This group of inventions relates to power engineering, and in particular, to engine building, and more specifically, to rotary internal combustion engines, and pneumatic and hydraulic pumping units.
Known in the art are rotary machines comprising a housing and a rotor received within the housing (cf. U.S. Pat. No. 5,472,327, published on Dec. 5, 1995; U.S. Pat. No. 5,102,314, published on Apr. 7, 1992; U.S. Pat. No. 5,558,509, published on Sep. 24, 1996; Russian Patent RU No. 2,084,659, published on Jul. 20, 1997; and Russian Patent RU No. 2,013,593, published on May 30, 1994).
A disadvantage of existing machines is their inadequate wear resistance and, therefore, reliability.
Also known in the art is a rotary machine, which was chosen by the Applicant as the closest prior art and which comprises a housing and a rotor received in the housing (cf. Russian Patent RU No. 2,187,656, published on Aug. 20, 2002).
A disadvantage of the immediate prior art rotary machine is its complex design, high material consumption, low technological efficiency, and high unit costs.
The claimed invention is aimed at developing a rotary machine of general-purpose kinematical design, in which the rotor produces an effective torque every 180 degrees of revolution and simultaneously with the revolution of the rotor the working fluid is compressed, a working (power) stroke is performed, the waste working fluid chambers are purged, and a new portion of working fluid is drawn in to enable the rotary machine to operate as an internal combustion engine or a pump.
The technical effect of the invention consists in simplifying the machine design, lowering the material consumption rate, improving machining efficiency, and cutting unit costs, all other conditions remaining unchanged, by using less complicated and less expensive manufacturing techniques.
This technical effect is achieved in a first embodiment of the rotary machine comprising a housing in the form of two intersecting parts of cylinders having different diameters and parallel axes; a rotor received in the housing coaxially to the smaller diameter cylinder and comprising at least two segmental rotor parts interconnected by annular rotor covers, and at least two pairs of annular elements interconnected in pairs to be able to move in annular guides provided in the rotor covers; pivotal members placed between the annular elements of each pair; a driving member received in the openings of the pivotal elements for movement therein, the axis of rotation of the driving member being coincident with the axis of the large inner cylindrical surface of the housing; the driving member having its working surfaces in contact with the inner working surfaces of the segmental rotor parts, the annular rotor covers, the inner end-face surfaces of the large cylindrical surface of the housing to produce inner variable-volume working chambers between the segmental rotor parts and the driving member, and outer variable-volume working chambers produced between the driving member, the inner surfaces of the housing, and the outer surfaces of the rotor.
The above technical effect is also achieved as a result of the following developments:
In one of the embodiments of this invention, the pairs of annular elements can move in the inner annular guides of the segmental rotor parts and engage the same alternately.
In another embodiment of this invention, the pairs of annular elements embrace the segmental rotor parts and enter into contact with the inner cylindrical surface of a smaller-diameter housing and are capable of moving in the annular guides of the segmental rotor parts and being engaged by the pairs of annular elements.
In a further embodiment of this invention, the pairs of annular elements can embrace the segmental rotor parts and enter into contact with the inner cylindrical surface of the smaller-diameter housing and be capable of moving in the annular guides of one another and engaging the segmental rotor parts. Besides, the pairs of annular elements also can move in the annular guides of the rotor covers in all the three embodiments,
The inner cylindrical surface of the smaller-diameter housing can be rippled to produce increased resistance to the passage of escaping gases.
As the pairs of annular elements move relative to one another, they can envelope one another on two sides.
The annular guides of the segmental rotor parts, the rotor covers, and the end-face surfaces of the housing are mounted in rolling-contact bearings.
The pivotal elements can have openings complementary with the shape of the driving member to allow the same to slide therein.
The end-face parts of the pivotal elements can be positioned at points where the annular elements are connected to the rolling-contact bearings.
The openings of the pivotal elements can be adapted to receive rolling-contact bearings to be engaged by the driving member.
The annular elements can be provided with reinforcing and cooling plates and the housing can have coolant passages.
The driving member can be designed in the form of a single plate or several interconnected plates and can have a two-, three- or multi-lobed shape in cross-section so that the lobes are received in the pivotal elements, the angles between the lobes are identical, and the working surface of each segmental rotor part has a two-sided shape so that the angle between the lobes is equal to the angle between the sides to permit contact between the driving member and the segmental rotor parts upon rotation thereof.
