The subject invention relates to seal assemblies and, more specifically, to adjustable seal assemblies.
Various components, including but not limited to rotating shafts, are provided with seals against the components. The seal assembly can be used, for example, to keep external contaminants such as dust away from sensitive or moving components, or to keep fluids such as lubricants, hydraulic fluids, or other materials inside of a component assembly. Various configurations and materials can be utilized to provide a target position of the seal against the body being sealed or to provide a target pressure of the seal against the body being sealed. However, many such configurations and materials are not capable of adjusting the seal position or pressure.
In some embodiments, a seal assembly for providing a seal against a body comprises an elastically-deformable sealing member comprising a sealing surface facing a surface of the body. The assembly also includes a biasing member comprising a shape memory alloy. The biasing member is configured to bias the sealing surface to different positions with respect to the surface of the body or with different pressures against the surface of the body in response to a displacement response of the shape memory alloy (SMA) to thermal stimulus. The body can be dynamic relative to the sealing member such as a rotatable shaft, static relative to the sealing member such as a case or housing, or can be either static or dynamic in response to the SMA displacement such as a snubber assembly.
In some embodiments, a method of sealing a body comprises disposing an elastically-deformable sealing member comprising a sealing surface facing a surface of the body. The sealing surface is biased with a biasing member comprising a shape memory alloy to different positions with respect to the surface of the body or with different pressures against the surface of the body in response to a displacement response of the shape memory alloy to thermal stimulus.
The above features and advantages and other features and advantages of the invention are readily apparent from the following detailed description of the invention when taken in connection with the accompanying drawings.
Other features, advantages and details appear, by way of example only, in the following detailed description of embodiments, the detailed description referring to the drawings in which:
The following description is merely exemplary in nature and is not intended to limit the present disclosure, its application or uses. For example, the embodiments shown are applicable to vehicle components, but the system disclosed herein may be used with any suitable components to provide securement and retention of mating components and component applications, including many industrial, consumer product (e.g., consumer electronics, various appliances and the like), transportation, energy and aerospace applications, and particularly including many other types of vehicular components and applications, such as various interior, exterior, electrical and under-hood vehicular components and applications. It should be understood that throughout the drawings, corresponding reference numerals indicate like or corresponding parts and features.
Shape memory alloys (SMA's) useful for the biasing members described herein are well-known in the art. Shape memory alloys are alloy compositions with at least two different temperature-dependent phases. The most commonly utilized of these phases are the so-called Martensite and Austenite phases. In the following discussion, the Martensite phase generally refers to the more deformable, lower temperature phase whereas the Austenite phase generally refers to the more rigid, higher temperature phase. When the shape memory alloy is in the Martensite phase and is heated, it begins to change into the Austenite phase. The temperature at which this phenomenon starts is often referred to as Austenite start temperature (As). The temperature at which this phenomenon is complete is called the Austenite finish temperature (Af). When the shape memory alloy is in the Austenite phase and is cooled, it begins to change into the Martensite phase, and the temperature at which this phenomenon starts is referred to as the Martensite start temperature (Ms). The temperature at which Austenite finishes transforming to Martensite is called the Martensite finish temperature (Mf). It should be noted that the above-mentioned transition temperatures are functions of the stress experienced by the SMA sample. Specifically, these temperatures increase with increasing stress. In view of the foregoing properties, deformation of the shape memory alloy is preferably at or below the Austenite transition temperature (at or below As). Subsequent heating above the Austenite transition temperature causes the deformed shape memory material sample to revert back to its permanent shape. Thus, a suitable activation signal for use with shape memory alloys is a thermal activation signal having a magnitude that is sufficient to cause transformations between the Martensite and Austenite phases.
The temperature at which the shape memory alloy remembers its high temperature form when heated can be adjusted by slight changes in the composition of the alloy and through thermo-mechanical processing. In nickel-titanium shape memory alloys, for example, it can be changed from above about 100° C. to below about −100° C. The shape recovery process can occur over a range of just a few degrees or exhibit a more gradual recovery. The start or finish of the transformation can be controlled to within a degree or two depending on the desired application and alloy composition. The mechanical properties of the shape memory alloy vary greatly over the temperature range spanning their transformation, typically providing shape memory effect, superelastic effect, and high damping capacity. For example, in the Martensite phase a lower elastic modulus than in the Austenite phase is observed. Shape memory alloys in the Martensite phase can undergo large deformations by realigning the crystal structure arrangement with the applied stress. As will be described in greater detail below, the material will retain this shape after the stress is removed.
