The present invention relates to linear compressors, and in particular linear compressors of the type suitable for use in a vapour compression refrigeration system.
Linear compressors of a type for use in a vapour compression refrigeration system are the subject of many documents in the prior art. One such document is our co-pending PCT patent application PCT/NZ2004/000108. That specification describes a variety of developments relating to compressors, many of which have particular application to linear compressors. The present invention relates to further improvements to compressor embodiments such as are described in that patent application, which provides a general description of an example compressor to which the present invention may be applied. However the present invention may also be applied beyond the scope of the particular embodiments of linear compressor disclosed in that application. Persons skilled in the art will appreciate the general application of the ideas herein to other embodiments of linear compressors such as are found in the prior art.
The present invention relates generally to suspension springs for suspending the compressor assembly within the hermetic shell.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a suspension spring with improved characteristics with particular application to linear compressors and/or to provide refrigeration compressors incorporating such springs, or to at least provide the industry with a useful choice.
In a first aspect the invention may broadly be said to consist in a suspension spring for use in supporting a linear compressor within a hermetic shell, said spring comprising:
a body of substantially planar form having a hub portion for connection with the compressor, a spiral arm extending from said hub portion in the plane of said hub portion, said spiral arm curving around said hub portion in a first direction, said arm extending greater than one complete pass around said hub portion and terminating in an attachment portion for fixing to said compressor housing.
According to a further aspect of the invention, said arm is singular and is the only said connection between said hub portion and said attachment portion.
According to a further aspect of the invention, said hub portion includes means for connection to said compressor assembly. Said means may for example be one or more apertures by which said compressor may be bolted or otherwise fixed to said hub portion, or could alternatively be a clip pressed from the plane of the sheet material constituting the suspension spring.
According to a further aspect of the invention, said arm leaves said hub portion in a direction substantially tangential with the perimeter of said hub portion and follows the path of a gradually expanding spiral to said attachment portion.
According to a further aspect of the invention, said attachment portion comprises a tab extending substantially radially with respect to said spiral.
According to a further aspect of the invention, said tab includes means for attachment to said housing. The means for attachment may comprise, for example, an aperture, slot or other deformity for assisting fixing to the housing by, for example, rivet, screw, adhesive or weld.
According to a further aspect of the invention, said spring is cut from a thin flat plate of high carbon steel, pre-hardened and tempered.
According to a further aspect of the invention, said spiral arm has a width, taken in a substantially radial direction with respect to said spiral, increasing from a minimum where the arm leaves said hub portion to a maximum adjacent said attachment portion.
According to a further aspect of the invention, said tab includes a bend across it, such that a portion of said tab distal from said hub portion of said spring lies generally in a plane that is at a substantial angle to the plane of the hub portion and spiral arm of said spring.
According to a further aspect of the invention, said spring arm includes a tuning mass at a location along said arm intermediate between said hub portion and said attachment portion.
According to a further aspect of the invention, said tuning mass comprises a short length of said arm substantially wider than the adjacent parts of said arm.
In a further aspect the present invention may broadly be said to consist in a refrigeration system compressor comprising a hermetic housing, a linear compressor within said hermetic housing, said compressor including at least two relatively reciprocating parts, with one part typically being much greater mass than the other part, the relative reciprocation of the centre of mass of each part occurring along an axis of reciprocation, and
at least a pair of suspension springs substantially as set forth in one or more of the above paragraphs, the hub portion of each said suspension spring being connected with said compressor part of greater mass, such that the centre of said spiral at least substantially coincides with said axis of reciprocation, and the attachment portion of each said spring being fixed to one part of said hermetic housing.
To those skilled in the art to which the invention relates, many changes in construction and widely differing embodiments and applications of the invention will suggest themselves without departing from the scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims. The disclosures and the descriptions herein are purely illustrative and are not intended to be in any sense limiting.
Referring to
The illustrated linear compressor 1 has, broadly speaking, a cylinder part and a piston part connected by a main spring. The cylinder part includes cylinder chassis 10, cylinder head 11, valve plate 5 and a cylinder liner 12. It also includes stator parts 15 for a linear electric motor. An end portion 18 of the cylinder part, distal from the head 11, mounts the main spring relative to the cylinder part. In the illustrated embodiment the main spring is a combination of coil spring 19 and flat spring 20.