The driving member can have parallel sides and rounded portions on the surface interacting with the inner larger-diameter cylindrical surface of the housing.
The rounded portions of the driving member surfaces can have a radius of curvature larger than the distance from the center of rotation of the rotor to the pivotal elements.
The aforesaid technical effect is also achieved by that the second embodiment of the claimed rotary machine comprises a housing in the shape of two intersecting cylinder components of different diameters having parallel axes; a rotor received in the housing coaxially to the smaller-diameter cylinder and having at least two pairs of annular elements interconnected in pairs and having annular guides, each pair of annular elements being movable in the annular guides of the other pair; pivotal elements placed between the annular elements of each pair; a driving member received in the openings of the pivotal elements for movement therein, the axis of rotation of the driving member being coincident with the axis of the inner larger-diameter cylindrical surface of the housing, the driving member having its working surfaces in contact with the inner working surfaces of the rotor parts, the annular covers of the rotor, and the inner end-face and larger cylindrical surface of the housing to produce inner variable-volume working chambers between the inner surfaces of the annular elements and the driving member and the outer variable-volume working chambers defined between the driving member, the outer surfaces of the rotor, and the inner surfaces of the housing. The pairs of annular elements also can move in the annular guides of the rotor covers.
The inner smaller-diameter cylindrical surface of the housing can be rippled to produce increased resistance to the passage of escaping gases.
The annular guides of the annular elements and rotor covers and the end-face surfaces of the housing can be provided with rolling-contact bearings.
The openings of the pivotal elements can have a shape complementary to the shape of the driving member for the same to move therein.
The end-face portions of the pivotal elements can be positioned at points where the annular elements are connected to the rolling-contact bearings.
The annular elements can have reinforcing and cooling plates and the housing can be provided with coolant passages.
The openings of the pivotal elements can receive rolling-contact bearings for engaging the driving member.
The driving member can be designed as a single plate or several plates similarly to its design in the first embodiment of the rotary machine.
The driving member can have parallel sides and rounded portions on the surface interacting with the inner larger-diameter cylindrical surface of the housing.
The rounded portions of the driving member surfaces can have a radius of curvature larger than the distance from the center of rotation of the rotor to the pivotal elements.
The technical effect of the claimed invention is also achieved by that the driving member of the rotary machine comprises a housing, wherein each part thereof is provided, between its axis of rotation thereof and one of the working surfaces designed to engage the inner cylindrical surface of the housing, with inner chambers, one of which is a combustion working chamber and the other chamber is designed to be filled with the working fluid to subsequently purge the working chamber that is designed for a fuel mixture to be injected thereinto and for combustion products to be discharged into the main working chamber of the rotary machine.
The driving member can have passages and valves received therein for the working fluid to move therein to the working chambers upon compression.
The driving member can comprise nozzle-shaped outlet openings.
An additional inner working chamber provided in each driving member can have double walls.
The aforesaid technical effect is further achieved by that the engine can comprise one or several first rotary machines as described above, which operate as pumps, and one or several second rotary machines as described above, which operate as engines, the outlet of each first rotary machine being connected to at least one working chamber of each second rotary machine directly or via a receiver.
FIGS. 1 to 7 illustrate a first embodiment of the claimed rotary machine, wherein rotor elements are designed as at least two segments having annular guides interconnected by annular elements provided for movement in the annular guides of the segments.
FIGS. 14 to 19 illustrate a second embodiment of the claimed rotary machine.
FIGS. 20 to 24 show relative positioning of rotary machine elements in the first embodiment of this invention, with rotor segments embraced by annular elements moving in annular guides of one another.
A volume-displacement rotary machine, wherein the driving member (axis AA′) interacting with a fluid medium (such as air) and transmitting motion rotates in a circular path about a fixed axis O*, is a continuous-action machine developed for converting compressed medium energy to mechanical energy, or vice versa. The drawings show machine components designated as follows: A rotary machine comprises driving member 1; cylindrical pivotal element 2; main working chamber 3, twin working chamber 4; working fluid compression chamber 5; twin working fluid compression chamber 6; annular rotor elements 7; segmental components (segments) 8 of the rotor; strips 9; purge ports 10; cylindrical portion 11 of the larger-diameter housing; cylindrical portion 12 of the smaller-diameter housing; distinct points “a” and “d” of segment 8; distinct points “b” and “c” of driving member 1, line 13 of possible configuration of compression chambers 5 and 6 (in the plane of
The claimed rotary machine is a diesel reactive rotor machine with an internal compressor, designated as RMKOlgA.
