The present subject matter relates generally to washing machine appliances and, more particularly, to suspension systems and methods of limiting energy dissipated in such systems.
Washing machine appliances typically include an apron and a sub-washer unit. The sub-washer unit includes a wash basket rotatably mounted within a wash tub, the wash basket defining a wash chamber for receipt of clothing articles. Washing machine appliances utilize wash and rinse fluids to clean clothing articles within the wash chamber. More specifically, a motor assembly is coupled to the wash tub and configured to rotate the wash basket within the wash tub in order to cleanse articles within the wash basket. Upon completion of a wash cycle, a pump assembly can be used to rinse and drain soiled water to a draining system.
When the wash basket is rotating, out of balance loads can cause the sub-washer unit to translate relative to its center position and wobble relative to its axis of rotation. In certain conventional washing machine appliances, the sub-washer unit is preferably mounted within the apron by suspending the sub-washer unit using a suspension system attached to the apron. More specifically, typical suspension systems include a plurality of dampers that extend between the sub-washer unit and fixed corner brackets mounted to the apron. The dampers are intended to maintain sub-washer unit in the neutral position and absorb forces and movement resulting from load imbalances to prevent them from transferring directly to the supporting floor, e.g., through the apron.
However, large movements and oscillations experienced by the dampers can result in large cyclic stresses and excessive heating on the dampers. These stresses and excess heat can result in premature wear and failure of the dampers or other components of the washing machine appliance. Accordingly, a washing machine appliance with features for limiting component stresses resulting from load imbalances would be useful. More specifically, a washing machine appliance and methods of operation which limit the heat and cyclic stresses experienced by the suspension system would be particularly beneficial.
The present subject matter provides a washing machine appliance and methods of operation. The washing machine appliance generally includes an apron and a sub-washer unit suspended within the apron by a plurality of dampers. A measurement device is mounted on the sub-washer unit to measure the movement of the sub-washer unit. The movement of each damper is calculated based on the relative position of the damper and the measurement device. By monitoring the movement of each damper, the amount of energy dissipated by each damper during operation may be calculated and the operation of the washing machine appliance may be adjusted when the amount of energy dissipated and/or power level exceeds a predetermined energy threshold. Additional aspects and advantages of the invention will be set forth in part in the following description, or may be apparent from the description, or may be learned through practice of the invention.
In one exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure, a washing machine appliance is provided including an apron defining a vertical direction, a lateral direction, and a transverse direction, the vertical, lateral, and transverse directions being mutually orthogonal. A sub-washer unit is positioned within the apron, the sub-washer unit including a wash basket defining a wash chamber for receipt of articles for washing and being rotatable about an axis of rotation. A motor assembly is operably coupled with the wash basket for rotating the wash basket and a suspension system includes a plurality of dampers extending between the apron and the sub-washer unit for suspending the sub-washer unit within the apron. A measurement device is mounted to the sub-washer unit and a controller is in operative communication with the motor assembly and the measurement device. The controller is configured for monitoring a movement of the sub-washer unit using the measurement device and calculating an amount of energy dissipated in at least one of the plurality of dampers as a result of the movement of the sub-washer unit. The controller is further configured for determining that the amount of energy dissipated has exceeded a predetermined energy threshold and adjusting the operation of the washing machine appliance in response to determining that the amount of energy dissipated has exceeded the predetermined energy threshold.
In another exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure, a method for operating a washing machine appliance is provided. The washing machine appliance includes an apron and a sub-washer unit positioned within the apron and suspended by a plurality of dampers. The sub-washer unit includes a wash basket defining a wash chamber for receipt of articles for washing and being rotatable about an axis of rotation, and a measurement device is mounted to the sub-washer unit. The method includes monitoring a movement of the sub-washer unit using the measurement device and calculating an amount of energy dissipated in at least one of the plurality of dampers as a result of the movement of the sub-washer unit. The method further includes determining that the amount of energy dissipated has exceeded a predetermined energy threshold and adjusting the operation of the washing machine appliance in response to determining that the amount of energy dissipated has exceeded the predetermined energy threshold.