In some embodiments, the biasing member can be an SMA wire or band with two ‘remembered’ lengths. Other configurations can be utilized as well, such as an SMA member that can be transformed between a straight and bent shape, or from one bent shape to a different bent shape. The thermal stimulus to transform an SMA member between different states can be a direct external thermal stimulus, such as heat applied from a heat source like an infrared, convective, or conductive heating element. In many cases, the thermal stimulus can be applied by simply running electrical current through the SMA member to cause it to heat up, and terminating the current so that the SMA member cools down by transferring heat to the surrounding cooler environment.
Suitable shape memory alloy materials for fabricating the biasing member(s) described herein include, but are not intended to be limited to, nickel-titanium based alloys, indium-titanium based alloys, nickel-aluminum based alloys, nickel-gallium based alloys, copper based alloys (e.g., copper—zinc alloys, copper-aluminum alloys, copper-gold, and copper-tin alloys), gold-cadmium based alloys, silver-cadmium based alloys, indium-cadmium based alloys, manganese-copper based alloys, iron-platinum based alloys, iron-palladium based alloys, and the like. The alloys can be binary, ternary, or any higher order. Selection of a suitable shape memory alloy composition depends on the temperature range where the component will operate. SMA members typically must be worked or trained at different temperatures in order to remember different shapes between the Austenitic and Martensitic states, e.g., by repeated heating and cooling to transition between the Austenitic and Martensitic states combined with cold working of the SMA member. SMA members may exhibit one-way or two-way shape memory depending on the application for which they are intended, and the embodiments disclosed herein may be used with either one-way or two-way SMA members.
Turning now to the Figures, where numbering is carried through the various Figures to represent identical or similar components without repetition of the description of the same numbering, various example embodiments of seal assemblies are depicted.
Another example embodiment is depicted in
The SMA band 24 and SMA wire coil 24′ are examples of particular embodiments of biasing members, and other configurations can be utilized. For example, both the SMA band 24 and SMA wire coil 24′ are configured to distribute stress across a surface area of the sealing member 16. In an alternative configuration, a single SMA wire strand could be circumferentially disposed around an outside surface of the sealing member 16 in conjunction with a non-SMA elastically deformable metal band (configured, for example, in the shape of SMA band 24 as shown in
In some embodiments, a biasing member can be configured to provide an asymmetrical deformation response. An asymmetrical deformation response can be utilized for various purposes, such as to provide venting from the area around the sealed body. An asymmetrical SMA displacement response can be provided in a variety of ways. For example, a coil formed from an SMA wire having a uniform deformation response of different lengths can be formed to have a different coil density at different portions along the axis of the coil so that a constant length displacement deformation response along the SMA wire will produce an asymmetrical response of the coil as a whole. Alternatively, an SMA member can produce an asymmetrical response from a compositional variation of the alloy along the length of the SMA member, including a shape memory alloy of varying composition (e.g., Ni—Ti ratio) or having a portion of the biasing member formed from a shape memory alloy and a portion formed from a non-shape memory alloy. An asymmetrical response can also be produced by subjecting different portions of the SMA member to different training schemes, e.g., different portions of the SMA member can be subjected to different degrees of deformation during cold working during the SMA shape training process. Asymmetric biasing of the seal member 16 can also be induced with a biasing member that is disposed only along a portion of the circumference of the seal member 16 instead encircling the seal member. An example embodiment of seal assembly with an asymmetrical deformation response is depicted in
An alternative example embodiment to provide venting is shown in
Many of the above-described example embodiments utilize a deformation response of a biasing member where an SMA member length-reducing deformation response of an outer seal around a rotatable shaft provides a tighter seal between a sealing member and the rotatable shaft. A converse configuration can be utilized for inner seal members, where a biasing member disposed radially inwards with respect to the seal can provide a tighter seal with a length-extending deformation response. In other example embodiments, an SMA member length-extending deformation response can be utilized to bias a seal toward a sealed body by utilizing an SMA member (e.g., an SMA wire) configured in a wave or coil pattern that is constrained from axial lengthening so that a length-extending deformation response of the SMA wire produces an expansion of the wave amplitude or coil diameter. Such an example embodiment is depicted in
Many of the above configurations have utilized an SMA length-altering deformation response to bias a sealing member to different positions with respect to a surface of a sealed body or with different pressures against the surface of the sealed body. However, other deformation responses can be utilized as well, such as different shapes or angles of an SMA biasing member in response to thermal stimulus. An example of such an embodiment is shown in
While the invention has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof without departing from the scope of the invention. In addition, many modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation of material to the teachings of the invention without departing from the essential scope thereof. Therefore, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the particular embodiments disclosed, but that the invention will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the application.