The RMKOlgA rotary machine has a housing formed by two intersecting cylinder parts 11 and 12 of different diameters having parallel axes O (smaller-diameter cylinder) and O* (larger-diameter cylinder). A rotor received in the housing is in line with the smaller-diameter cylinder 12 and consists of several components.
In the first embodiment of the RMKOlgA rotary machine, the rotor consists of at least two segmental components (segments) 8 and at least two pairs of annular (annular sector) elements 7.
Each pair of annular elements 3 is fastened at the ends with strips 9 or is made integrally with the rotor and has its end portions received in annular guides (recesses) of rotor covers 14.
Cylindrical pivotal elements 2 are placed between annular elements 7 of each pair. The pivotal elements 2 have their ends inserted into the openings (or recesses) of strips 9 to be freely pivoted therein, for example, via rolling-contact bearings.
Pivotal elements 2 have orifices (slits) of a shape complementary to the shape of driving member 1 slidably received therein. Driving member 1 has an axis of rotation coincident with axis O* of the larger-diameter cylinder, and also has wide parallel working surfaces and narrow rounded (cylindrical) working surfaces in contact with the inner surface of larger-diameter part 11 of the housing. Also, the radius of curvature of these rounded portions is larger than the distance from center O of rotor rotation to pivotal elements 2.
Segmental elements 8 and annular elements 7 can be positioned differently relative to, and can interact differently with, one another.
FIGS. 1 to 7 illustrate a rotary machine design, in which the pairs of annular elements 7 move in the annular guides of segmental elements 8 and push the same in rotation, segmental elements 8 being in contact with the cylindrical surface of smaller-diameter part 7b of the housing.
FIGS. 20 to 27 illustrate a design, in which annular elements 7 embrace segmental elements 8, in the manner of the preceding design, but annular elements 7 move in the annular guides of one another.
The second embodiment of the rotary machine (FIGS. 14 to 19) is distinguished by that its rotor comprises pairs of interconnected elements, each pair containing annular element 7 and segmental element 8, with pivotal element 2 placed therebetween. Pivotal elements 2 are fastened and driving member 1 is arranged therein as they are in the first embodiment of the rotary machine.
An annular element 7 and a segmental element 8 in each pair move in the annular guides of one another.
To reduce friction losses, rolling-contact bearings (for example, as shown in
Annular elements 7 are provided with reinforcing and cooling plates 17 (as in
Driving member 1 may be a single plate (FIGS. 1 to 7, 12, 13, and 14-25) or be composed of several plates interconnected at the axis of rotation (
In a driving member made up of three plates, the angle between each two lobes is equal to 120°. This is a “three-lobed” rotor (
A “four-lobed” driving member consists of four plates spaced at angles of 90° between each two plates (lobes), and so on.
Moreover, the machine rotor has a respective number of segmental parts (elements) 8. In the case of a two-lobed driving member, the rotor has two segmental elements with a flat working surface (
The claimed rotary machine can use a driving member consisting of a single solid plate or more plates. It can, however, use several driving members of composite design. Moreover, a driving member of a design described below can be used in other rotary machines as well.
The driving member (
The claimed RMKOlgA rotary machine can be used as a basic component of an engine plant shown diagrammatically in
The claimed rotary machine using energy produced by combustion of a fuel mixture (such as air-gas, air-gasoline, air-diesel fuel or other combinations of fuel and oxidizer) operates as follows.
Superatmospheric pressure produced alternately in chambers 3 and 4 by gases evolving upon combustion of, for example, a gasoline-air mixture rotates driving member 1 continuously because all essential events, in particular, air suction, air (mixture) compression, mixture combustion causing a high pressure to be built up concurrently in chamber 3 (or 4) (in certain designs, in chambers 5 and 6 and within driving member 1 itself), purging of chambers 3 and 4 or 5 and 6, chambers 17, and passages 19, and exhausting combustion products alternately from the driving member, are completed separately from one another over each 180° of rotation of the driving member (from position of working member 1 at 0:00 hours to position at 6:00 hours). Certain designs of the claimed rotary machine, in particular, a design, in which the mixture is fired alternately in working member 1 or in chambers 5 and 6, are a machine utilizing further the reactive component of a torque produced by the flow of working fluid (combustion products) from nozzle-like exhaust orifices 18 of driving member 1 alternately to working chambers 3 and 4.
