term “propeller” as used herein may include rotary blade devices that can be used to displace fluid to propel an apparatus, or which are employed in a stationary device such as, for example, a cooling or other air circulating fan, which moves fluid such as air through or around it.
Propeller 100 has three blades 102, 104, 106 disposed at equal increments around hub 128. Disclosed embodiments of the propeller may have for example, two, three, four, five, six, seven or eight blades that rotate in the same plane. The number of blades will generally depend on the application of the propeller. For example, additional blades may be beneficial for increases in the weight of a boat or airplane in which the propeller is employed to increase the area of the blades, thereby reducing the blade loading.
Blades 102, 104, 106 may be configured to rotate about an axis corresponding to hub axis 103, but in an apparatus in which there is no hub, such as in a configuration in which the blades extend inward from a rotating support. The rotation of the support may be generated by an electromagnetic field. Hub 128 may also be hollow, and may have openings in its surface, such as in a centrifugal fan.
Although 29 blade sections are shown in
Parameter sections 1-29 are defined, for example, by orientation variables, such as roll angle and vertical angle (alpha), and may include location variables; and shape variables, such as chord length, thickness, and camber. Additional illustrative orientation or location variable include rake, skew angle and radius. Some or more of the variables may change through the blade or a blade portion and some may be constant throughout. Orientation variables may be measured with respect to an X-Y-Z coordinate system. The X-Y-Z coordinate system has the origin at the shaft centerline and a generating line normal to the shaft or hub axis 103. The X-Axis is along hub axis 103, positive downstream. The Y-Axis is up along the generating line and the Z-Axis is positive to port for a right-handed propeller. A left-handed propeller is created by switching the Z-Axis and making a left hand coordinate system.
Parameter sections may be located by their chord (nose-to-tail) midpoint, such as by using radius, rake and skew. Parameter sections may be oriented using the angles Phi, Psi and Alpha, as will be described further below.
Illustrative shape variables for parameter sections are defined as follows;
Radius: The term radius is used to define both the shape of a parameter section and its orientation with respect to the X-Y-Z coordinate system. With regard to the parameter section shape, radius may refer to the curvature of the nose 306 of parameter section 300, for example, and thus will be referred to as a “nose radius.” Other points on parameter section 300 may be used to calculate a radius. By way of example, parameter section leading edge radius may be calculated based on maximum thickness 316 and the length of chord 314.
Chord: The chord is the nose-to-tail line 314 of the parameter section.
Thickness: Various thickness measurements may define a parameter section such as, for example, the maximum thickness 316. A further illustrative example is the trailing edge thickness, which may be calculated as a percentage of maximum thickness 316. For example, the trailing edge thickness may be 8% of maximum thickness 316 of parameter section 300.
Camber: Camber 318 defines the curvature of a parameter section.
Illustrative orientation variables include:
Rake: Rake is the axial location of a parameter section chord midpoint.
By “axial location” it is meant in this instance, along the X-axis, which is coincident with the propeller rotational axis. Illustrative rake measurements are shown in
Pitch Angle: Pitch Angle is the angle between the chord line of a parameter section and a plane perpendicular to the X-axis. Pitch angle may be calculated based on pitch distance and blade radius. Examples of pitch angles of parameter sections are provided in
Radius: The orientation radius is the distance from the hub center 208 to the midpoint 320 of chord 314 of a parameter section. Chord 314 may also be referred to as the nose-to-tail line. The radius described in this paragraph will be referred to as the parameter section orientation radius to differentiate it from the nose radius or other parameter section shape radii, which are not measured with respect to the X-Y-Z coordinate system. Midpoint 320 of chord 314 is the point on the parameter section chord line through which the median line 202 would pass. This is illustrated in
It is noted that
Roll: Roll is the angle that a parameter section is rotated about its chord line. As described herein, a zero roll value is in a plane parallel to the hub axis. In an illustrative embodiment, roll at intake root 132 is zero, roll at exhaust root 134 is 180 degrees and a roll of 90 degrees is at a location within tip portion 122.
Various illustrative embodiments will be described by combinations of characteristics. The disclosed propeller includes different combinations of the characteristics, equivalents of the elements and may also include embodiments wherein not all characteristics are included.
In an illustrative embodiment of a propeller, the propeller includes a plurality of blades in a loop form, generally as shown in
Each blade 102, 104, 106 of propeller 100 includes a tip portion 122, an intake portion 124 and an exhaust portion 126. In an illustrative embodiment, the intake portion is 0-45% of the blade, the tip portion is 30%-75% of the blade and the exhaust portion is 50 percent to 90 percent of the blade.
