Bearing housing and its applications
11754123 · 2023-09-12
Assignee
Inventors
- Jiakai LIU (Shanghai, CN)
- Weiguang Cao (Changshu, CN)
- Zongkang Xu (Suzhou, CN)
- Weifei Geng (Shanghai, CN)
Cpc classification
F16C35/067
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C2322/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C33/36
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C33/723
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C13/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C2300/54
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C37/007
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C23/086
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B22D11/1287
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A bearing housing is provided with a cooling channel in at least part of the circumference around the bearing. The cooling channel is provided with a flow guide member at least in part of its flow section to construct a tortuous passage whose flow distance is longer than the corresponding circumferential length of the flow section. On the basis of the above-mentioned bearing housing, the present invention also provides a bearing housing unit, a continuous casting roll line and a continuous casting machine that use the bearing housing. The above-mentioned bearing housing adopts an optimized cooling channel design, which can obtain a better cooling effect without changing other structures of the bearing housing. Therefore, it is particularly suitable for upgrading existing equipment and has a huge cost advantage and a wide range of application prospects.
Claims
1. A bearing housing comprising: a cooling channel extending around a circumferential length of the bearing housing, the cooling channel being defined by a top surface and a bottom surface, the cooling channel comprising: flow guide members configured to construct a tortuous passage, the flow guide members comprising a radial height being at least 50% but less than 100% of a height of the cooling channel as measured in a radial direction between the top surface and the bottom surface, wherein the tortuous passage comprises a flow distance, the flow distance being longer than the circumferential length; wherein the flow guide members are configured such that the tortuous passage extends substantially in a serpentine shape along the circumferential length.
2. A bearing housing comprising: a cooling channel extending around a circumferential length of the bearing housing, the cooling channel being defined by a top surface and a bottom surface, the cooling channel comprising: flow guide members configured to construct a tortuous passage, the flow guide members comprising a radial height being at least 50% but less than 100% of a height of the cooling channel as measured in a radial direction between the top surface and the bottom surface, wherein the tortuous passage comprises a flow distance, the flow distance being longer than the circumferential length; wherein the flow guide members are arranged at intervals along the circumferential length, so as to construct the tortuous passage through a distributed arrangement thereof.
3. The bearing housing according to claim 2, wherein the flow guide members comprise: a first group, the first group comprising a first portion of the flow guide members that axially abuts a first side edge of the cooling channel, and a first plurality of free ends defined by being axially opposite the first portion of the flow guide members; and a second group, the second group comprising a second portion of the flow guide members that axially abuts a second side edge of the cooling channel, and a second plurality of free ends are positioned axially opposite the first portion, the second portion of the flow guide members; wherein the first plurality of free ends extends past a axial center line of the cooling chamber, and the second plurality of free ends extends past the radially center line of the cooling chamber.
4. The bearing housing according to claim 1, wherein the flow guide members are formed integrally with at least one of the top surface and the bottom surface.
5. The bearing housing according to claim 4, wherein a part of the flow guide members exposed to the cooling fluid is sloped and/or rounded.
6. The bearing housing according to claim 4, wherein the flow guide members are formed integrally with only one of the top surface and the bottom surface.
7. A bearing housing unit comprising: a bearing housing comprising a cooling channel, the cooling channel extending around a circumferential length of the bearing housing, the cooling channel being defined by a first axial side edge and a second axial side edge which both extend entirely circumferentially along the circumferential length; a flow guide member being positioned between the first axial side edge and the second axial side edge and configured to construct a tortuous passage, wherein the tortuous passage comprises a flow distance being longer than the circumferential length, the tortuous passage abutting the first axial side edge and the second axial side edge; and a rolling bearing being arranged in the bearing housing.