The piston part includes a hollow piston 22 with sidewall 24 and crown 14. A rod 26 connects between the crown 14 and a supporting body 30 for linear motor armature 17. The rod 26 has a flexible portion 28 approximately at the centre of the hollow piston 22. The linear motor armature 17 comprises a body of permanent magnet material (such as ferrite or neodymium) magnetised to provide one or more poles directed transverse to the axis of reciprocation of the piston within the cylinder liner. An end portion 32 of armature support 30, distal from the piston 22, is connected with the main spring 19, 20.
This briefly describes a linear compressor of a type for which the suspension spring of the present invention is useful. However it will be appreciated that the usefulness of the suspension spring of the present invention is not restricted to linear compressors of the type and configuration illustrated. It is generally applicable where operation of the linear compressor results in the relative reciprocation of the centre of mass of the piston carrying part and the centre of mass of the cylinder part along the linear axis.
The suspension spring of the present invention is most usefully applied to support the heavier of the relatively moving assemblies, typically the cylinder part assembly. In the preferred manner, such as illustrated in
Referring to
The precise shape or form of hub portion 36 is not critical although a generally circular or volute shape is preferred to provide a suitably large flat area to clamp the hub portion 36 to the compressor end.
The spring arm 38 spirals around the hub portion 36, preferably through greater than a complete turn, staying in the same plane as the planar hub portion 36. As best seen in
The hub portion 36 is for attachment to an end of the compressor. The hub portion 36 may include suitable feature to facilitate attachment. In the illustrated embodiments the hub portion 36 includes one or more apertures 45 which may be used to screw the spring to the compressor. To prevent gradual rotation of the compressor about its axis the two outer holes may be used at one end (as at end 50 in
The attachment portion 40 is for mounting the spring to the housing. Typically the spring will be mounted to the lower internal surface of the housing. For that application the attachment portion 40 may, as illustrated, include an extended tab bent to a suitable angle such that with the bent tab flush against the housing the main planar portion of the suspension spring extends away from the housing at an angle to be perpendicular to the axis of reciprocation of the compressor. So, for example, the angle at which the tab 46 is bent through at bend 44 will depend on the slope of the part of the surface of the housing to which the tab 44 is to be fixed. The attachment portion 40 (or tab 44) may be attached to the housing in any convenient fashion so that the planar portion of the support spring is cantilevered from the housing. For this the tab 44 may include suitable features to facilitate attachment. For example, for attachment to the housing by a fastener, or to provide keying for attachment by an adhesive, the tab 44 may include an aperture 46. Alternatively the tab may include one or more protrusions or dimples to facilitate spot welding or projection welding to the housing.
When suspension of the compressor in the housing is by a conventional coil spring there is the disadvantage that when the coil springs are made soft to minimise vibration along the axis of the compressor they allow too much movement at right angles to this axis. This can compromise robustness during transport and handling of the compressors or the appliance in which they are fitted. Conventional coil springs can also be noisy as in use they tend to slide over the snubbers that locate them at each end.
The spiral flat spring of the present invention, when carefully designed, is very soft in the axis of reciprocation and stiff in directions transverse to this axis. Accordingly it does not compromise between isolation and robustness.
One possible disadvantage is the many modes of resonance a spring of this type can have. Such a spring, when designed to be very soft in the direction of axial movement, will have low fundamental frequencies, (e.g. a frequency below 50 hz for all six rigid body modes) and will also have a large number of higher mode resonant frequencies where the spring vibrates within itself. Our linear compressor is also based around a resonance spring system. In preferred embodiments that we use the compressor runs at a varying natural frequency due to the variable stiffness of the compressed gas associated with the current running conditions. The compressor resonant system allows the compressor to move almost sinusoidally but there are higher order harmonics due mainly to the non linearity of the compressed gas stiffness. These higher harmonics can excite resonance in the suspension spring. Accordingly, it is important that the spring design is such that internal resonances of the suspension spring do not coincide with the running frequency or low order harmonics of the compressor.
If this interference cannot be avoided it is possible to add a mass at an appropriate point on the spring so that the resonant frequency of one internal resonance mode (which would otherwise be excited by the compressor operation) is reduced. The mass can be an additional quantity of spring material, or an added mass such as a piece of polymer which is dense and has high internal damping. Additional spring material may be included for example by providing a short wide portion 58 along the spiral arm 38 at a location between the end joining into the hub portion 36 and the end joining to the attachment portion 40. The mass is located at a point expected to exhibit maximum amplitude in the problematic resonant mode.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/NZ05/00288 | 11/1/2005 | WO | 00 | 12/12/2007 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60624251 | Nov 2004 | US |