This invention is in the field of pumps, and more particularly rotary pumps of the type having a stator chamber with inlet and outlet ports.
The term “pump” is used herein to refer to a device comprising a stator chamber or housing and a rotor that rotates within the chamber to cause sequential intake, compression, and exhaust of a fluid medium such as a gas, a liquid, or a combination thereof. The term, therefore, comprehends not only devices that cause fluid movement but also devices that compress or pressurize fluids with or without ignition and combustion. Further, the term “pump” embraces a reverse operation in which fluid drives a rotor rather than the rotor driving the fluid; i.e., in reverse operation every pump is effectively a motor.
One example of a rotary pump is the well-known Wankel engine that uses an ellipsoid stator chamber and a triangular rotor with seals at the corners.
Another example of a rotary pump is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 4,507,067 to Hansen. The pump in the Hansen patent comprises an elliptical, non-expanding rotor within an elliptical chamber with co-located geometric and rotational centers. The device is characterized by complexity in the number of radially sliding seals required.
The present invention comprises a pump structure having a stator chamber with a substantially continuous inner wall with intake and exhaust ports formed therein. The pump further comprises an eccentrically mounted, cyclically expanding, two-part rotor mounted within the chamber such that as the rotor rotates, the rotor parts shift in position to maintain a wiping contact between the trailing edges of the rotor parts and the inner wall of the chamber to effect intake, compression, and exhaust functions with each 180° of rotor movement.
In an illustrative embodiment, the chamber wall is cylindrical and the rotor comprises a pair of crescentoid rotor bodies (each being less than semi-cylindrical, or covering less than 180°, in outer circumference; but of essentially constant radius, so as to form a body with an elliptical outer surface when the bodies are joined) with outer surface contours conforming to the inner surface contours of the chamber wall, so that within each 180° of rotation one rotor body lies fully and conformingly against the chamber wall while the other rotor body is maximally separated or spaced from the wall, the intake port is full open, and the exhaust port is full closed.
In the illustrative embodiment, the crescentoid rotor bodies have end surfaces that abut and slide over one another to effect rotor expansion and contraction. A spring-biased pin or rod interconnects the inner diameters of the rotor bodies to urge them outwardly into continuous wiping contact with the chamber wall.
In accordance with a preferred embodiment hereafter described, the trailing rotor body edges that contact the stator wall are chamfered to reduce initial wear. The intake and exhaust ports are opposite one another [and offset] along a chord that intersects the rotor axis. As will be understood from the following specification, the pump of the present invention can be scaled to any desired capacity and constructed using any material or combination of materials including hard, dense plastics such as HDPE, ceramics, cermets, and/or metals.
These and other features and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the detailed description below, in light of the accompanying drawings.
Referring to
A rotor 22 comprises substantially identical crescentoid bodies 24 and 26 mounted end-to-end for rotation with an input structure 28. Each rotor body has an outer surface 42 with a diameter equal to the diameter of the wall 14 and an inner surface 44 of a smaller diameter such that, when the rotor 22 is in the expanded condition shown in
The crescentoid rotor bodies 24, 26 are identical but asymmetrically installed; i.e., the end surfaces 48, 50 differ in depth and area and the bodies are arranged such that the larger end surface (e.g. 48) of one body abuts the smaller end surface (e.g. 50) of the other body. With rotation in a clockwise direction when viewing the pump 10 as in
Blind holes 38 and 40 are formed in the inner surfaces 44 of the rotor bodies to receive an end of a connecting spring pin 32 shown in detail in
Rotor drive comes from driven post or shaft 28, the center of which defines the rotor axis of rotation. As can be seen in
Referring now to
In
Pump 10 can also be driven in reverse operation as a motor, in which fluid entering the stator chamber drives the rotor 22 rather than the rotor pumping the fluid through the chamber. Fluid pumped into exhaust port 18 will thus rotate the rotor 22 in reverse, i.e. counterclockwise in the Figures, until exiting the chamber through inlet 16 in a reverse of the 180° cycle described in reference to
It may also be possible to make the stator's inner wall 14 circular over only a portion of its circumference, for example by making the “base” of the wall 14 where the rotor bodies 24, 26 bottom out (
It will finally be understood that the disclosed embodiments represent presently preferred forms of the invention, but are intended to be explanatory rather than limiting of the invention. Reasonable variation and modification of the invention as disclosed in the foregoing disclosure and drawings are possible without departing from the scope of the invention. The scope of the invention is defined by the following claims.