LINEAR ACTUATOR COMPRISING A SHAPE MEMORY ALLOY COIL SPRING OPERATING AT LOW ELECTRICAL POWER
20220042498 · 2022-02-10
Assignee
Inventors
- Marco CITRO (Varese VA, IT)
- Luca FUMAGALLI (Muggiò MB, IT)
- Matteo ZANELLA (Olgiate Olona VA, IT)
- Michele SCARLATA (Caronno Pertusella, IT)
Cpc classification
F03G7/06145
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03G7/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03G7/065
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
The present invention relates to linear actuators comprising an electrically-controlled shape memory alloy coil spring (23) suitable to provide linear displacements in valves, switches, lock systems and provided with a crimped terminal at each extremity, each of said crimped terminals comprising a crimping component (21) and an engaging member (22) suitable to mount the spring (23) into the linear actuator. The invention further discloses the use of said spring (23) with particular geometrical characteristics and crimping system assuring the maximization of the available stroke and fatigue life, structural simplicity, low electrical power requirements and thermal inertia, small size.
Claims
1. A linear actuator comprising an electrically-controlled shape memory alloy coil spring that has an external diameter (D) and is made with a shape memory alloy coiled wire having a thickness (T), a ratio (Φ) between said external diameter (D) and said wire thickness (T) being comprised between 4 and 10, said coil spring being provided with a crimped terminal at each extremity, each of said crimped terminals comprising a crimping component, that is deformed and crimped on the terminal portion of the coil spring, and a fitting portion suitable to mount the coil spring into the linear actuator that is provided with corresponding engagement means, wherein said fitting portion (22b) is formed on a separate engaging member of the crimped terminal, said engaging member comprising a connection portion configured in size and material to be fitted in said terminal portion of the coil spring and to keep it undeformed when the terminal is crimped.
2. A linear actuator according to claim 1, wherein the external diameter (D) is comprised between 0.1 and 10 mm.
3. A linear actuator according to claim 1, wherein the wire thickness (T) is comprised between 0.025 and 1 mm.
4. A linear actuator according to claim 1, wherein said coil spring has a number of turns comprised between 2 and 240.
5. A linear actuator according to claim 1, wherein the crimping component comprises a tubular body having an internal diameter equal to or greater than the outer diameter (D) of the coil spring.
6. A linear actuator according to claim 5, wherein said tubular body is made by a tube or a pre-formed metal strip.
7. A linear actuator according to claim 5, wherein said tubular body is provided with a conical flaring at its distal end toward the engaging member and/or at its proximal end toward the coil springs.
8. A linear actuator according to claim 1, wherein the fitting portion has a hook shape, or an L shape, or a nail shape, or a spherical shape, or a square holed shape.
9. A linear actuator according to claim 1, wherein the shape memory alloy coiled wire is coated with a material selected from a polyurethane, a silicone, a metal, a lacquer, a paint, and a microencapsulated phase change material.
10. A device comprising a linear actuator according to claim 1, wherein it comprises a movable element that is connected to an extremity of the shape memory alloy coil spring that is linearly arranged.
11. A device comprising a linear actuator according to claim 1, wherein it comprises a movable element that is connected to a middle portion of the shape memory alloy coil spring that is mounted in a U-shape or V-shape configuration.
12. The device according to claim 10, said device being a locking device, a door closing switch, or a fluidic valve.
Description
[0014] The invention will be illustrated with the help of the following figures:
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019] In the above-referenced figures only the essential elements for understanding the invention have been illustrated, ancillary components such as a current supply source have not been shown since they are ordinary means known in the technical field. Moreover, element dimensions and dimensional ratios in some cases have been altered to improve their readability, with particular but not exclusive reference to the SMA wire diameter.
[0020] The invention is not limited to any specific shape memory alloy material, even though preferred are Ni—Ti based alloys, such as the alloy commonly known with the trade name of Nitinol, whose basic properties are described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,830,262. The newer and improved shape memory alloys described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 8,152,941 and 8,430,981 in the name of SAES Smart Materials may also be employed.
[0021] In particular the term Ni—Ti based shape memory alloy encompasses shape memory alloys with a preponderant content of nickel and titanium (at least 60 atomic percent, at %), as additional elements may impart different properties such as lower hysteresis in case of Ni—Ti—Cu alloys, described for example in U.S. Pat. No. 4,565,589, or higher transformation temperature as in the case of Ni—Ti—Hf alloys, described for example in U.S. Pat. No. 5,114,504.
[0022] The present invention consists in a linear actuator comprising a SMA coil spring with particular geometrical characteristics and means for connecting to the driven element. In fact, the inventors have found that a coil spring having the ratio (Φ) between the external diameter (D) of the coil spring and the thickness (T) of the coiled wire comprised between 4 and 10 can be advantageously used in linear actuators when its terminal portions are crimped in a novel way suitable to improve the number of life cycles
[0023] If ratio Φ is lower than 4 the spring has been found unsuitable to achieve the desired stroke and actuation speed because the wire is too thick and has a high thermal inertia, whereas when this ratio is higher than 10 the low strength of the spring limits the advantages of the spring for solenoid replacement because the wire is too thin to provide an adequate force.
