The application relates to a self-powered and self-sensing MR damping device and an electrical circuit applicable to devices that have electrical power generation, velocity sensing and MR damping capabilities.
Vibration controls are crucial to today's increasingly high-speed dynamic systems. In an application of a magnetic field, magnetorheological (MR) fluids are one kind of smart materials that exhibit fast, reversible and tunable transition from a free-flowing state to a semi-solid state in a few milliseconds. MR fluids are very promising for semi-active vibration control because they provide a simple and fast response interface between electronic controls and mechanical devices/systems. MR dampers have attractive advantages such as controllable damping force, broad operational temperature range, fast response, and low power consumption.
The schematic of the typical MR damper based semi-active control system is illustrated in
In the current MR damper system, as two ends of the MR damper 67 move relative to each other under an external excitation, the mechanical energy from the MR damper will be converted into heat and the converted heart will be dissipated. For example, during the everyday usage of an automobile, only 10-16% of the fuel energy is used to drive the car to overcome a resistance from a road friction and an air drag. A fair amount of fuel power is wasted when the car is running under an irregular road. In addition, the separate power supply (battery) needs to be recharged or replaced due to its limited lifetime. It also increases the installation space, weight and cost of MR damper systems.
Also, to fully take advantages of the controllable damping characteristics of the MR damper, an extra velocity/displacement sensor that measures the relative velocity/displacement of two ends of MR damper is necessary in the current MR damper system. In general, the extra sensor is separately paralleled with the MR damper. The extra dynamic sensor increases the installation space, weight and cost of MR damper systems. Besides, the connectors between the separate sensor and MR damper system lower the system reliability.
The present application provides an ideal solution for vibration mitigation systems. Under vibration excitations, a self-powered and self-sensing MR damper according to embodiments of the application will generates a required damping force automatically without the extra power supply and sensor.
In one aspect, there is provided a self-powered and self-sensing MR damping device, comprising:
an MR damper part having a damper piston assembly and a damper cylinder, the damper piston assembly being movable relative to the damper cylinder under an external excitation;
a power generator configured to generate electrical power according to the relative movement between the damper piston and the cylinder assembly; and
an electrical circuit configured to estimate said relative movement to output a damper driving current based on the estimated velocity,
In another aspect, there is provided a self-powered and self-sensing MR damping device, which may comprise:
an MR damper part having a damper piston assembly and a damper cylinder, the damper piston assembly being movable relative to the damper cylinder under an external excitation;
a power generator configured to generate electrical power according to the relative movement between the damper piston and said cylinder assembly; and
a sensing part configured to sense the relative movement of the damper piston assembly and the damper cylinder.
According to the above MR damping device, a part of mechanical energy from the MR damper may be converted to electricity for the usage of MR damping system itself, rather than just wasting it as heat. Also, it could measure relative velocity/displacements between two ends of MR damper without an extra sensor. Therefore, separate power supply and dynamic sensor in the current MR damping system are not needed any more. Great benefits such as energy saving, size and weight reduction, lower cost, and less maintenance could be obtained for the MR damper systems. Moreover, the reliability of MR damper system could be improved by eliminating two separate devices and their connectors.
In addition, the present application could provide system dynamic information by utilizing a sensing function. The dynamic information could be used to provide a controlling function in the MR damper system. This sensing function is applicable to different control algorithms. By using different control algorithms, the above mentioned device could have good performances for broad applications, for instances, vehicle suspensions, buildings, and prostheses.
The MR damper part, the power generator and the sensing part is not a simple combination. Instead, the three parts share some common space and components. Motion and magnetic-field interactions among three parts are also considered. In addition, some special components are designed for magnetic-field interactions.
Hereinafter, some embodiments of the application will be described in reference to the accompanying drawings.
As shown in
Referring to
The MR damper part 84 may comprise a hydraulic cylinder 106 normally made from a high-permeability material, such as low-carbon steel. In this embodiment, the cylinder 106 provides a cylindrical hollow 116 to house fluids, e.g., MR fluids, air, oil, and/or other liquids or materials/components. The cylinder 106 is closed by two non-magnetic covers 100 and 114 at its two ends. They are assembled together to form a partially closed assembly.
The MR damper part 84 may also comprise at least one piston rod 96. The piston rod 96 is in sliding fit with the hydraulic cylinder 106 through two central holes in the covers 100 and 114. The piston rod 96 is non-magnetic. Seal components 98A, which may be bushings, O rings, lubricants, bearings and/or combined sealers, centralize and provide supports to the rod 96. Additionally, the piston rods 96 is configured as axially slidable without touching covers 110 and 114, and is further configured to seal the MR fluids inside the hollow 116.
The MR damper part 84 may also comprise a piston assembly 104 connected to the piston rod 96 by screws or welding. The piston assembly 104 is axially slidable within the cylinder 106 by guiding of the seal components 98A, and keeps centralizing or to be aligned within the cylinder 106. The piston assembly 104 is preferably manufactured by a high-permeability material with at least one spool and coil winding. In this embodiment, one coil winding 108 is shown. The MR damper part 84 may also comprise one rod-volume compensator. In this embodiment, an accumulator 160 is used, which has a floating piston 158.