According to still another exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure, a washing machine appliance is provided including an apron defining a vertical direction, a lateral direction, and a transverse direction, the vertical, lateral, and transverse directions being mutually orthogonal. A sub-washer unit is positioned within the apron, the sub-washer unit including a wash basket defining a wash chamber for receipt of articles for washing and being rotatable about an axis of rotation. A motor assembly is operably coupled with the wash basket for rotating the wash basket and a measurement device is mounted to the sub-washer unit. A controller is in operative communication with the motor assembly and the measurement device, the controller being configured for measuring an acceleration of the sub-washer unit using the measurement device and calculating a displacement of the sub-washer unit at a location remote from the measurement device. The controller is further configured for calculating an amount of cyclic stress at the location remote from the measurement device based on the calculated displacement, determining that the amount of cyclic stress has exceeded a predetermined cyclic stress threshold, and adjusting the operation of the washing machine appliance in response to determining that the amount of cyclic stress has exceeded the predetermined cyclic stress threshold.
These and other features, aspects and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with reference to the following description and appended claims. The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate embodiments of the invention and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention.
A full and enabling disclosure of the present invention, including the best mode thereof, directed to one of ordinary skill in the art, is set forth in the specification, which makes reference to the appended figures.
Repeat use of reference characters in the present specification and drawings is intended to represent the same or analogous features or elements of the present invention.
Reference will now be made in detail to embodiments of the invention, one or more examples of which are illustrated in the drawings. Each example is provided by way of explanation of the invention, not limitation of the invention. In fact, it will be made apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made in the present invention without departing from the scope or spirit of the invention. For instance, features illustrated or described as part of one embodiment can be used with another embodiment to yield a still further embodiment. Thus, it is intended that the present invention covers such modifications and variations as come within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents.
Washing machine appliance 50 includes a cabinet or apron 52 and a top panel or cover 54. A backsplash 56 extends from cover 54, and a control panel 58 including a plurality of input selectors 60 is coupled to backsplash 56. Control panel 58 and input selectors 60 collectively form a user interface input for operator selection of machine cycles and features, and in one embodiment a display 61 indicates selected features, a countdown timer, and other items of interest to machine users. A lid 62 is mounted to cover 54 and is rotatable about a hinge (not shown) between an open position (not shown) facilitating access to a wash tub 64 located within apron 52, and a closed position (shown in
As illustrated in
A sub-washer unit 65 (see
A hot liquid valve 102 and a cold liquid valve 104 deliver fluid, such as water, to basket 70 and wash tub 64 through a respective hot liquid hose 106 and a cold liquid hose 108. Liquid valves 102, 104 and liquid hoses 106, 108 together form a liquid supply connection for washing machine appliance 50 and, when connected to a building plumbing system (not shown), provide a fresh water supply for use in washing machine appliance 50. Liquid valves 102, 104 and liquid hoses 106, 108 are connected to a basket inlet tube 110, and fluid is dispersed from inlet tube 110 through a nozzle assembly 112 having a number of openings therein to direct washing liquid into basket 70 at a given trajectory and velocity. A dispenser (not shown in
In some embodiments, an agitation element 116, such as a vane agitator, impeller, auger, or oscillatory basket mechanism, or some combination thereof is disposed in basket 70 to impart an oscillatory motion to articles and liquid in basket 70. In various exemplary embodiments, agitation element 116 may be a single action element (oscillatory only), double action (oscillatory movement at one end, single direction rotation at the other end) or triple action (oscillatory movement plus single direction rotation at one end, single direction rotation at the other end). As illustrated in
Basket 70 and agitation element 116 are driven by a motor 120 through a transmission and clutch system 122. The motor 120 drives a drive shaft 126 to rotate basket 70 within wash tub 64. Clutch system 122 facilitates driving engagement of basket 70 and agitation element 116 for rotatable movement within wash tub 64, and clutch system 122 facilitates relative rotation of basket 70 and agitation element 116 for selected portions of wash cycles. Motor 120 and transmission and clutch system 122 collectively are referred herein as a motor assembly 128 and may be a component of sub-washer unit 65.
