The present invention relates to a rotary pump for a corrosive fluid such as urea that is used to clean up the exhaust gases of vehicles.
With increasingly strict standards on exhaust emissions from vehicles, and in particular heavy goods vehicles coming into effect, devices for pollution control of NOx (or nitrogen oxides) have had to be put in place.
The system used by most manufacturers for reducing NOx emissions to the required value consists in carrying out a selective catalytic reaction with reducing agents such as urea (“Urea SCR” or selective catalytic reduction using ammonia generated in situ in the exhaust gases by decomposition of urea).
In order to do this, it is necessary to equip the vehicles with a tank containing a urea solution, a device for metering the amount of urea to be injected into the exhaust line and a device for supplying, with urea solution, the device for metering the amount of urea to be injected. Generally, the supply device comprises a rotary pump driven by a motor.
One feature in common to urea pumps lies in the fact that they should ideally have a limited size for optimum efficiency (both in terms of pressure and speed). These pumps are generally rotary pumps driven by a motor of any type, preferably a magnetically coupled motor in order to avoid the use of dynamic seals. Particularly preferably, these pumps are integrated into (mounted in) the urea tank, which may generally be achieved in two ways:
The latter variant has a certain advantage in terms of pressure drops, but requires making the whole of the pump submersible, while the former one allows in some cases to have the pump (at least partially) outside the liquid.
Thus, Application FR 2918718 in the name of the Applicant describes a rotary pump intended to pump urea in a system on board a vehicle and comprising a stator, a rotation axle attached both to a mechanical pumping element and a magnetic rotor, this rotor comprising at least one recess through which the fluid sucked up by the mechanical pumping element is forced. This mechanical pumping element comprises at least two gears, one of which is fastened to the axle of the rotor, and the other, which is driven by the rotation of the previous one, is fastened to a second axle supported by two bearings. In this pump, the magnetic rotor is contained in a housing which is connected in a leaktight manner to an outlet (discharge) tube of the pump. This pump also comprises a leaktight chamber, constituted of a cover and of a cylindrical wall equipped with a base and molded from one part with a submerged base plate, the stator of the pump (constituted of magnetic coils) and the electronic boards of the pump controller being located in this chamber. Such a geometry is relatively bulky and involves using a relatively high number of leaktight fastenings. Its manufacturing cost is also high.
The objective of the present invention is to provide a pump capable of being completely submerged in a corrosive liquid such as urea, which does not take up a lot of space, involves using a smaller number of leaktight fastenings and the manufacturing cost of which is lower.
For this purpose, the present invention relates to a rotary pump intended to pump a fluid in a system on board a vehicle and comprising a stator, a rotation axle attached both to a mechanical pumping element and a magnetic rotor, and electrical connections. According to the invention, the rotor, the stator and the electrical connections are overmolded in a leaktight manner with a plastic. In this way said pump can be completely submerged in a corrosive liquid such as urea without having to comprise a chamber that is sealed against said liquid that makes it possible to isolate the corrosion-sensitive components (electric and electromagnetic elements) therefrom.
For a detailed description of the preferred embodiments of the invention, reference will now be made to the accompanying drawings in which:
The pump according to the invention is a rotary pump of any known type, driven by a magnetically coupled motor, the control of which is preferably electronic (managed by an ECM or Electronic Control Module). The invention gives good results with a three-phase BLDC motor (or brushless direct current motor).
The fluid for which this pump is intended is preferably a reducing agent capable of reducing the NOx present in the exhaust gases of the vehicle's engine. This is advantageously an ammonia precursor in aqueous solution. The invention gives good results with aqueous solutions of urea and in particular, eutectic water/urea solutions such as solutions of AdBlue®, the urea content of which is between 31.8 wt % and 33.2 wt % and which contain around 18% of ammonia. The invention may also be applied to urea/ammonium formate mixtures also in aqueous solution, sold under the trademark Denoxium® and which contain around 13% of ammonia. The latter have the advantage, with respect to urea, of only freezing from −35° C. onwards (as opposed to −11° C.), but have the disadvantages of corrosion problems linked to the release of formic acid.
In the pump according to the invention, the pumping effect (suction/discharge) is essentially achieved using a mechanical pumping element attached to a rotation axle. This is understood to mean an element whose geometry is such that its rotation creates a pumping effect. Preferably, this pumping element comprises at least two gears (toothed wheels) which make it possible, by rotation, to pump over and increase the pressure of the fluid. Compared to conventional rotary turbine pumps (i.e., a rotary part equipped with blades or vanes), this variant has the advantage of having a good efficiency with a gas or a liquid and regardless of the direction of rotation.
The gears of such a pump are preferably based on sintered metal and more particularly on a corrosion-resistant metal such as 316L stainless steel. Alternatively, they may be in a corrosion resistant plastic material like PEEK (poly-ether-ether-ketone) or PPS (poly-phenylene-sulfide).
According to one particularly advantageous variant of the invention, the pumping element is a gerotor (abbreviation for the terms “GEnerated ROTOR”), i.e., an assembly of two integrated gears, one of which is peripheral and the other central. Such a pumping element is particularly advantageous in that it takes up substantially less space than an element with external gears, in that it makes it possible to eliminate one rotation axle and in that it involves an axial symmetry that makes it possible to increase the structural rigidity of the pump, hence savings in material are made.
Alternatively, the gears may be external to each other, one being entrained by the rotor and the other being entrained by the former one (i.e., by the gear moved by the rotor).