A gap between the inner wall (diameter) of the hydraulic cylinder 106 and the outer wall (diameter) of the piston 104 forms a working portion of MR fluids, i.e. an annular fluid orifice 109. The coil winding 108 may be configured to create a magnetic field that affects the MR fluids in the fluid orifice 109. As the piston rod 96 moves under an external excitation, the MR fluids will flow through the annular orifice 109.
The coil winding 108 may be formed as a solenoid in this embodiment to generate magnetic fields. The coil winding 108 is interconnected to the electrical part 76 by wires 92. The wires 92 exit through the damper part by wire holes in the piston 104 and the piston rod 96. When an electrical current is applied to the coil winding 108, a magnetic field is generated to solidify the MR fluids in the annular orifice 109. Then the yield strength of MR fluids in the annular orifice 109 is increased, and thus the damping force of MR damper part 84 is increased. By adjusting input currents of coil winding 108, the damping force of MR damper part 84 could be controlled. The piston rod 96 has a threaded rod end mated with an upper connector 90A.
There are at least four different configurations for the power generator 86. A multi-pole slotted linear generator 86 is shown in
As shown in
In this embodiment, ring permanent magnets 150A˜C made from rare earth may be radially magnetized or axially magnetized. The polarities of the adjacent magnets 150A˜C are opposite. As shown, the magnets 150A˜C are axially magnetized for illustrative purpose. The magnets 150A˜C are stacked in pairs so that opposing magnetomotive forces drive the flux through spacers 142 segmented in the outer part 86B. The magnets 150A˜C are interspersed with high-permeability pole pieces 152 mounted on the magnetic-flux shield layer 154. When the ring magnets are radially magnetized, the materials of the pole pieces 152, the magnetic-flux shield layer 154 and the magnetic-flux guided layer 140 should accordingly be changed to non-magnetic, high-permeability and non-magnetic.
The outer part 86B may comprise at least one winding coil and at lest one spacer. Eleven winding coils 144 and twelve spacers 142 are shown in
The outer part 86B is attached to the cylinder cover 114 of MR damper part 84 by the screws 135. Therefore, the assembly of outer part 86B is movable with the cylinder 106. In one embodiment, the outer part 86B may also comprise a high-permeability shell 136 and a locker 156.
A specially designed magnetic-flux shield layer 154 and a magnetic-flux guided layer 140 are used to minimize the mutual interferences of the magnetic fields of the power generator 86 and the damper part 84, to solve the integration problem between the power generator 86 and the damper part 84.
A guide rail 112 is connected to the cover 114, and has a relatively low surface finish. The guide rail 112 is in slide fit with the inner part assembly 86A, and insures a proper centralizing of the inner part assembly 86A when it moves with piston rod 96.
Magnetic flux paths are depicted by dashed lines in
Hereinafter, the electrical part 76 will be discussed in references to
The energy harvesting circuit 482 may comprise a power conditioning circuit 4821, an energy storage device 4822, and a voltage regulator 482323. The power conditioning circuit 4821 is coupled to the energy storage device 4822. The power conditioning circuit 4821 receives the AC voltage from the mechanical part 78 and rectifies the AC voltage to DC voltage so as to provide charging voltages to the energy storage device 4822. The power conditioning circuit 4821 may include a bridge rectifier and/or voltage multiplier such as a tripler.
The energy storage device 4822 may be rechargeable batteries, capacitors or ultracapacitors. The device 4822 receives the charging voltages of power conditioning circuit 4821. The device 4822 is used to store and accumulate the harvested energy for intermittent use. In many cases, the output of harvested electrical energy of storage device 4822 may be not appropriate for load use directly (e.g., the required working power supply of the controller 486 may be 3.3 Volt, while the output voltage of storage device 4822 may be 12 Volt). Therefore, the voltage regulator 4823 is utilized to adjust the voltage received from the energy storage device 4822 to appropriate values that could be used for loads. The voltage regulator 4823 will output the electrical power to the sensing estimator 484, the controller 486 and current driver 488. The majority of the electrical power is for the current driver 488, because this branch of power is used for driving the MR damper coil 108 finally. According to one embodiment, the physical circuits in the voltage regulator 4823 may be DC-DC circuits. The voltage regulator 4823 is designed to regulate the output voltages to appropriate values (e.g. the power supply voltages for the controller 486, the sensing estimator 484, and the current driver 488 may be ±3.3 V, ±5 V, and 12 V, respectively).
A sensing estimator 484 receives the AC power signals from the power generator 86 or the sensing voltages from the sensing part 82, and outputs the relative velocity of the two ends of MR damper. The sensing estimator 484 may comprise an analog amplifier if it receives a sensing voltage from the moving-spacer velocity-sensing part 82 of the mechanical part 220, which is proportional to the relative velocity. The moving-spacer velocity-sensing part 82 will be discussed in reference to
The relative velocity between the two ends of self-powered and self-sensing MR damper is identical with the relative velocity between the inner part 86A and the outer part 86B. The generated voltages of two adjacent coils 141 and 144 (as shown in
where E1 and E2 are the generated voltages of the coils 141 and 144, respectively, N is the number of turns of the coils, φg is an air-gap magnetic flux, r is a magnet pole pitch, z is a relative displacement, and dz/dt is a relative velocity.
