The invention relates to a seal assembly that seals a first portion of a machine part relative to a second portion of a machine part, wherein the seal assembly includes at least one seal element that contacts the machine part or contacts a component connected with the machine part or that extends with a gap relative to the machine part or to the component connected with the machine part.
Seal assemblies of this type are well known. They are used as frictional (e.g., radial shaft seal rings) as well as non-frictional seals (labyrinth seals), by means of which a sealing of an area of a component can be ensured.
Notwithstanding appropriate usage, it can not always be prevented that moisture and dirt enter into the area to be sealed. A corrosion danger and/or a contamination of the lubricant (oil or grease) results due to such an ingress of water, which can lead to operational disruptions and/or even operational breakdowns. Generally speaking, an improved protection against the ingress of moisture can be achieved only by implementing constructive modifications to the seal assembly, e.g., by disposing a greater number of seal elements and/or seal lips.
Therefore, the object underlying the invention is to further develop a sealing assembly of the above-mentioned type so that an improved protection against the penetration of moisture, in particular water, is provided without having to modify the seal design.
The solution of this object by the invention is characterized in that the seal element and/or the machine part and/or the component connected with the machine part is provided or coated with a material, which has super hydrophobic properties, in the area of the seal element.
The super hydrophobic material preferably has a water contact angle (θ) of at least 150° (for this, see the following embodiments).
The super hydrophobic material includes nano-filaments in an advantageous manner. In particular, the super hydrophobic material can include silicone nano-filaments. Polymethylsilsesquioxane nano-filaments have proven themselves as a preferred material.
According to one embodiment, the seal assembly can comprise at least one seal lip, wherein a portion of at least one seal lip is provided or coated with the material. In particular, it can involve a radial shaft seal. The at least one seal lip can axially or radially contact its counterface. The seal lip can contact a contact disk that is connected with the machine part.
According to an alternative embodiment, however, the seal assembly can also comprise a labyrinth seal that includes at least one portion forming a gap, wherein the portion forming the gap is provided or coated, at least partially, with the material. The dimensioning of the gap height is effected in dependence upon the water contact angle of the material so that the water drop will be larger than the gap height, in order to reliably prevent the ingress of water in this case.
The machine part interacting with the seal lip or with the labyrinth seal or the component connected with the machine part can be a shaft or a contact ring that can be provided or coated with the material on its surface at least in the area of the seal assembly.
The proposed concept is suitable for seals, which operate with contacting seal elements, as well as for those, which seal in a contact-free manner.
The long-lasting super-hydrophobic effect provides for the formation of spherical-shaped water drops on planar surfaces using the surface tension of the water, which drops can roll off (bead off) in a residue-free manner when inclined. For curved surfaces, such as e.g., in the case of shafts, the water can form ring-shaped structures (torus-shaped structures) when present in sufficient amounts. The sealing effect can be bolstered by an advantageous geometry, so that the to-be-excluded water drops are conveyed in the desired direction.
It is advantageous that the water-repelling property is maintained on the seal and the counterface independent of the surface wear of the contact surfaces, i.e. it is wear-independent.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention are shown in the drawings.
In
The same applies to the embodiment according to
In order to improve the protection against the penetration of moisture, in particular water, and also dirt, the invention provides, in both exemplary embodiments, that the seal element 5 as well as the machine part 3 is provided or coated with a material 7 in the area of the seal element 5, which material has super hydrophobic properties. That is, the material is applied to the seal element 5 and/or to the shaft 3 in a rotationally symmetric manner.
The super hydrophobic material has the effect that moisture, and in particular water, is repelled such that water drops form, as is shown according to
An ingress of water into the actual sealed region is prevented by upstream protective elements, such as radially- or axially-disposed seal lips. Even small gaps, which can result from dynamic running deviations, are not surmounted due to the surface tension of the water.
Impregnation of non-woven materials in the protective seal also improves the protection against water and ensures a sufficient ventilation of the main seal element.
