The present invention relates to a rotary displacement pump with smaller radial dimensions.
Documents U.S. Pat. No. 2,458,958, FR-1 504 705, EP-0 560 709 and DE-81 21 531 U1 already disclose a rotary displacement pump comprising:
It is an object of the present invention to improve a rotary displacement pump of this type in order to reduce the radial dimensions thereof while at the same time allowing said inner gear to be fitted into and removed from said outer gear.
To these ends, according to the invention, the rotary displacement pump of the type described hereinabove is noteworthy in that:
As a preference, at least one of the end plates of said outer gear is dismantleable.
Furthermore, it is advantageous for bearings for said motor shaft, that is to say for said inner gear, to be positioned on said tie rod.
When the pump according to the present invention is, intended to be immersed in a hydraulic liquid, said tie rod may itself be hollow so that said liquid can enter it, and the side wall of said tie rod may be pierced with orifices. In this way, said bearings of the inner gear, carried by said tie rod, can be lubricated with said hydraulic liquid.
In order to avoid the risks of cavitation and turbulent losses in the fluid displaced by the pump, it is advantageous for said radial fluid inlet and/or for said radial fluid outlet to extend from one end plate of said outer gear to the other.
For the same reasons, the internal toothset of the outer gear and the internal toothset of the outer gear comprise five at the most, and four teeth, respectively. Thus, the outside diameter of said pump can be smaller, this accordingly reducing the velocities of the fluid around the periphery of said pump.
Thanks to the specific features described hereinabove it will be readily understood that the pump according to the present invention can be miniaturized, while at the same time having a reversible output.
According to one example of an application thereof, the miniaturized pump according to the present invention can be incorporated into a heart prosthesis that can be implanted in the pericardial cavity of a patient.
Thus, a heart prosthesis such as this, which can replace the native left and right ventricles of said patient once these have been removed and which comprises a body in which artificial left and right ventricles operated by at least one hydraulic actuator are arranged, is notable in that said hydraulic actuator is a displacement pump like the one specified hereinabove.
If, as is customary, the artificial ventricles have a cover plate attached to said prosthesis body, it is then advantageous, according to the invention, for a displacement pump such as this to be connected to such a cover plate.
The figures of the attached drawing will make it easy to understand how the invention may be embodied. In these figures, identical references denote elements that are similar.
The rotary displacement pump 1 according to the present invention and illustrated by
The rotary shaft 8 of the electric motor 3 has an axis A8 and passes through the fixed internal wall 5 to enter the pumping chamber 4. Keyed onto that part of said shaft 8 that is housed in the pumping chamber 4 is an elongate gear 9 with four rounded external teeth 9D.
The part 2P of the casing 2, that forms said pumping chamber 4, is open at its opposite end to the part 2M and which can be closed off in a fluidtight manner by a removable wall 10 that can be fixed to said casing 2.
Arranged in said fixed internal wall 5 and in said removable wall 10, respectively, on the same side of said pumping chamber 4 and facing one another, are bearings 11 and 12 defining an axis A13 for a gear 13 housed in said pumping chamber 4.
The axis A13 is parallel to the axis A8 but offset therefrom.
The gear 13 displays the form of a squirrel cage provided with two end plates 14 and 15 which are connected by five longitudinal bars 16 that form rounded internal teeth for said gear 13. In the example depicted in the figures, the bars 16 are secured to the end plate 15 while the end plate 14 is removable, being attached by way of screws 17, allowing it to be separated from the end plate 15 and from the bars 16.
The end plates 14 and 15 are respectively provided with central circular recesses 18 and 19 capable respectively of collaborating with the bearings 11 and 12 to allow said gear 13 to rotate inside said pumping chamber 4.
The gear 9 is housed inside the gear 13, with its end faces 9E respectively in the vicinity of the end plates 14 and 15 and the shaft 8 passing through the central circular recess 18 of the end plate 14. It will be readily understood that, thanks to the fact that the end plate 14 can be removed, it is easy to fit the gear 9 inside the gear 13.
When the gear 13 is mounted on the bearings 11 and 12 and the gear 9 is positioned inside said gear 13 and keyed onto the shaft 8, the respective rounded teeth 9D and 16 of said gears are capable of collaborating with one another in order to produce a pumping effect.
Furthermore, that part 2P of the casing 2 that defines the pumping chamber 4 has two opposing openings 20 and 21 extending over the length of the gear 9 and capable respectively of acting as radial inlet and outlet for the fluid that is to be pumped.
Thus, when the motor 3, via the shaft 8, drives the rotation of the gear 9 about the axis A8, the rounded external teeth 9D of said gear 9 collaborate with the rounded internal teeth 16 of the gear 13 to drive the latter gear in rotation about the axis A13 of the bearings 11 and 12. As it does so, fluid is drawn in through the inlet 20 and discharged through the outlet 21.
As can be seen clearly in
The screw 25 and the tie rod 22 are hollow and apertures 26 are pierced in the side wall of the tie rod 22.
Thus, when the pump 1 is immersed in hydraulic liquid, this liquid can lubricate said bearings 23, 24 of the inner gear 9.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
06 04206 | May 2006 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/FR2007/000778 | 5/7/2007 | WO | 00 | 9/25/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2007/135261 | 11/29/2007 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2458958 | Pigott et al. | Jan 1949 | A |
3386648 | Van Rossem | Jun 1968 | A |
5135539 | Carpentier | Aug 1992 | A |
5373819 | Linder | Dec 1994 | A |
6342072 | Wartelle | Jan 2002 | B1 |
6979351 | Forsell et al. | Dec 2005 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
81 21 531 | Oct 1985 | DE |
37 09 901 | Oct 1988 | DE |
0 324 669 | Jul 1989 | EP |
0 560 709 | Sep 1993 | EP |
1 504 705 | Oct 1967 | FR |
2 760 973 | Sep 1998 | FR |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20090132038 A1 | May 2009 | US |