This invention relates to rotary positive displacement pumps with vane rotor, and more particularly it concerns a rotor for one such pump having an improved shape of the vane seats.
The invention also concerns a rotary positive displacement pump equipped with such a rotor.
In pumps with vane rotor, the vanes are inserted in the rotor in seats consisting of radial slots suitably shaped so as to allow an easy mounting and to ensure the proper support during rotation.
Especially the shape of the inner end portion of the vane seats is a critical element in rotor design, taking into account the stresses induced by the press fitting of the drive shaft and by the subsequent pump operation. In particular, such a shape conditions the rotor strength and demands that particular attention is paid to the definition of the minimum thickness between the bore where the drive shaft is press fitted (internal diameter of the rotor) and the inner end portion of the vane seats. It is necessary to have a minimum thickness such that the maximum design torque can be transmitted without breaking both during the press fitting step and during operation.
Usually, at said inner end portion, the vane seats are widened so as to form a zone with substantially circular cross section. The provision of such a widened zone aims, inter alia, at offering a discharge path for oil present inside the slots themselves so that the radial movements of the vanes are not hindered. An example of such a conventional shape of the vane seats is shown in DE 10 2007 018 692 A1.
Yet, vane seats with an end portion with circular cross section create a zone where overstressing and stress intensification take place, due, inter alia, to the reduced radius of curvature at such portion. Consequently, the thickness between the bottom of the vane seats and the internal diameter of the rotor required in order to ensure a sufficient resistance to stresses under load must be relatively high. On the other hand, in turn, the drive shaft cannot have a thickness smaller than a given minimum, in order to offer the desired mechanical strength in operation. Consequently, the overall rotor size cannot become smaller than a certain value. It is clear that this compels to limit the pump displacement if a given pump size is to be maintained, or to make more cumbersome pumps if a given displacement is desired.
It is an object of the invention to provide a rotor for a rotary positive displacement pump obviating the drawbacks of the prior art.
According to the invention, this is obtained in that the widened end portion of each seat has a cross-sectional profile consisting of a pair of first arcs having their radially outer ends joined with a respective wall of the same seat and arranged with facing concavities, and of a connecting portion connecting the radially inner ends of said first arcs.
The provision of the connecting portion results in the first arcs being spaced apart by a certain angle (recess angle) from the radius of the rotor comprising the axis of the vane seat.
According to preferred features of the invention, the connecting portion consists of a second arc having the convexity directed towards the inside of the widened portion and having a radius greater than the radius of the first arcs. Advantageously, the second arcs in the bottoms of all seats belong to a same circumference.
By the solution according to the invention, it is possible to reduce the maximum stress acting onto the innermost portion of the vane seats, which stress is generated during the press fitting step. Such a reduction in the maximum stress increases as the recess angle increases.
The reduction in the maximum stress achieved through geometrical improvements (and not by employing materials with higher performance, which would entail higher costs) offers the possibility of allowing freely changing the shaft size with a greater freedom than in rotors with vane seats of conventional shape. In particular, it would be possible to employ a shaft with greater size than in a rotor not equipped with the invention, so that the pump is capable of withstanding higher stresses, or even to employ a smaller shaft should the pump have a smaller displacement. In case of use of a shaft with greater size, the advantage that can be attained is of about the same order of magnitude as the reduction in the maximum stresses.
According to another aspect of the invention, a pump using the improved rotor is also provided.
The above and other features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following description of preferred embodiments made by way of non limiting example with reference to the accompanying Figures, in which:
As shown in
Both arcs 6a substantially are semi-circumferences corresponding each to half the cross section of the conventional circular bottom shown in
As it will be discussed below, the amplitude of recess angle αR determines the percentage of maximum stress reduction, said percentage increasing as angle αR increases.
According to the invention, the absolute value of angle αR can range from a minimum αR(min)>0° (0° clearly corresponding to the conventional circular shape) to a maximum αR(max), corresponding to the value at which the material between two adjacent seats no longer would be capable of withstanding stresses coming from the vanes. Such a maximum cannot be precisely defined since, besides depending on the rotor material, it obviously depends on the number of vanes, the diameter of the drive shaft, the stresses the rotor undergoes during operation, and so on.
In a preferred embodiment, shown in the drawings, connecting portion 6b is an arc of circumference the convexity of which faces the inside of bottom 6, and it has a radius R2 that advantageously is greater than radius R1 of arcs 6a. More particularly, all arcs 6b belong to circumference 7.
By such an arrangement, arcs 6b of each bottom 6 have substantially the same direction of curvature as shaft 3, and this allows improving the stress state distribution inside the material.
Moreover, thanks to the shape of arcs 6b, a maximum reduction of the notch effect is achieved.
The diagrams of the Von Mises stress in
More particularly,
In the graph shown in
The graph in
The graph in
In view of the above, a solution representing a good trade-off between the advantages resulting from the mechanical strength increase and the drawbacks due to the decrease of the transmissible torque and the possible increase in radial oil leaks is given by a recess angle in a range 3 to 6°, for instance an angle of about 5°.
The invention can be applied to any kind of positive displacement pump with vane rotor, with fixed or variable displacement, for instance to pumps for the lubrication oil of a vehicle engine, and it is of particular interest for pumps where at least the rotor and the vanes are made of sintered, plastic or fibre-reinforced plastic material.
It will be apparent for the skilled in the art that the invention can be applied also in combined pumps, that is pump combinations where at least one pump is a rotary positive displacement pump of the kind considered here, or in ancillary groups, that is groups of components, not necessarily all hydraulic components, comprising at least one rotary positive displacement pump of the kind considered here.
It is clear that the above description is given only by way of non-limiting example and that changes and modifications are possible without departing from the scope of the invention as defined in the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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TO2012A000943 | Oct 2012 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2013/059496 | 10/21/2013 | WO | 00 |