The present invention relates to a scroll compressor to be used suitably as a refrigerant compressor in a refrigerating cycle for refrigeration or air conditioning purposes or as a gas compressor for compressing air or the like.
Background art in this technological field include Japanese Unexamined Patent Application Publication No. 2005-180298 (Patent document 1). This publication refers to “a scroll compressor in which the volute center of the orbiting scroll volute body and the volute center of the fixed scroll volute body are disposed in positions shifted, relative to the centers of the end plates of the orbiting scroll and the fixed scroll, in the direction of a straight line linking the winding end positions of the two volute bodies to the volute center of the Archimedean spiral curve or the envelope thereof” (see Claim 1 of the publication).
Another case of relevant background art is found in Japanese Unexamined Patent Application Publication No. Hei8-232863 (Patent document 2), which contains a mention of “a shaft penetrating scroll compressor in which an orbiting bearing part is disposed in the central part of an orbiting scroll member and an eccentric shaft part of a crankshaft is inserted into the orbiting bearing part to the lap tip part” (see Claim 1 of the publication).
No particular consideration has been given to such offsetting of laps as restraining an increase in the outer diameter of a scroll compressor of a shaft penetrating structure having a bearing part in the central part of the laps of an orbiting scroll.
In order to address the problem, configurations stated in the claims for the present invention, for instance, are adopted.
The invention includes a plurality of devices to solve the problem noted below, and one example is stated below:
A scroll compressor comprising a fixed scroll having a spiral lap erected on a bed plate; an orbiting scroll having a spiral lap erected on a panel and forming a compression room meshed with the fixed scroll; and an orbiting bearing disposed penetrating the panel and the central part of the lap of the orbiting scroll, wherein the orbiting scroll is formed in such a manner as to so shift a lap center from a panel center out of alignment, when the panel center and the lap center are in the same state, as to bring the minimum distance between a winding end position of the lap of the orbiting scroll and the outer circumference of the panel close to the minimum distance between the outer circumferential part which, out of the outer circumferential parts of the lap in a direction of 45° to 135° with the center of the panel from the lap winding end position of the orbiting scroll as its center, has the longer of the minimum distances to the outer circumference of the panel.
The scroll compressor of a shaft penetrating structure can serve to restrain an increase in the outer diameter of the compressor while securing a necessary designed volume ratio and to make efficiency enhancement and diametric reduction compatible.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention will be described below with reference to the accompanying drawings.
First, the basic structure of a scroll compressor will be described.
The surface of the bed plate 7a on which the lap 7b is erected is called a tooth bottom 7c because it is located between segments of the lap 7b. The face of the supporting part 7d in contact with a panel 8a of an orbiting scroll (orbiting scroll member) 8 is a panel face 7e of a fixed scroll 7. The supporting part 7d of the fixed scroll 7 is fixed to a frame 17 with bolts or the like, and the frame 17 integrated with the fixed scroll 7 is fixed to a case (sealed vessel) 9 by welding or otherwise.
The orbiting scroll 8 is arranged opposing the fixed scroll 7, and disposed to be able to orbit in the frame 17 as the lap 7b of the fixed scroll and a lap 8b of the orbiting scroll are meshed with each other. The orbiting scroll 8 has a disk-shaped panel 8a, the spiral lap 8b erected on a tooth bottom 8c, which is a surface of this panel 8a, and a boss part 8d disposed at the center of the rear face of the panel 8a. The outer circumferential face of the panel 8a in contact with the fixed scroll 7 constitutes a panel face 8e of the orbiting scroll 8.
The case 9 has a sealed vessel structure housing a scroll part comprising the fixed scroll 7 and the orbiting scroll 8, a motor part 16 (16a: rotor, 16b: stator), lubricating oil, and so forth. A shaft (rotation shaft) 10 fixed integrally with the rotor 16a of the motor part 16 is rotatably supported by the frame 17 via a main bearing 5 and is coaxial with the central axis of the fixed scroll 7.
A crank 10a is provided at the tip of the shaft 10. This crank 10a is inserted into an orbiting bearing 11 disposed on the boss part 8d of the orbiting scroll 8, which is configured to be able to rotate along with the rotation of the shaft 10. The central axis of the orbiting scroll 8 is in a state of being eccentric relative to the central axis of the fixed scroll 7 by a prescribed distance. Further, the lap 8b of the orbiting scroll 8 is superposed over the lap 8b of the fixed scroll 7 with a shift by a prescribed angle. Reference numeral 12 denotes an Oldham ring for orbiting the orbiting scroll 8 relative to the fixed scroll 7 while so restraining it as not to rotate on its own axis.