When the RMKOlgA rotary machine is used as a pump to compress air or other fluids during rotation of driving member 1 together with the rotor, chambers 3-6 are used as a compressor pump with two compression stages, air is first compressed alternately in chambers 2, whereupon it is transferred through annular elements 7 for successive alternate compression in chambers 5 and 6. At the end of the compression cycle, as pressure reaches the required level, air (working fluid) is transferred for further utilization in the receiver (if it is used) through the end-face covers or other elements.
The claimed rotary machine can be used in the following fields:
The claimed rotary machine utilizes energy released upon combustion of a fuel mixture (such as air-gas, air-gasoline, air-diesel fuel, and other fuel and oxidizer combinations).
The RMKOlgA rotary machine operates on the principle of volume expansion (displacement) of working fluid by driving member 1 to chambers 3, 4, 5 and 6 and generation of torque every 180 degree turn of the driving member (from position 0:00 to position 6:00), when the following processes occur.
Working fluid is compressed in chambers 5 (or 6) during rotation of driving member 1 starting from position 0:00 (side A of the driving member) to position 6:00 (side A′ of the driving member), when at the same time working fluid is drawn into twin chamber 6 (or 5) (as shown in
a. When driving member 1 reaches a position at approximately 17:00 (11:00) (after driving member 1 has passed the inflection line, or the common generatrix of the cylindrical parts 11 and 12 of the housing; in
b. Compression of the working fluid during rotation of driving member 1 from 0:00 to 6:00, causes the fluid to flow, via valve 22, into chambers 17 and 21, respectively (
Note: Driving member 1 contains twin chambers 17 and 21 (
c. Compression of the working fluid during rotation of driving member 1 from position 0:00 to position 6:00 results in the formation of chamber 5 (or 6), shown by dotted lines at 8 in
d. Compression of the working fluid during rotation of driving member 1 from position 0:00 to position 6:00, causes the fluid to flow through end-face covers 15 into common receiver 30 (
Fuel is injected, according to embodiments, as follows:
a. Fuel is injected into the compressed working fluid in chamber 3 (or 4), after chamber 3 (or 4) started to be filled from injectors, such as those provided in housing part 11 (above chamber 3 in
b. Fuel is injected into the compressed working fluid in chamber 17 (or twin chamber), after or as the working fluid filled chamber 17 of driving member 1;
c. Fuel is injected into the compressed working fluid in chamber 5 (or 6), beginning with the start of compression (
Note: The shape and volume of the chamber are shown by interrupted radial line 13 (
d. Fuel is injected outside of the rotary machine, that is, upstream on the path of the working fluid (compressed air) flowing from receiver 30 into chamber 3 (or 4).
Note: The term “inject” also implies injection of combustible gas to obtain a fuel mixture.
After usable working fluid has filled the chamber, it is ignited, according to embodiments, as follows:
a. In chamber 3 (or 4), starting with the moment when driving member 1 has moved to a position at 12:00;
b. In chamber 17 (or twin chamber), starting with the moment when driving member 1 (
c. In chamber 5 (or 6), in a position of driving member 1 past 12:00 (depending on the configuration of chamber 5 (or 6), position 13 in
Note: The fuel mixture is ignited electrically, or spontaneously as compressed air attains a high temperature in chamber 6 (or 5), or alternately, and so on. Optimal locations of electric igniters (spark plugs) can be determined additionally: in housing part 11, end-face covers 15, driving member 1 upstream of chambers 17, and so on. Spark plug locations are not shown for convenience.
The compression stroke occurs as driving member 1 turns through 180 degrees and working fluid is drawn concurrently and alternately into chambers 6 (or 5), the working fluid is compressed in chamber 5 (or 6), and chambers 4 (or 3), 17 are purged of preceding cycle combustion products through purge ports 6.
High working fluid pressure built up in working chamber 3 (or 4) affects surrounding machine components, so that:
Pressure on the housing portion a-b does not generate a torque relative to the center of rotation O* of the driving member (pressure on housing part 11);
Pressure on the portion d-c does not generate a torque relative to the center of rotation O* of the driving member (actually, pressure on a pivot with a center O);
Pressure on the portion b-c generates a positive torque relative to the center of rotation O* of the driving member (pressure is transmitted to the rotor, in particular, via annular elements 7, strips 9, pivotal elements 2, segmental elements 8, and rotor covers 14); and
Pressure on the portion a-d generates an insignificant negative torque relative to the center of rotation O* of the driving member (pressure is transmitted to the rotor, in particular, to segmental elements 8 held together by rotor covers 14, and to annular elements 3 joined by strips 9 to pivotal elements 2 and driving member 1).
