This invention relates to a pump for fluid and, in particular to a pump in which the pumping cavity is closely a disc-shaped cylindrical cavity, having closely-circular end walls. The design of such a pump is disclosed in WO2006/111775.
In such a pump one or both end walls are driven into oscillating displacement in a direction substantially perpendicular to the plane of the end wall by an actuator. Where an end wall is so driven, that end-wall surface may, but need not, be itself formed as an element of a composite vibration actuator such as a piezoelectric unimorph or bimorph. Alternatively, the end wall may be formed as a passive material layer driven into oscillation by a separate actuator in force-transmitting relation (e.g. mechanical contact, magnetic or electrostatic) with it.
It is preferable to match the spatial profile of the motion of the driven end wall(s) to the spatial profile of the pressure oscillation in the cavity, a condition described herein as mode-matching. Mode-matching ensures that the work done by the actuator on the fluid in the cavity adds constructively across the driven end-wall surface, enhancing the amplitude of the pressure oscillation in the cavity and delivering high pump efficiency. In a pump which is not mode-matched there may be areas of the end-wall surface in which the work being done by the end-wall on the fluid reduces rather than enhances the amplitude of the pressure oscillation in the fluid within the cavity: the useful work done by the actuator on the fluid is reduced and the pump becomes less efficient.
This problem is demonstrated in the prior art by FIG. 3 of WO2006/111775. FIG. 3A of WO2006/111775 shows a pump in which one end-wall 12 is formed by the lower surface of disc 17 and is excited into vibrational motion by a piezoelectric actuator formed by disc 17 and piezoelectric disc 20. Together, disc 17 and piezoelectric disc 20 form a composite bending-mode actuator whose vibration excites radially-symmetric pressure waves in the fluid within the cavity 11. The amplitude of motion of end-wall 12 is a maximum at the centre of the cavity and a minimum at its edge. A pump incorporating such a composite actuator is relatively simple to construct, as the actuator may be rigidly clamped to the cavity around its perimeter where the amplitude of motion of the actuator is close to zero. However in many practical designs using conventional solid materials for construction of the curved side-walls of the cavity the acoustic impedance of those side-walls is greater than that of the working fluid and consequently the pressure oscillation in the fluid within the cavity will have an antinode at the end-wall. Since, at this location, the side-wall as shown in FIG. 3 of WO2006/111775 has a node, such an arrangement cannot deliver mode-matching that is effective across the full surface area of the end-walls. Indeed, the failure of mode-matching occurs principally at the outer radii of the end-walls, so a substantial area fraction of the end walls and working fluid volume are not vibrationally mode-matched.
FIG. 3B of WO2006/111775 shows a preferable arrangement in which the amplitude of motion of the actuator and therefore of the end-wall 12 approximates a Bessel function and has an antinode at the cavity perimeter. In this case, the driven end wall and the pressure oscillation in the fluid within the cavity are mode-matched, and the efficiency of the pump is improved. However, it is not obvious how such a pump may be constructed, as the actuator must have an antinode of vibration at the side-wall, to which it might normally be mounted.
Two further problems of the prior art are illustrated by FIG. 1 of WO2006/111775, which shows a pump driven by a simple unimorph actuator. The actuator consists of a piezoelectric disc attached to a second disc. If such an actuator is clamped at the cavity perimeter its lowest order mode will be as shown schematically in FIG. 3A.
There are two limitations to this design. Firstly, the thickness and diameter of the piezoelectric disc are determined by the need to achieve the required frequency of vibration and mode-shape in the actuator, effectively fixing the volume of piezoelectric material that may be used. As there is a limit to the power that may be delivered efficiently per unit volume of piezoelectric material, this limitation on piezoelectric disc volume puts a limit on the useful power output of the actuator. Secondly the piezoelectric disc is subject to high strain at its centre, where the amplitude of motion of the actuator and its radius of curvature are highest. It is known that high strains can lead to the degradation of piezoelectric material through its depolarisation, thereby reducing the amplitude of motion of the actuator and thus limiting actuator lifetime. Such high strain at the centre of the actuator may also lead to fatigue of the glue layer between the piezoelectric disc and the second disc if the two are joined by gluing, again leading to reduced actuator lifetime.