According to the invention, the rotation axle of the pumping element is attached to a magnetic rotor which may be actuated (rotated) by application of a magnetic field. The expression “magnetic rotor” is understood to mean that the rotor preferably comprises at least one magnet. This magnet may be a single magnet and the rotation axle may pass through this magnet. Alternatively, it may be several magnets positioned (preferably in a symmetrical manner) around the axle. Very particularly preferably, the axle of the rotor comprises two ends each guided by a bearing, so as to avoid being off-centre and to make it possible to further increase the structural rigidity of the pump.
In the case where the pumping element is a gerotor, the rotation axle is generally attached to the inner gear of the gerotor.
The pump according to the invention also comprises a stator for applying a magnetic field to the aforementioned rotor, this stator comprising one or more magnetic coils.
The electrical power supply of these coils is preferably controlled electronically as explained above by a controller to which the pump is connected via a connection included, for simplicity, in the aforementioned “electrical” connections.
According to the invention, the rotor and the stator are overmolded in a leaktight manner with a plastic. This is understood to mean that the magnet(s) and coil(s) are coated with molten plastic that is left to solidify. Preferably, this is a plastic that is resistant to corrosion and to the diffusion (permeability) of molecules such as urea. Resins of polyacetal type, and in particular of poly-oxy-methylene (POM) type, give good results. In one variant which gives good results in practice, the electrical connections are overmolded by coating the stator.
According to one preferred variant of the invention, described in the aforementioned French application, the content of which is for this purpose incorporated by reference in the present application, the magnetic rotor comprises at least one recess through which the fluid sucked up by the mechanical pumping element (gears, preferably) is forced. Preferably, substantially all the fluid sucked up is subjected successively to the action of the mechanical element and of the magnetic rotor, either in this order or in the reverse order. Preferably, the fluid is first sucked up by the mechanical element and is then forced through the recess of the rotor, the rotation of which imparts a helical movement (trajectory) to it, combined with a certain acceleration. Particularly preferably, in order to promote this movement, the recess in the rotor is provided with an optimized relief.
Alternatively or in addition to this “central” passage (through the rotor) for the fluid, an interstice (a generally annular space) is generally provided between the rotor and the stator as a passage for the fluid.
According to a first variant, the pumping element, the rotor and the stator are incorporated into (mounted in) one and the same chamber that is used to confine the pressure generated by the pumping element, without an intermediate wall between the rotor and the stator. Such an assembly is particularly compact and makes it possible to reduce the rotor/stator air gap, which makes it possible to increase the efficiency of the pump (reduce its electric power consumption), but it involves passing electrical connections through the pressurized chamber. It is therefore advisable to take great care over the overmolding of these connections.
According to a second variant, the pumping element and the rotor are mounted in a chamber comprising a cover and a lower part that are assembled in a leaktight manner to one another with the aid of the stator and of a leaktight mechanical fastening system comprising, for example, a seal (preferably made of a chemically resistant material such as a fluoroelastomer or a fluorosilicone) and a bayonet. This variant makes it possible to not adversely affect the electrical efficiency of the pump too much (only slightly increases the air gap) but is relatively tricky in terms of sealing, particularly in the long term (considering the internal pressure).
A third variant, more reliable from this point of view, consists in providing a leaktight continuous chamber in which the pumping element and the rotor are mounted and to which the stator is fastened (in a distinctly less critical manner). However, it involves a more significant loss of efficiency and slightly higher weight and cost.
Preferably, the chamber to which reference is made in the aforementioned variants comprises a metal cylinder (preferably made of stainless steel). Preferably, this cylinder is closed off at its two ends by covers that are made of plastic (preferably based on a polymer such as PEEK (polyetheretherketone) or PPS (polyphenylene sulfide), or any other polymer with sufficient chemical inertness and rigidity. Very particularly preferably, the metal cylinder is seamed, at its ends, to the plastic covers in any manner known in the field of canning (manufacturing cans). These covers generally comprise, respectively, for one, an inlet and for the other, an outlet for the fluid to be pumped.
In this variant, the pumping element (which is preferably a gerotor as explained above) is generally incorporated into a housing, preferably also made of plastic, and which preferably comprises a guide for the rotation axle that passes through it, said axle resting on the lower cover (for example on a stop attached to this lower cover) and being guided both by the aforementioned guide and by a guide attached to the upper cover. It is understood that the terms “lower” and “upper” mean the position of the covers during the assembling of the pump, which in no way defines the position of the pump during operation.
Preferably, the housing which contains the gears (external ones or gerotor, where appropriate), is integrated into the lower cover.
The present invention also relates to a process for manufacturing a pump as described above that comprises the following steps 1 to 4:
Finally, the present invention also relates to a urea tank in which a pump as described above is submerged. The term “submerged” is understood to mean that when the tank is full (filled to its maximum filling level) at least the rotor, the stator and the electrical connections are in contact with the urea.
Preferably, the pump is mounted vertically, i.e., the rotation axle is substantially vertical when the tank is mounted on the vehicle.
This pump can be top mounted as explained above, the advantage being that said pump naturally circulates liquid from bottom to top.
Alternatively, this pump can be mounted on the bottom of the tank, in this case preferably in an immerged flange (reserve container) which is heated.
The invention is illustrated in a non-limiting manner by the appended
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Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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09 51875 | Mar 2009 | FR | national |
This application is a divisional application of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/258,326 filed Sep. 21, 2011, which is the U.S. National Stage application of PCT International Application No. PCT/EP2010/053841 filed Mar. 24, 2010, which claims priority to French Application No. 09 51875 filed Mar. 24, 2009, all of which are herein incorporated by reference in their entirety for all purposes.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13258326 | Sep 2011 | US |
Child | 14289102 | US |