Note: The above negative torque is only associated with FIGS. 1 to 11, and does not apply to other embodiments, which lack a plate with sides “a” and “d”.
Working fluid is drawn in and chambers 5 and 6 are filled with fresh working fluid after a successive turn of driving member 1 through 180 degrees (
After driving member 1 has turned 180 degrees, the cycle is repeated.
Summary: All essential events of a cycle take place at every turn of driving member 1 together with the rotor through 180 degrees, whereupon another cycle occurs, that is, preparatory and working strokes occur at a ratio of 1:1.
The only exception is operation of a working machine embodiment in which fuel is injected into chamber 5 (or 6), followed by a working stroke. In this embodiment, however, chamber 5 is purged during another full revolution (360 degrees), that is:
(A) Working stroke of driving member 1 (chamber 6): 180 degree turn and simultaneous compression in chamber 5 and fuel (gas) injection—180 degree turn (which gives a total of 180 degree turn of driving member 1);
(B) Purging of chamber 6: 180 degree turn and simultaneous working stroke (chamber 5)—180 degrees (giving a total of 360 degrees);
(C) Suction of clean air into chamber 6 and simultaneous purging of chamber 5—180 degrees (giving a total of 540 degrees); and
(D) Compression in chamber 6: 180 degree turn and simultaneous suction of clean air into chamber 5 and injection of fuel (gas)—180 degrees (giving a total of 720 degrees).
Summary: Every turn of driving member 1, together with the rotor, through 720 degrees generates a torque through 360 degrees, and the next 360 degree turn is taken up by preparatory events, that is, the preparatory and working strokes occur at a ratio of 1:2.
Working chambers 3 and 4, and 17 are purged, respectively, by driving member 1 displacing the combustion products through the purge ports, and working chambers 17 are purged by air injected thereinto from chambers 21 (
Working machine elements can be used differently as well:
1. A two-lobed driving member 1 is replaced with a three-, four- or multi-lobed variety, with appropriate modifications of the key elements, without altering the idea of this invention. In the inventor's view, the above modifications in this invention are more preferred in larger and, therefore, more powerful versions of the rotary machine.
2. Driving member 1 is used as an intermediate receiver.
The claimed rotary machine is used as a pump for compressing air and other agents, for example, according to the following scenario (
As driving member 1 turns 180 degrees (clockwise) together with the rotor, the volume (on suction and filling) of chamber 4 reaches a maximum, the volume of air in chamber 3 remaining after the preceding stroke (at bottom) is compressed and transferred to chamber 5 via the valve passages in circular elements 7 (not shown for convenience), the volume of chamber 3 starts to be filled with atmospheric air through intake ports 31, and the volume of chamber 5 reaches a maximum.
An engine plant (
This design features a set of rotary machines 29 to operate as an engine and a set of rotary machines 28 to operate as a pump. Moreover, the engine unit having a set of rotary machines is self-sustaining in the sense of self-contained operation in a normal and quiet mode, and a pump unit of this type can:
Direct additional compressed air alternately into main working chambers 3 and 4 for supercharging purposes by analogy with turbine-powered engines. Air compressed by the pump is directed, via the end-face covers of the pump machine housing via passages provided with valve means directly to chambers 5 and 6 for further compression in the rotary engine unit, and for successive processes.
Pump mode used for preliminary storage of compressed air in central receiver 30, without using it for directly supplying the working chambers of a rotary machine operated as an engine, that is, the machine can be used, in an “engine braking” mode to provide additional resistance to engine operation.
Summary:
The claimed pump can, over every 180 degree turn of driving member 1 together with the rotor, compress air in the manner of a compressor having two working fluid compression stages.
The claimed pump can be used in an engine plant if operated in a recuperative mode, which means that braking energy released by slowing down rotation of the driving member in an engine unit is used, in part or in full, to compress working fluid and store it in a receiver as useful work for later use.
The objects for which the claimed invention has been developed are:
1. Developing a rotary machine wherein a torque could be generated over each 180 degree turn of driving member 1 and all the following events take place simultaneously with the turning thereof:
2. Developing a general-purpose kinematic design and routines for operating the machine depending on objectives by allowing a choice of a gas-dynamic process to be made, and designating the functions of machine elements.