A suction port 14, as shown in
When the shaft 10 is rotationally driven by the motor part 16, the rotational motion is transmitted from the crank 10a of the shaft 10 to the orbiting scroll 8 via the orbiting bearing 11, and the orbiting scroll 8 orbits around the central axis of the fixed scroll 7 with an orbiting radius of a prescribed length. During this orbiting motion, the orbiting scroll 8 is so restrained by the Oldham ring 12 as not to rotate on its own axis.
By the orbiting motion of the orbiting scroll 8, each of the compression rooms 13 formed between the laps 7b and 8b is continuously shifted toward the center and, along with that shifting, the volumes of the compression rooms 13 are continuously contracted. This causes the fluid (e.g. refrigerant gas circulating in a refrigerating cycle) sucked through the suction port 14 to be successively compressed in the compression rooms 13, and the compressed fluid is discharged through the discharge port 15 into a discharge space 54 in the upper part of the case. The discharged fluid enters a motor room 52 in the case 9 from the discharge space 54, and supplies through a discharge pipe 6 to outside the compressor, for instance into a refrigerating cycle.
Lubricating oil is deposited at the bottom of the case 9, and a displacement type or centrifugal type oil feed pump 21 is provided at the lower end of the shaft 10. Along with the rotation of the shaft, the oil feed pump 21 is also rotated, and the lubricating oil is sucked through a lubricating oil suction inlet 25 provided in an oil feed pump case 22 and discharged through a discharge outlet 28 of the oil feed pump. The discharged lubricating oil is supplied to a higher part by way of a through hole 3 bored in the shaft. Part of the lubricating oil lubricates a sub-bearing 23 via a transverse hole 24 bored in the shaft 10, and returns to an oil sump 53 in the bottom part of the case. The remaining majority part of the lubricating oil reaches the upper part of the crank 10a of the shaft 10 via the through hole 3, and lubricates the orbiting bearing 11 via an oil groove 57 cut in the crank 10a. After lubricating the main bearing 5 disposed underneath the orbiting bearing 11, this majority part of the lubricating oil returns to the bottom part of the case via a waste oil hole 26a and a waste oil pipe 26b. Hereinafter, a space formed by the oil groove 57 and the orbiting bearing 11 and another space accommodating the main bearing 5 (a space formed by the frame 17, the shaft 10, a frame seal 56, a flange-shaped orbiting boss member 34 disposed on the boss part 8d of the orbiting scroll 8, and a seal member 32) will be collectively referred to as a first space 33. This first space 33 has a pressure close to the discharge pressure. A majority part of the lubricating oil having flowed into the first space 33 to lubricate the main bearing 5 and the orbiting bearing 11 returns to the bottom part of the case via the waste oil hole 26a and the waste oil pipe 26, but some of the lubricating oil in a minimum quantity required for lubrication of the Oldham ring 12 and for lubricating and sealing the sliding parts of the fixed scroll 7 and the orbiting scroll 8 enters a back pressure room 18, which is a second space, via an oil leaking device between the upper end face of the seal member 32 and an end face of the orbiting boss member 34.
The seal member 32 is inserted into an annular groove 31 cut in the frame 17 together with a wavy spring (not shown), and partitions the first space 33 under the discharge pressure from the back pressure room 18 under an intermediate pressure between the suction pressure and the discharge pressure. The oil leaking device is configured of, for instance, a plurality of holes 30 bored into the orbiting boss member 34 and the seal member 32, and the plurality of holes 30 shifts between the first space 33 and the back pressure room 18 in circular motions across the seal member 32 along with the orbiting motion of the orbiting scroll 8. By depositing the lubricating oil in the first space 33 into the holes 30 in this way and intermittently shifting and discharging the oil into the back pressure room 18, the minimum required quantity of oil can be guided to the back pressure room 18. In place of the plurality of holes 30, slits or the like may as well be provided for the oil leaking device to serve the back pressure room.
The lubricating oil having entered the back pressure room 18 enters, when the back pressure has risen, into the compression rooms 13 through a back pressure hole 35 that establishes communication between the back pressure room 18 and the compression rooms 13 and is discharged through the discharge port 15. Some of the oil is discharged through the discharge pipe 6 into a refrigerating cycle together with, for instance, refrigerant gas, and the remainder is separated from the refrigerant gas in the case 9 and deposited in the oil sump 53 at the bottom of the case.