For the hydrophobicity of the proposed material 7 proposed according to the invention, the following can be noted: The measure for the degree of the water-repellency (hydrophobe) of materials is the hydrophobicity. Substances that do not mix with water are designated with this and can, in most cases, bead water on surfaces. Non-polar materials, such as greases, waxes, alcohols with long alkyl-residues (i.e. with the exception of methanol, ethanol and propanol), alkanes, alkenes, etc., are hydrophobic. When dissolving some hydrophobic materials, such as methane, in water, disadvantageous clathrate-structures entropically form. Therefore, the solubility of these materials in water is low.
The so-called contact angle θ is often utilized to identify the degree of hydrophobicity. The angle is denoted as the contact angle, which a liquid drop (see water drop 10 in
Certain properties of the surface of a solid—such as for example the surface energy—can be determined from the determination of the contact angle.
In the special case of the use of water as the liquid, the surface is designated as hydrophilic for small contact angles (θ is very small), as hydrophobic for angles around 90° and as super hydrophobic for even larger angles (like in
Generally speaking, hydrophobic surfaces are comprised of hydrophobic substances or are covered by hydrophobic substances. Examples are the coating of surfaces with PTFE (Teflon) or the impregnation of insulating materials and textiles with hydrophobic materials, such as wax or paraffin.
An extreme example for a hydrophobic surface is the surface of leaves and flowers of the lotus. This surface is rough and also covered with hydrophobic substances. Due to this distinctive attribute, this surface has a contact angle of over 160°, so that drops on it are almost round. Water beads up very well on such surfaces. Dirt particles lying thereon are rinsed away very easily. This effect is called the Lotus Effect.
In
The invention preferably utilizes nano-filaments to generate the super hydrophobic effect in the material 7. For this, the following can be noted:
To generate a super hydrophobic effect, silicone nano-filaments are preferably utilized according to the invention. These have a diameter of about 5 nm and a length of a few micrometers. They are produced from silanes. Chemically, they are constructed like silicone; however, due to their nanostructure, they possess completely different physical and chemical properties.
The chemical structure of silicone nano-filaments corresponds to that of silicone. Silicon atoms are connected with each other via oxygen atoms. If more than two oxygen atoms serve as the bridge atoms, three-dimensional networks form. The fourth connecting point of the silicon atom is then saturated by an organic residue.
Under certain conditions, no solid silicon-solid-body results on the surfaces during the synthesis, but rather small filaments that are only a few nanometers thick and only a few tens of nanometers long.
In one method, silicon nano-filaments can be produced from the gas phase. For this, trichlorosilane was vaporized in a reaction chamber together with a precisely-set humidity and a substrate is exposed to this mixture for several hours. In this case, it should be noted that the concentration of trichlorosilane and humidity is very precisely set; otherwise a condensation reaction takes place, i.e. it forms the silicone, but no nano-filaments.
Silicone nano-filaments have a variety of, in some cases extreme, properties that can change into the extreme opposite by subsequent chemical modifications. Surfaces thus coated with silicone nano-filaments are extremely water-repellent (super hydrophobic), which is utilized in the present case. Therefore, water drops lie as nearly round balls on the surface; wetting scarcely occurs. This property is described—as was explained—by the contact angle, which is nearly up to 170° in the case of silicone nano-filament coatings. If the surface also rises at even a small angle, e.g., a 2° slope, the beads immediately roll off from the surface.
The proposed design can be utilized on any seal assemblies. This applies, for example, to sealing disks (simple metal covering disks) that are utilized in the axial end portion of a roller- or slide bearing, rotate with one of the bearing rings and frictionally abut on the other bearing ring, thereby maintaining a gap with this bearing ring, i.e. sealing in a friction-free manner. The invention can be utilized with all radial shaft seals that operate with conventional seal lips or those made of PTFE. The idea can also be used in the same manner in protective elements in the form of non-woven materials. This applies in the same manner when radial shaft seal rings are utilized with axially-acting protective lips that utilize separate contact rings.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1020090139699 | Mar 2009 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2010/001580 | 3/12/2010 | WO | 00 | 9/14/2011 |