Propeller 100 may have various number of blades, each preferably with the same characteristics and parameters, although variations between blades is within the scope of the embodiments. An illustrative number of blades is between two and twelve, although more blades may be included in a single propeller. In particular embodiments a propeller may have three, four, five, seven or eleven blades. In a propeller embodiment having looped blades, the blades have an intake root 132 at hub 128 and an exhaust root 134 at hub 128. Intake portion 124, tip portion 122 and exhaust portion 126 together may form a closed loop or the loop may be opened at the intake “root” or exhaust “root.”
Roll: The roll angle (Psi) is the orientation angle about chord 314, for example. Referring back to
Tip portion 122 may also be defined by a tip portion intake end that begins at the first deviation from zero of roll value and extends to a tip portion exhaust end that begins at a roll value of 90 degrees or just greater than 90 degrees.
Tip portion 122 is configured to generate non-axial lift only, more non-axial lift than axial lift, or more non-axial lift than intake portion 124. The roll value of parameter sections in tip portion 122 will transition from less than 90 degrees to greater than 90 degrees. Illustrative roll value ranges of tip portion 122 include between 1 degree and 46 degrees at the transition from intake portion 124 through between 91 and 150 degrees where tip portion transitions to exhaust portion 126. Additional illustrative roll value ranges of tip portion 122 include beginning at the transition from intake portion 124, between 5 degrees and 25 degrees and transitioning to a roll of between 110-135 degrees.
In an illustrative embodiment the transition from intake portion 124 to tip portion 122 occurs when the amount of non-axial lift produced by a given parameter section is greater than the axial lift. In a particular embodiment of the invention this transition takes place when roll is 45 degrees, or when roll is in a range of 40 degrees to 50 degrees.
Exhaust portion 126 is configured to generate less non-axial lift than tip portion 122. In an illustrative embodiment of the invention, the blade is configured so the average non-axial lift is the greatest in tip portion 122 as compared to either intake portion 124 or exhaust portion 126. In an illustrative embodiment the blade is configured so the average non-axial lift, if any, is greater in exhaust portion 126 than in intake portion 124. Illustrative roll value ranges of exhaust portion 126 include between 91 degrees and 150 degrees at the transition from tip portion 122 to exhaust portion 126 through 180 degrees at exhaust root 134. Additional illustrative ranges include beginning at the transition from tip portion 122, between 91 degrees and 135 degrees and transitioning to a roll of 180 degrees at exhaust root 134.
In an illustrative embodiment non-axial lift is created by 10 percent to 90 percent of the blade. Further illustrative ranges include 10 percent to 75 percent and 25 percent to 50 percent.
Within the tip portion of blades 602, 604 axial thrust is generated from the non-axial lift. Non-axial lift results in a fluid flow into the propeller blade, such as within the interior of the loop. Fluid encounters the leading edge of tip portions 610, 612 non-axially. As fluid is pulled in by the tip portions 610, 612 it is redirected into toward an axial direction within the loops of blades 602, 604. The non-axial lift may cause drag, which is created by the tip portion. As fluid passes the trailing edge of blades 602, 604, in tip portions 610, 612 it is in an axial direction or more toward an axial direction than when it entered the interior of the loops of blades 602, 604.
In an illustrative embodiment, propeller 600 is configured to create mixture of the free stream and jet stream of fluid flow aft of the propeller, wherein the mixing area is greater than the diameter of the propeller, wherein the propeller diameter in this instance is the measurement of the largest span of the propeller through the hub axis.
Referring back to
In an illustrative embodiment the average vertical angle for parameter sections in exhaust portion 126 is greater than the average vertical angle for parameter sections in intake portion 124.
Illustrative ranges of the vertical angle of tip portion 122 includes, 0 to 1 degree, 1 degree to 10 degrees; 4 degrees to six degrees; zero to 5 degrees; 1 degree to 4 degrees; and 2 degrees to 3 degrees. The vertical angle may also be zero throughout the entire blade. The vertical angle at the tip may cause fluid to be drawn in to the interior of the blade “loop” and may thereby cause drag. The vertical angle at the tip may also create fluid flow that is off-axis from the direction of travel which is redirected to axial fluid flow within the loop. The greater the vertical angle in the tip region, the greater the amount of non-axial lift and as a result the greater the amount of non-axial fluid flow into the propeller. The vertical angle of parameter sections in tip portion 122 may create non-axial lift and drag in the vicinity. In illustrative embodiments, the vertical angle is between −45 degrees and 45 degrees throughout the blade; between −25 degrees and 25 degrees or between −15 degrees and 15 degrees throughout the blade.