The present invention aims to overcome one or more of the above identified problems.
According to the invention, there is provided a fluid pump comprising:
a chamber which, in use, contains a fluid to be pumped, the chamber including a main cavity having a substantially cylindrical shape bounded by first and second end walls and a side wall and a secondary cavity extending radially outwards of the main cavity;
one or more actuators which, in use, cause oscillatory motion of the first end wall in a direction substantially perpendicular to the plane of the first end wall; and
whereby, in use, the axial oscillations of the end walls drive radial oscillations of the fluid pressure in the main cavity; and
wherein the secondary cavity spaces the side wall from the first end wall such that the first end wall can move relative to the side wall when the actuator is activated.
The secondary cavity may space the side wall from the first end wall such that the first end wall can move independently of the side wall when the actuator is activated.
The present invention overcomes the challenge of positioning an antinode of actuator vibration at the main cavity edge by physically separating the mechanical actuator mount from the side wall.
In one embodiment the actuator is mounted rigidly at a diameter greater than that of the side-wall, with the main cavity being defined by a side-wall which approaches but does not touch the surface of the actuator. In such a configuration the radial acoustic wave in the main cavity is substantially reflected by the side-wall, creating the desired radial standing wave in the main cavity with pressure anti-node at the curved side-walls, but the actuator does not contact the side-wall, enabling it to vibrate with or closely with, an anti-node of displacement at that radius, as desired. In further embodiments the side-wall is similarly defined, but with a compliant material filling the gap between the top of the side-wall and the surface of the actuator.
In a preferred embodiment, the use of an actuator whose active element is a ring of piezoelectric material to drive the oscillation of the actuator further overcomes the problems of limited piezoelectric material volume and high strain within the piezoelectric material. Because such a piezoelectric ring may be of significantly larger outer diameter than its piezoelectric disc counterpart it may have a significantly larger area. This enables a higher volume of piezoelectric material to be employed, and removes the piezoelectric material from the high-strain region at the centre of the actuator.
Preferably, a gap is provided between the top of the side wall and the first end wall. A layer of compliant material may be provided between the top of the side wall and the first end wall.
The secondary cavity may include a thinner portion between a rigid mount positioned radially outward of the side wall and the first end wall and a deeper portion radially outward of the side wall. The side wall may taper towards the first end wall.
The first end wall is preferably mounted on the radially outermost portion of the secondary cavity.
At least two apertures through the chamber walls are preferably provided, at least one of which is a valved aperture.
A second actuator may be provided such that, in use, the second actuator causes oscillatory motion of the second end wall in a direction substantially perpendicular to the second end wall.
One or both actuators may include an active element which is either piezoelectric or magnetostrictive and maybe a disc or a ring.
The active element is preferably excited in a radial mode to induce axial deflection of one or both of the end walls.
Preferably the distance between the inner and outer circumferences of the active element is approximately one half of a wavelength of the actuator mode-shape. In such a case the active element is preferably designed such that its inner and outer circumferences are located substantially at nodes of the actuator vibrational mode-shape, i.e. the actuator material substantially spans the area between such two nodes of vibration.
The distance between the inner and outer circumferences of the active element may be approximately one quarter of a wavelength of the actuator mode-shape. In such a case the active element is preferably designed such that its outer diameter is substantially adjacent the radially outermost portion of the secondary chamber.
In an alternative configuration, the actuator may include a solenoid.
The thickness of the first end wall is preferably shaped to optimise the actuator displacement profile for mode-shape matching.
The actuator is preferably constructed such that the piezoelectric or magnetostrictive material is pre-compressed in the actuator rest position.