Sub-washer unit 65 further includes a suspension system 140 which includes of a support rod 160, a spring 172, and a damper or piston assembly 170 (described below) for supporting sub-washer unit 65 within apron 52. One end of suspension system 140 may be connected to sub-washer unit 65 while an opposite end of suspension system 140 is receivable within and/or coupled to at least one bracket 142. For example, as illustrated in
Suspension system 140 can include a plurality of damping elements, such as piston-cylinder damping elements, referred to herein generally as dampers 144 and described in detail below. The dampening suspension system 140 can include other elements, such as a balance ring 146 disposed around the upper circumferential surface of the wash basket 70. The balance ring 146 can be used to counterbalance an out of balance condition for the wash machine as the basket 70 rotates within the wash tub 64. The wash basket 70 could also include a balance ring 146 located at a lower circumferential surface of the wash basket 70.
Referring still to
According to exemplary embodiments, a measurement device 148 in accordance with the present disclosure may include an accelerometer that provides acceleration data that can be used to calculate motion, such as acceleration along one or more directions. More specifically, for example, measurement device 148 may be configured for measuring the acceleration of sub-washer unit 65 along the vertical direction V, the lateral direction L, and the transverse direction T. Additionally or alternatively, a measurement device 148 may include a gyroscope that measures rotational motion, such as rotational velocity about an axis. More specifically, for example, measurement device 148 may be configured for measuring the rotation of the sub-washer unit about the vertical direction V, the lateral direction L, and the transverse direction T. In this manner, measurement device 148 may obtain a complete, six degree of freedom representation of the movement of sub-washer unit 65.
Measurement device 148 may be positioned at any suitable position within washing machine appliance 50 for measuring the movement of sub-washer unit 65 as described herein. For example, a measurement device 148 in accordance with the present disclosure is mounted to the sub-washer unit 65 at a location away from the axis of rotation 118. More specifically, for example, measurement device 148 may be positioned on sub-washer unit 65 at a location halfway between axis of rotation 118 and sidewall 68 of wash tub 64. Other suitable positions for measurement device 148 are possible according to alternative embodiments.
According to exemplary embodiments, acceleration of sub-washer unit 65 may be measured by measurement device 148 continuously or during a predetermined stage, time period, operating cycle, etc. As an example, monitoring or detection of acceleration may be initiated in response to a set cycle or rotation speed. As another example, acceleration values may be gathered continuously during a time period, but only collected or further analyzed during a predetermined stage, e.g., at the set rotation speed.
Operation of washing machine appliance 50 is controlled by a controller 150 that is operatively coupled to the control panel 58 (e.g., inputs 60 and/or display 61) located on washing machine backsplash 56 (shown in
Controller 150 may include a memory and microprocessor, such as a general or special purpose microprocessor operable to execute programming instructions or micro-control code associated with a cleaning cycle. The memory may represent random access memory such as DRAM, or read only memory such as ROM or FLASH. In one embodiment, the processor executes programming instructions stored in memory. The memory may be a separate component from the processor or may be included onboard within the processor. Alternatively, controller 150 may be constructed without using a microprocessor, e.g., using a combination of discrete analog and/or digital logic circuitry (such as switches, amplifiers, integrators, comparators, flip-flops, AND gates, and the like) to perform control functionality instead of relying upon software.