In illustrative embodiments tip portion 122 from the tip portion intake end to the tip portion exhaust end exhibits one or more of the following characteristics:
The chart below provides illustrative values for selected parameter sections. The parameter sections are 2, 6, 11, 19, 25 and 29 from a blade defined by 30 parameter sections. Parameter section 2 is the closest of the selected parameter sections to intake root 132. Parameter section 29 is the closest of the selected parameter section to exhaust root 134.
Referring to
Radius, Pitch, Skew, Pitch Angle and Roll are given the same values as the illustrative example having Alpha equal to zero. In the embodiment represented by
It is noted that throughout where values are associated with section parameters, the values may define blade portions as each of the intake, tip and exhaust portions are defined herein.
Illustrative embodiments of the propeller may have one or more of the following characteristics and any characteristics described herein:
Propeller variations can have the same median line but vary in other parameters. A series of propellers according to illustrative embodiments of the invention can be based on a common median line with varying parameter section pitch, angle of attack, angle, rake, surface area, area ratio, spline form, cross-sectional profile, chord length, vertical angle, roll and other blade parameters.
Illustrative embodiments have been depicted or described as a propeller having a hub. The blades described herein may also be used in a hubless propeller device such as shown in
Further disclosed is a method for creating a propeller according to any of the embodiments described herein. In an exemplary embodiment a plurality of independently modifiable orientation and shape variables are provided to define the orientation and shape of a plurality of parameter sections forming a propeller blade. The shape and orientation variables can be any combination of those disclosed herein. The parameter sections may be planar or cylindrical. In an illustrative embodiment the variables are modified to direct and redirect lift as desired, such as described herein. The configured parameter sections are then used to form a blade by extrapolating between parameter sections to form smooth lines. The method may be used to form any blade as described herein.
The invention includes several different devices having the disclosed propeller incorporated therein. For example, the invention includes the following illustrative devices, propulsors, shrouded propellers, encased propellers, impellers, aircraft, watercraft, turbines, including wind turbines, cooling devices, heating devices, automobile engines, unmanned aerial vehicles, turbofans (hydrojets), air circulation devices, compressors, pump jets, centrifugal fans, jet engines and the like. The invention also includes methods of manufacturing and designing a propeller, including any of the above-listed devices, according to any of the embodiments described, pictured or claimed herein; a method of manufacturing a device comprising any of the aforementioned propellers; a method of manufacturing a product wherein the method includes installing a device containing any of the aforementioned propellers.
The ratio of the roll to distance along the median line may be a factor in whether a particular propeller is suitable for an application. For example, a greater roll per given distance creates a more squat blade profile and thus may be more suitable for application as a fan for a cooling or ventilating device.
In an illustrative embodiment, a propeller as described herein is incorporated into a turbofan as shown, for example, in
In a further illustrative embodiment of the invention a propeller as described herein is incorporated into an unmanned aerial vehicle or device such as shown for example, in
Various embodiments and view of illustrative propellers are provided in
Various embodiments of the invention have been described, each having a different combination of elements. The invention is not limited to the specific embodiments disclosed, and may include different combinations of the elements disclosed or omission of some elements and the equivalents of such structures.
While the invention has been described by illustrative embodiments, additional advantages and modifications will occur to those skilled in the art. Therefore, the invention in its broader aspects is not limited to specific details shown and described herein. Modifications, for example, the number of blades and curvature of the blades, may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the specific illustrative embodiments, but be interpreted within the full scope of the appended claims and their equivalents.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 17/577,587, filed Jan. 18, 2022, entitled Propeller, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/897,767, filed Feb. 15, 2018, entitled Propeller (now U.S. Pat. No. 11,273,892), which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/605,764, filed May 25, 2017, entitled Propeller (now U.S. Pat. No. 9,926,058). U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/605,764 claims benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/508,139, filed May 18, 2017, entitled Propeller, and also claims benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/342,284, filed May 27, 2016, entitled Propeller. The aforementioned applications are incorporated herein by reference.
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3504990 | Sugden | Apr 1970 | A |
11649026 | Sharrow | May 2023 | B2 |
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37791 | Nov 1891 | CA |
39504 | Jul 1892 | CA |
339176 | Dec 1904 | FR |
357655 | Jan 1906 | FR |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20230249793 A1 | Aug 2023 | US |
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62508139 | May 2017 | US | |
62342284 | May 2016 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 17577587 | Jan 2022 | US |
Child | 18194994 | US | |
Parent | 15897767 | Feb 2018 | US |
Child | 17577587 | US | |
Parent | 15605764 | May 2017 | US |
Child | 15897767 | US |