The main cavity radius, a, and height h, preferably satisfy the following inequalities:
where c_min is 115 m/s, c_max is 1970 m/s, f is the operating frequency and k0 is a constant (k0=3.83).
The motion of the driven end wall(s) and the pressure oscillations in the main cavity are preferably mode-shape matched and the frequency of the oscillatory motion may be within 20% of the lowest resonant frequency of radial pressure oscillations in the main cavity.
The ratio
may be greater than 20. The volume of the main cavity may be less than 10 ml.
The frequency of the oscillatory motion is preferably equal to the lowest resonant frequency of radial pressure oscillations in the main cavity.
The lowest resonant frequency of radial fluid pressure oscillations in the main cavity is preferably greater than 500 Hz.
One or both of the end walls may have a frusto-conical shape such that the end walls are separated by a minimum distance at the centre and by a maximum distance at the edge.
The end wall motion is preferably mode-shape matched to the pressure oscillation in the main cavity.
The amplitude of end wall motion preferably approximates the form of a Bessel function.
It is preferable that any unvalved apertures in the chamber walls are located at a distance of 0.63a plus or minus 0.2a from the centre of the main cavity, where a is the main cavity radius.
It is preferable that any valved apertures in the chamber walls are located near the centre of the end walls.
The ratio
is preferably greater than 10−7 meters and the working fluid is preferably a gas.
Examples of the present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The actuator comprises a piezoelectric disc 20 attached to a disc 17. When an appropriate electrical drive is applied, the actuator is caused to vibrate in a direction substantially perpendicular to the plane of the cavity, thereby generating radial pressure oscillations within the fluid in the cavity.
where r is the radial distance from the centre of the cavity, a is the cavity radius, and P0 is the pressure at the centre of the cavity.
The degree of mode-matching may be expressed by the product of the actuator velocity and pressure integrated over the area of the cavity. For example, where the actuator velocity and pressure may be represented by:
V(r,t)=V(r)·sin(ωt)
P(r,t)=P(r)·sin(ωt+φ) Equation 2
where the function V(r) expresses the radial dependence of the actuator velocity, P(r) expresses the radial dependence of the pressure oscillation in the cavity, ω is angular velocity, t is time, and φ is the phase difference between the pressure and velocity. The degree of mode-matching may be defined by the integral of pressure and velocity over the surface of the actuator:
where M represents the degree of mode-matching, V(0) and P(0) are respectively the actuator velocity and pressure at the centre of the cavity, dA is an element of area, and the integral is taken across the area of the actuator in direct communication with the cavity. In the design of
where ZWall is the acoustic impedance of the side-wall material and ZFluid is the acoustic impedance of the fluid in the main cavity 110. In order to achieve a strong main cavity resonance it is therefore important that the acoustic impedance of the wall material is either significantly larger or significantly smaller than that of the fluid in the main cavity. The former condition may be readily satisfied where the wall is made of metal or some plastics and the fluid in the main cavity is a gas, however other combinations are possible.
Where the side-wall does not extend to the full height of the main cavity, the degree of reflection will be reduced. To a first approximation, the reflection coefficient in this case will be given by:
where hWall is the height of the side-wall, and hCavity the height of the main cavity. It is therefore important that the height of the side-wall be maximised for the design shown in
The embodiment of
Again assuming a Bessel function dependence, the piezoelectric ring of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0804739.1 | Mar 2008 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB2009/050245 | 3/13/2009 | WO | 00 | 12/3/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2009/112866 | 9/17/2009 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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20050219288 | Vogeley et al. | Oct 2005 | A1 |
20070035213 | Nakajima | Feb 2007 | A1 |
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4422743 | Jan 1996 | DE |
4422743 | Jan 1996 | DE |
2008147087 | Jun 2010 | RU |
WO-9419609 | Sep 1994 | WO |
WO-2006111775 | Oct 2006 | WO |
WO 2006111775 | Oct 2006 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20110081267 A1 | Apr 2011 | US |