8. A continuous casting machine comprising: a continuous casting roll line, the continuous casting roll line further comprising a bearing housing unit, the bearing housing unit comprising: a bearing housing comprising a cooling channel extending around a circumferential length of the bearing housing, the cooling channel being defined by a first axial side edge and a second axial side edge which both extend entirely circumferentially along the circumferential length; a flow guide member being positioned between the first axial side edge and the second axial side edge and configured to construct a tortuous passage, the tortuous passage abutting the first axial side edge and the second axial side edge, wherein the tortuous passage comprises a flow distance being longer than the circumferential length, and a rolling bearing being arranged in the bearing housing.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
(8) In the following description, terms indicating directions, such as “axial”, “radial” and “circumferential direction”, unless otherwise specified or delimited, refer to the axial, radial and circumferential directions of the cage or the bearing to which the cage belongs.
(9) As mentioned above, the technical efforts intended to improve the cooling effect by “expanding/enlarging” the cooling channel is limited by the overall radial size of the continuous casting roll line, and so it is difficult to further improve the cooling performance of the cooling channel to a greater extent. This prompted the inventor to further consider the essence of the heat exchange problems from the perspective of thermodynamics. Theoretically, the heat exchange efficiency of a cooling channel mainly depends on the water flow velocity and the area of the cooling channel exposed to water which participates in the heat exchange. When the heat exchange area is basically the same, the water flow velocity becomes a factor that has a decisive influence on the heat exchange efficiency.
(10)
(11) According to the conservation of flow (also known as the “hypothesis of fluid continuity”), the inflow and outflow of a fluid without compressibility through a channel at any time should be equal. Therefore, with the above-mentioned diversion flow design, the flow velocity of the water in the tortuous passage S should greatly exceed the flow velocity of the water in the cooling channel when the diversion flow is not adopted. Therefore, the greatly increased flow velocity can significantly improve the heat exchange efficiency of the water in the cooling channel.
(12)
(13) Alternatively, in the solutions B and C shown in
(14) From a geometrical point of view, the structural complexity of the cooling channel will generally cause an increase in the internal heat exchange area. Still taking solutions B and C shown in
(15) In the technical solutions B and C shown in
(16) As a further preferred embodiment, the part of the flow guide members exposed to the water is preferably sloped and/or rounded, so as to avoid an obtrusive shape that causes more resistance to the water flow. The so-called sloping is to make the surface washed by the water flow into a shape similar to the slope of a dike to reduce the resistance of the fluid when it passes. By the way, part of the resistance encountered by the fluid flowing in a pipeline (referred to as “pipe resistance”) comes from the resistance generated by the internal friction of the fluid (also known as the “along-path resistance”), and the other part comes from the resistance of the pipeline shape to the fluid (referred to as “physical resistance”). Pipe resistance is the root cause of energy loss and pressure loss when a fluid flows in a pipeline. Therefore, the above-mentioned optimized design is beneficial to reduce the power loss and head loss of the water pump caused by the pipe resistance.
(17) The specific embodiment in which the two sets of guide members 2a and 2b form a tortuous passage through axial staggering are described above with reference to
(18) Although water is used as a refrigerant for heat exchange in the existing continuous casting roll cooling systems, it is easy to understand that other types of refrigerants, such as ammonia, freon, etc., can also be guided by the guide members to flow in the tortuous passage, by means of which the objective of the present invention can also be achieved. In other words, the function of the tortuous passage is universal, which has nothing to do with the type of refrigerant.
(19) From the above description it can be seen that the bearing housing adopting the above-mentioned improved design is particularly suitable for forming a bearing unit with the bearing to support the continuous casting roll line thereby meeting the requirements of a continuous casting machine for higher cooling performance. Not only that, but the bearing housing is also suitable for supporting all bearings and/or shaft systems with cooling requirements.
(20) Those skilled in the art should understand that the bearing housing and its applications are not limited by the above specific embodiments. More general technical solutions will be subject to the limitations in the appended claims. For any changes and improvements of the present invention, as long as they meet the limitations of the appended claims, they fall within the protection scope of the present invention.