Control panel 58 and other components of washing machine appliance 50 may be in communication with controller 150 via one or more signal lines or shared communication busses to provide signals to and/or receive signals from the controller 150. For example, controller 150 may be in operable communication with motor assembly 128, a rotational speed sensor (not shown) on motor assembly 128 to detect rotational velocity of motor 120, measurement device(s) 148, or any other suitable sensors. Optionally, measurement device 148 may be included with controller 150. Moreover, measurement devices 148 may include a microprocessor that performs the calculations specific to the measurement of motion with the calculation results being used by controller 150.
In an illustrative embodiment, laundry items are loaded into basket 70, and washing operation is initiated through operator manipulation of control input selectors 60 (shown in
Referring now to
As may be seen in
A spring 172 or other biasing mechanism extends between cylinder 166 and piston assembly 170 within interior volume 168 of cylinder 166. Spring 172 biases or urges piston assembly 170 and rod 160 towards toward an equilibrium position, e.g., by resisting compression relative to the equilibrium position. In addition, spring 172 provides sub-washer unit 65 rocking motion degrees of freedom, supports sub-washer unit 65 within apron 52, and assists with coupling cylinder 166 to rod 160.
Piston assembly 170 may compress gases, such as air, within interior volume 168 of cylinder 166 during motion of sub-washer unit 65 relative to apron 52. In addition, friction between components of piston assembly 170 and an inner surface 174 of cylinder 166 provides damping of the motion of sub-washer unit 65 relative to apron 52 during motion of piston assembly 170 within cylinder 166. It should be appreciated that damper 144 is described herein only for the purpose of explaining aspects of the present subject matter. Alternative damping systems and configurations may be used while remaining within the scope of the present subject matter.
Referring now to
In addition, a stroke length (indicated by reference numeral 182) of the sinusoidal profile is measured along the X-direction between a peak and an adjacent trough, e.g., twice the amplitude of the stroke from an equilibrium position (indicated by reference numeral 184). By using measurement device 148 to obtain the movement of damper 144 as illustrated in
For example, the amount of energy dissipated in a damper is a function of the normal force, the displacement, and the speed or frequency of the damper movement. In this regard, higher frequencies 180 and higher stroke lengths 182 result in higher energy dissipation, while lower frequencies 180 and lower stroke lengths 182 result in lower energy dissipation. For example, according to exemplary embodiments of the present subject matter, the dissipation of energy in damper 144 may be characterized as the total force exerted on damper 144 times the velocity of damper 144 (i.e., the derivative of the displacement illustrated in
The total force exerted on damper 144 may be a function of a damper force, e.g., the force used to drive damper 144 and sub-washer unit 65 to the equilibrium position 184. In this regard, for example, the force the damper 144 exerts is the product of a damping coefficient and the velocity. The damping coefficient will be a function of the normal force exerted on inner surface 174 of cylinder 166, materials, temperature, surface condition, etc. A frictional force generated between piston assembly 170 and inner surface 174 of cylinder 166, as well as hydraulic damping may contribute to the total force exerted on damper 144. For example, when sub-washer unit 65 moves down, spring 172 compresses and the damper friction opposes further compression. By contrast, when sub-washer unit 65 moves up, spring 172 extends and the damper friction opposes further extension. These values may be used by controller 150 in determining the amount of energy dissipated by each damper 144.
Referring now to
A method 200 may, for example, include the step 210 of monitoring a movement and a rotational speed of the sub-washer unit using the measurement device. In some embodiments, step 210 includes using an accelerometer attached to the sub-washer unit to measure the acceleration and rotation at a single location on the sub-washer unit, as described above. According to exemplary embodiments, monitoring the movement of the sub-washer unit comprises calculating a displacement of the sub-washer unit proximate the at least one damper using the movement measured by the measurement device and the relative location of the measurement device to the damper. More specifically, the measurement device measures the movement of the sub-washer unit at a first location and trigonometry is used to calculate the displacement of the damper (e.g., as illustrated in
However, it should be appreciated that other methods of monitoring the motion of the sub-washer unit are contemplated and within the scope of the present subject matter. For example, other measurement methods may include measuring the back electromagnetic force (EMF) through an inverter and using that value to calculate motion (as opposed to using a dedicated measurement device). In such an embodiment, the measurement device may simply be the drive motor of the washing machine appliance.