[0024]
[0025] The comparison between the unactuated state A and the actuated state B of
[0026] The external diameter D is preferably comprised between 0.1 and 10 mm, the wire thickness T is preferably comprised between 0.025 and 1 mm and the number of turns of spring 11 is preferably comprised between 2 and 240. The coiled SMA wire used to manufacture the spring can be optionally coated with a different material, for example polyurethane, silicone, metal, lacquer, paint, microencapsulated phase change material. In this case, for the measurement of the external diameter D and wire thickness T the coating contribution to the respective sections of the spring and wire must not be considered, i.e. the sections have to be evaluated with reference to their core made of SMA material.
[0027] As the main technical feature of the present invention, shown in
[0028]
[0029] More specifically, the diameter of the connection portion 22a of the inner part is substantially equal to the inner diameter d of spring 23, while the internal diameter of the tubular body 21a of the outer part is equal to or greater than the outer diameter D of spring 23. The outer part (crimping component 21) properly deformed and crimped both on the terminal portion of spring 23 and on the inner part (engaging member 22) allows the overall system to be handled and used without relative movements among its parts, with the inner part being responsible to keep spring 23 undeformed only in correspondence with the outer part. To this purpose, the inner part is usually made of a material that must be harder than the outer part, such as steel, although also the outer part could be made of steel if its thickness allows the required deformation (even if softer materials are preferable).
[0030] As mentioned above, the hook-shaped engaging member 22 is suitable to facilitate the mounting of spring 23 into a linear actuator of a device that is provided with corresponding engagement means, and similarly
[0031] Even if in the above description the working principle of the present invention has been explained with reference to a linear configuration of the spring, in a second possible embodiment (not shown in the drawings) said spring can be mounted in the final device resulting in a “V” shape or a “U” shape. In these alternatives, the linear displacement of a moving element is assured by its connection to the middle portion of the spring rather than to one of its extremities.
[0032] The comparison between a wire and a spring suitable to give evidence of the advantage of the spring according to the invention for wire or solenoid replacement in linear actuators by use of a low electrical power supply can be carried out by setting the same working force and the same installation length, and feeding the proper current to actuate both the straight wire and the coil spring. A dedicated testing equipment has been used, composed by a very stiff aluminum hyperstatic frame to guarantee a correct measurement of the wire/spring deformation since such frame allows to keep restrained the SMA element (wire and spring) and to feed current thereto, as well as to load it with a constant load or a bias spring.
[0033] Thanks to an internally designed electronics, such testing equipment allows the measurement of different parameters for a SMA element such as the stroke, the feeding current, the actuation time, the number of cycles for the fatigue characterization. The stroke is measured by using a laser, and it can be verified that the stroke obtained with a spring according to the present invention is up to the 12% of its length whereas a wire assures values limited to about 3%.
[0034] A similar approach was used for the comparison between a linear solenoid and a SMA spring according to the present invention, by starting from the performance of the linear solenoid and then designing a SMA spring that can perform the same mechanical work. The previous testing equipment has been modified in order to allow the solenoid feeding so as to guarantee the proper feeding both of the linear solenoid (12V) and of the SMA spring (variable depending on its length), and thus measure the real feeding current, the voltage powering the SMA spring and the actuation time. The mechanical work is obtained by imposing a steady force to the moving part of the solenoid and powering the device at 12 V, with two end stoppers which impose the same stroke that is equal to the distance between them, whereby the product of the force by the stroke is the mechanical work.
[0035] The comparison has been made on the weight and size of the two actuators and on the electrical power needed by them to perform the same mechanical function, with the result that a SMA coil spring can allow to obtain several advantages when compared to a solenoid. In fact, a significant reduction of weight and volume can be achieved, both by more than 90%, as well as a great reduction of the electrical power to be used for its actuation, namely more than 50% and up to 90% less than the power required by the solenoid.
[0036] Hereinafter, the invention will be explained in more detail with reference to the following non-limiting examples, with the aim to give evidence of the advantage of the spring crimped according to the invention in comparison with the commonly used crimping system.
[0037] The present crimping system includes a rigid part, which constitutes the non-deformable core, inserted inside the turns located at the two ends of the spring, such that said turns are compressed/constrained between the rigid core and an external tube made of deformable material. Traditional crimping causes deformation of the turns located at the ends of the spring with the consequence that, compared to the crimping system according to the invention, with the same load and stroke conditions, fatigue life is shorter.
[0038] Linear fatigue tests were conducted on stations whose set-up is as follows: a first end of the spring is anchored to the upper fixed part of the station structure, the second end is connected to a first end of the steel bias spring by means of a mechanical component that can only slide vertically with low friction and the second end of the steel bias spring is connected to the station's fixed structure. The mechanical component that connects the two springs has a cold stopper and allows to detect the stroke travelled by the spring thanks to a Hall sensor placed on the station structure that detects the magnetic field generated by a permanent magnet which is integral with the mechanical component. The activation of the spring takes place through an electrical impulse commensurate with the stroke and the load of the spring, the cooling time between operating cycles is strictly correlated to the mass of the spring.
[0039] A test was carried on two identical springs with 30 turns, a wire diameter of 0.13 mm and an internal diameter of 0.5 mm by applying 0.5 N of operating force and 4 mm of operating stroke. The spring with this crimping geometry (i.e. rigid internal core) was able to work for more than 100000 cycles, whereas for the spring crimped in the conventional way the fatigue life was shorter than 15000 cycles.
[0040] The use of a linear actuator comprising a SMA coil spring according to the present invention allows to obtain all the above advantages in several devices, for example locking devices, door closing switches or fluidic valves.