The sensing algorithm 242 provides a method to extract the accurate velocity information. Firstly, the structural parameters (that is, N, φg, τ and z) are input to the sensing estimator 484, and then E1 and E2 are computed according to equation (2) to obtain the absolute value of velocity |dz/dt(t)|. Next, the absolute value is assumed to have two different signs to obtain two possible velocities, i.e. dz/dt=|dz/dt(t)|, and dz/dt=−|dz/dt(t)|. And then, the obtained two possible velocities are summed up by a common integral transform to get two computed relative displacements z1 and z2. Two calculated voltages E11(t) and E12(t) are determined by rule of equation (1). Then, it is determined whether |E11(t)−E1(t)| is less than |E12(t)−E1(t)|. If yes, dz/dt=|dz/dt(t)|; otherwise, dz/dt=−|dz/dt(t)|.
The relative velocity dz/dt could be obtained from the algorithm 242 by online processing of sensing estimator 484. Although this method requires online signal processing, the separate mechanical part 78 is not needed and the size of self-powered, self-sensing MR damper would be decreased. This method is applicable to the muti-pole linear electromagnetic power generators, and could be used for various applications, not only for MR damper systems shown in this embodiment.
The controller 486 is an essential component of the electrical part 76. It receives the velocity sensor signal from the sensing estimator 484. For some complex applications, the controller 486 may also receive some external sensing signals. The physical circuits for the controller 486 may comprise MCU, DSP et al. The controller 486 uses some readily available measurements to run certain control algorithms, and generates a command of voltage that could instruct the current driver 488 to induce a desired damping force of MR damper. The command of voltage output from the controller 486 is received by a current driver 488. The current driver 488 operates to convert input commands from the controller 486, which are in form of analog voltage, into the driving current accordingly. As mentioned in the above, the power supply of the current driver 488 is provided by the voltage regulator 4823. The physical circuits for the current driver 488 may be composed of operational amplifiers and MOS transistors. The output current of current driver 488 is applied to the MR damper coil 108 for activating MR fluids.
The configurations of spring-based generators 190 and 200 could not work together with the velocity-extraction configuration 240. Therefore, when the self-powered and self-sensing MR damper uses the spring based power generator 190 or 200, it needs other sensing methods. Two other sensing methods could be used and require separate mechanical components, i.e. a moving-magnet velocity-sensing part and a moving-spacer velocity-sensing part.
A radially magnetized ring magnet 134 is fixed on the top of the outer cylinder 118. There is also provided a non-magnetic steel piece 132 that is attached to the outer cylinder 118 by interference fit for locating the ring magnet 134. The polarity of the magnet 134 may be opposite with that shown in
A high-permeability piston rod 120 that is slidable through a central hole of the magnet 134 is kept centralized by seal components 98B. The piston rod 120 is also attached to the non-magnetic magnetic-flux shield segment 110. The specially designed magnetic-flux shield segment 110 is used to minimize the mutual interferences of the magnetic fields of the velocity-sensing part 82 and the MR damper part 222, to solve the integration problem between the velocity-sensing part 82 and the MR damper part 222. The other end of the piston rod 120 is attached by a high-permeability washer 122.
A gap 129 between the inner wall (diameter) of the bobbin 128 and the outer wall (diameter) of the washer 122 forms a working portion 129 of the velocity-sensing part 82. The primary magnetic flux path is depicted by the dashed line in
Specifically, when the damper piston assembly 96 and the damper cylinder 106 move relative to each other under an external excitation, there will be a corresponding relative velocity between connectors 223A and 223B, which may in turn result a relative linear movement between the piston rod 120 and the outer cylinder 118 such that the number of turns of the coil 130 enclosed by the flux path through the coil 130 will change with this movement so as to generate a voltage in coil 130 that is proportional to the relative velocity between piston rod 120 and the outer cylinder 118. Hereinabove, it is described that the piston rod 120 and the outer cylinder 118 may be moved according to the movement of the damper piston assembly 96 and the damper cylinder 106, respectively. It shall be understood that the moving-spacer velocity-sensing part may be configured such that the piston rod 120 is movable according to the movement of the damper cylinder 106, and the outer cylinder 118 may be moved according to the movement of the damper piston assembly 96.
Features, integers, characteristics, compounds, compositions, or combinations described in conjunction with a particular aspect, embodiment, implementation or example disclosed herein are to be understood to be applicable to any other aspect, embodiment, implementation or example described herein unless incompatible therewith. All of the features disclosed in this application (including any accompanying claims, abstract and drawings), and/or all of the steps of any method or process so disclosed, may be combined in any combination, except combinations where at least some of such features and/or steps are mutually exclusive. The invention is not restricted to the details of any foregoing embodiments and extends to any novel one, or any novel combination, of the features disclosed in this specification (including any accompanying claims, abstract and drawings), or to any novel one, or any novel combination, of the steps of any method or process so disclosed.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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201010257348.0 | Aug 2010 | CN | national |