Method 200 may further include, for example, the step 220 of calculating an amount of energy dissipated in at least one of the plurality of dampers as a result of the movement of the sub-washer unit. For example, according to exemplary embodiments, calculating the amount of energy dissipated in a damper comprises obtaining a measurement of or using a predetermined value for force and multiplying the force by a derivative of the displacement of the sub-washer unit proximate the damper. The amount of energy dissipated may be either a rate of energy dissipation or a cumulative amount of energy dissipation over an operating cycle of the washing machine appliance.
Method 200 may further include, at step 230, determining that the amount of energy dissipated has exceeded a predetermined energy threshold. The predetermined energy threshold may be determined by the controller, entered by the manufacturer, or determined based on a temperature of the dampers during operation. For example, the manufacturer or user may set the predetermined energy threshold based on recommendations or ratings provided by the manufacturer of the damper, such that fatigue and/or failure of the dampers will not occur.
Method 200 may further include, at step 240, adjusting the operation of the washing machine appliance in response to determining that the amount of energy dissipated has exceeded the predetermined energy threshold. For example, adjusting the operation of the washing machine appliance may include adjusting a rotational speed of the wash basket during spin according to an exemplary embodiment. In this regard, by operating the motor assembly to slow down the rotational speed of the wash basket, the frequency of wobble, and thus the velocity of the dampers will be decreased.
In addition, or alternatively, adjusting the operation of the washing machine appliance may include taking measures to redistribute the load of clothing articles such that the load imbalances and resulting wobble during spin cycles are reduced or eliminated. For example, the motor assembly may be operated to redistribute the load of clothes within the wash basket or a user can manually redistribute the clothes. In this manner, the magnitude of displacement may be reduced, resulting in less cyclic stress and heat build-up. In addition, according to another embodiment, a cool down pause in spin may be another option to mitigate overheating.
According to exemplary embodiments, the controller may be configured to provide a user of the washing machine appliance 50 with an indication that the amount of energy dissipated has exceeded the predetermined threshold. For instance, controller 150 may transmit a warning signal to control panel 58 and/or display 61, e.g., via one or more wired connections or busses. At the user interface an audio and/or visual alert signal may be generated. Additionally or alternatively, the warning signal may be transmitted to a secondary device, such as a remote computer, tablet, or smart phone (not pictured), (e.g., via one or more wireless connection protocol). When this indication or warning signal is received, the user may manually redistribute the load and restart the wash cycle. In further embodiments, if excessive wobble is detected (e.g., resulting in the amount of energy dissipated exceeding the predetermined threshold), the rotation of the basket 70 may be halted until corrective action is taken.
As described above, measurement device 148 and method 200 are used to determine the displacement of one or more dampers 144, and the amount of energy dissipated by those dampers 144 is calculated. Limits are placed on the energy dissipation to ensure safe and reliable operation of suspension system 140. However, it should be appreciated that aspects of the present subject matter may be used to control or limit cyclic stresses placed on any structure or component of washing machine appliance 50. In this regard for example, by measuring the movement of sub-washer unit 65 using measurement device 148, the movement of any other remote location on sub-washer unit 65 may be determined and stresses resulting from that movement may be calculated. Similar cyclic stress thresholds may be applied to limit the amount of stress experience by that remote structure or component. Other beneficial applications of the present disclosure will be apparent to those of skill in the art.
This written description uses examples to disclose the invention, including the best mode, and also to enable any person skilled in the art to practice the invention, including making and using any devices or systems and performing any incorporated methods. The patentable scope of the invention is defined by the claims, and may include other examples that occur to those skilled in the art. Such other examples are intended to be within the scope of the claims if they include structural elements that do not differ from the literal language of the claims, or if they include equivalent structural elements with insubstantial differences from the literal languages of the claims.
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