3. Operating the claimed rotary machine as an internal combustion engine and a pump using their characteristic high-technology devices, such as digital control systems; fuel injection systems, including diesel fuel injection systems; valves; and so on.
4. Developing a rotary machine operating as a two-stage compressor pump.
5. Making the machine design relatively simple, lowering material consumption rates of the machine per kilowatt of output mechanical power, wide-scale application of available modem technologies, and so on.
6. Achieving a significant reduction in the cost of the claimed machine, all other conditions being the same, in relation to traditional internal combustion engines by using less complicated and less expensive processes to manufacture the machine.
(A) The engine has a cylindrical housing consisting of two intersecting cylinders 11 and 12 of a larger diameter and a smaller diameter, which have parallel axes extending at a distance OO* from one another (giving a certain amount of eccentricity). The diameter of larger cylinder 11 is equal to that of driving member 1 plus a required spacing that includes the thickness of the seals of driving member 1, taking account of their deformation characteristics with heating. The diameter of smaller cylinder 12 is equal to the outer diameter of a rotor plus a required tolerance to account for rotor heating. The housing is made of metal and composite materials having a minimum coefficient of volumetric expansion. A cooling liquid or gas (not shown for convenience) circulates in housing passages parallel to the generating lines of cylinders 11 and 12. Cylinders 11 and 12 are provided on both sides with housing covers 15 defining a closed space within the cylinders. Two openings are provided (on either side of the housing) in covers 15 at the center O* of the larger cylinder circumference for mounting and sealing a shaft and driving member 1, such as a parallelepiped-shaped flap (FIGS. 1 to 11) with cylindrical short sides tightly adjoining the inner surface of cylinder 11, to be securely mounted thereon. The centers of end-face rotor covers 14 can be provided, on the axis of rotation O of the inner rotor, with orifices for alternately supplying and exhausting air to and from chambers 5 (or 6), supplying a fuel mixture, gaseous fuel, and so on, arranging fuel injectors, spark plugs, and so on.
Fuel injectors and spark plugs also can be positioned on the side surface of housing cylinder 11, in the area of chamber 3 (or 4), with driving member 1 in a position between 0:00 and 6:00.
The side wall of the housing is provided with openings 10 to discharge waste gases (in driving member position between 5:00 and 9:00).
Location of the injectors, valves, spark plugs, and their apertures, in combination with valve passages for circulating a working fluid (fuel mixture, air or gas), orifices for exhausting waste gases and purging the chambers is chosen depending on the operation scenario of the claimed rotary machine.
The inner surface of housing cylinder 12 can be rippled to produce eddy flows in the working fluid flowing out of chamber 3 (or 4) toward a position at 9:00, so as to “seal off” this portion as fully as possible.
(B) Driving member 1, or flap, is a critical element provided to:
In geometric shape, driving member 1 is essentially a parallelepiped with radial short ends (A and A′), complementary to the radial curvature of the inner surface of large-diameter housing cylinder 11. The outer faces of driving member 1 are provided, if at all, with sealing elements and elements to clean the friction surfaces (not shown for convenience).
(C) Cylindrical pivotal element 2.
Cylindrical pivotal element 2 is provided to:
Cylindrical pivotal element 2 is a cylinder with an inner slot complementary to the shape of driving member 1 to ensure tight contact therewith.
(D) Annular (annular sectoral) elements 7.
Annular elements 7 perform the following functions:
(E) Segmental parts (segmental elements, components, elements) 8.
(F) Rotary machine balancing.
The rotary machine is balanced by balancing elements provided in the three principal embodiments thereof by:
Attaching additional assemblies to the rotary machine and offsetting driving members 1 and rotors, for example, by 90 or 180 degrees relative to one another in phase, that is, by balancing all the assemblies together;
Designing elements in a second embodiment of the rotary machine in such a way that they are in balance relative to the axis of rotation O;
Positioning balancing elements between rotor covers 14 and false covers (not shown for convenience) and housing covers 15 attached, via strips 9, to cylindrical pivotal elements 2 at points M and K (
Using an embodiment combining the above variants.
Note: Rotary machine balancing is not disclosed in this patent.
The proposed rotary machine can be used as an engine or a pump unit owing to high efficiency in many branches of industry such as automotive industry, tank—building, motor—building, heavy machine—building, aerospace industry, shipbuilding, etc.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2003127441 | Sep 2003 | RU | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/RU03/00463 | 10/31/2003 | WO | 9/8/2005 |