To add, since the quantities of oil supplied to bearings and those of oil supplied to the compression rooms are enabled to be controlled independent of each other by providing the first space 33, the back pressure room 18, and the oil leaking device as described above, it is made possible to ensure oil supply to the compression rooms in appropriate quantities, resulting in a highly efficient compressor.
Next, the back pressure will be described in detail. In the scroll compressor, its compressive actions give rise to a force working to pull apart the fixed scroll 7 and the orbiting scroll 8 from each other. When this force in the axial direction invites separation of the scrolls, a so-called separating phenomenon of the orbiting scroll 8, the sealed state of the compression rooms is loosened, resulting in a drop in the efficiency of the compressor. In view of this problem, on the rear side of the panel of the orbiting scroll 8, the back pressure room 18 having a pressure level between the discharge pressure and the suction pressure is arranged, and its back pressure is used to cancel the separating force as well as to press the orbiting scroll 8 against the fixed scroll 7. If the pressing force in this process is too great, the sliding friction loss between the panel face 8e of the orbiting scroll 8 and the panel face 7e of the fixed scroll 7 will increase and the compressor efficiency will drop. Thus, there is an optimum level of the back pressure, under which the sealed state of the compression rooms is loosened to invite an increase in thermo-hydrodynamic loss and above which the sliding friction loss will increase. Therefore, keeping the back pressure at its optimum level is of vital importance to enhancing the performance and reliability of the compressor.
In order to obtain this optimum back pressure level, the scroll compressor shown in
The basic structure of the scroll compressor has been described so far. Disadvantages of this structure include a large upsetting moment of the orbiting scroll. The upsetting moment will be described below. The orbiting scroll by its own compressive action is subject not only to the axial direction mentioned above but also to a force in the horizontal direction. Its point of action is the center of the lap 8b of the orbiting scroll in the perpendicular direction. The point where the orbiting scroll is restrained is the approximate center of the orbiting bearing 11 in the perpendicular direction. Thus, the point where the load works on and the point where the orbiting scroll is restrained is apart by the distance denoted by 60 in
As a structure to reduce this upsetting moment, a shaft penetrating structure for scroll compressors is known. This structure has an orbiting bearing 11 penetrating the central parts of the panel 8a and the lap 8b of the orbiting scroll 8 as shown in
As described above, a scroll compressor of such a shaft penetrating structure, though it excels in efficiency, has its own disadvantage of a greater outer circumference of the compressor.
In view of this problem, the present invention proposes a structure in which the lap center and the panel center of the orbiting scroll are shifted out of alignment, and the outer circumference of the panel is reduced without allowing leaks from the panel to increase and a structure that keeps the outer circumference of the panel unchanged and further reduces leak loss from the panel.
First, details of the structure hat keeps the outer circumference of the panel unchanged and further reduces leak loss from the panel will be described.
To compare the four seal lengths in
To substantially uniformize these four seal lengths, the lap center and the panel center are shifted out of alignment according to the invention. The direction of this shifting will be described with reference to
Whereas the seal lengths 105, 106, 107 and 108 can be substantially uniformized by using such a configuration (
To add, as described earlier,
As another embodiment,
Incidentally, the case illustrated in this diagram uses an involute curve as the lap curve, it is even more advisable to use either or both of an Archimedean spiral curve and its envelope as the lap curve. The Archimedean spiral curve, by virtue of its geometrical characteristics, can give a greater designed volume ratio than an involute curve when the distance between the lap center and the lap winding end position is the same. In other words, when the designed volume ratio is the same, the outer diameter can be reduced. Furthermore, the Archimedean spiral curve gives a smaller lap thickness and a shorter distance between laps as the lap winding end position is approached. The combined length of the lap thickness and the distance between laps is denoted by 70 in
Further, when the lap center and the panel center are to be offset, it is better also to shift the center of the orbiting bearing 11 together with the panel center. Reference numeral 83 in
It is to be noted, however, that formation of the orbiting bearing 11 requires a certain thickness of its central part of to hold the orbiting bearing 11 on its outer circumferential part. Thus, the thickness denoted by 89 in
By configuring a refrigerating cycle for air conditioning purposes as shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2012-042696 | Feb 2012 | JP | national |