Bearing Bush for a Rotating Shaft, Bearing Shield, Electric Motor and Method for Manufacturing a Damping Element
20220275830 · 2022-09-01
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B33Y10/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F16C2240/60
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H02K5/14
ELECTRICITY
F16F7/01
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C2220/24
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B22F5/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F10/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F16C17/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B33Y80/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F16C2240/44
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C33/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C2240/90
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C33/208
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C2350/54
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F16C17/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C17/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C23/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C33/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C33/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C33/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
Various teachings herein may be used to make a bearing bush for a rotating shaft, wherein a wall of the bearing bush has a wall thickness which amounts to less than 10% of the diameter of the bearing bush. In the axial direction, the bearing bush is made from a plurality of layers connected with a material bond. Each layer has a layer thickness between 10 μm and 200 μm and the wall has closed cavities which are filled with a powder.
Claims
1. A bearing bush for a rotating shaft, the bearing brush comprising: a plurality of layers stacked along a longitudinal axis of the bearing brush, wherein each layer has a thickness along the longitudinal axis between 10 μm and 200 μm; wherein the individual layers are connected to adjacent layers with a material bond, forming a wall with a wall thickness less than 10% of a diameter of the bearing bush measured transverse to the longitudinal axis; and the wall includes closed cavities filled with a powder.
2. The bearing bush as claimed in claim 1, wherein the cavities have a maximum cross-section less than 5 mm.sup.2.
3. The bearing bush as claimed in claim 1, wherein the cavities have a maximum cross-section less than 3 mm.sup.2.
4. The bearing bush as claimed in claim 1, wherein the cavities have a powder fill level of at least 60%.
5. The bearing bush as claimed in claim 1, wherein the cavities have a powder fill level of at least 80%.
6. The bearing bush as claimed in claim 1, wherein the individual layers comprise a metal alloy.
7. The bearing bush as claimed in claim 1, wherein the individual layers comprise an iron alloy.
8. The bearing bush as claimed in claim 1, wherein the powder in the cavities comprises a first material with a higher melting temperature than a second material of the individual layers.
9. The bearing bush as claimed in claim 8, the first material has a higher density than the second material.
10. An electric motor comprising: a rotor; a stator; and a bearing shield with a bearing brush comprising: a plurality of layers stacked along a longitudinal axis of the bearing brush, wherein each layer has a thickness along the longitudinal axis between 10 μm and 200 μm; wherein the individual layers are connected to adjacent layers with a material bond, forming a wall with a wall thickness less than 10% of a diameter of the bearing bush measured transverse to the longitudinal axis; and the wall includes closed cavities filled with a powder.
11. A method for manufacturing a damping element with a screen printing method, the method comprising: printing a first subregion of a first layer with a first screen printing paste; printing a second subregion of the first layer with a second screen printing paste, wherein the second subregion in the layer plane is enclosed by the first subregion; drying the first layer; continuing to print further layers until a three-dimensional green body is formed, wherein the second subregions of the layers form a volume enclosed by the first subregions; and carrying out a thermal treatment process at a process temperature, thereby sintering the first screen printing paste; wherein the process temperature is too low to sinter the second printing paste.
12. The method as claimed in claim 11, wherein the first screen printing paste comprises iron.
13. The method as claimed in claim 11, further comprising debinding the three-dimensional green body before carrying out the thermal treatment process.
14. The method as claimed in claim 11, wherein the damping element comprises a bearing bush.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0024] Further features of various embodiments of the teachings herein are explained in more detail on the basis of the following figures. This involves purely exemplary embodiments, which do not represent a restriction to the scope of the disclosure. The drawings show:
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
[0034]
[0035]
[0036]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0037] The teachings of the present disclosure may be incorporating in a bearing bush for a rotating shaft comprising a wall, which has a wall thickness which amounts to less than 10% of the diameter of the bearing bush. The bearing bush is characterized in that in the axial direction it is established from a plurality of layers which are connected in a material bonded manner. Each of these layers has a layer thickness which lies between 80 μm and 300 μm. Furthermore, the wall has closed cavities which are filled with a powder.
[0038] The described bearing bush therefore has a very thin wall, in relation to the overall diameter of the bearing bush, said wall being established by way of discrete, material-bonded layers. These material-bonded layers can be established by means of an additive manufacturing method, in particular by means of a screen printing method in the described layer thickness. The screen printing method is suited to realizing cavities with a powder filling in a very narrow wall as an additive manufacturing method. Here this powder filling in the closed cavities brings about a strong pronounced damping behavior, which in turn is used to reduce the described vibrations and the acoustic phenomenon produced in the process, as well as the structure-borne sound of the component. The reduction is carried out here without measures which result in a higher gap dimension, such as e.g. the O-ring seals described in the prior art. Here the described bearing bush is generally a damping element, which can basically also be used at other vibration-loaded points in mechanically functional devices. The arrangement of the described bearing bush in a bearing shield, which is used as a cover shield of a housing of an electric motor, is particularly useful. Here the shaft of a rotor is guided into the motor housing through the bearing shield and the bearing bush. In this respect, the electric motor, which comprises the bearing shield with the described bearing bush, is also part of the invention.
[0039] In some embodiments, the bearing bush has cavities, which have a maximum cross-section which is less than 5 mm.sup.2, in particular less than 3 mm.sup.2. Here the term of the maximum cross-section is understood to mean the cut through a cavity in a sectional image which has the maximum possible size. Attempts are generally made also to configure the maximum cross-section to be smaller than 3 mm.sup.2, wherein a defined cross-section through a cavity with an even smaller cross-section is more complex in terms of manufacture.
[0040] A geometrically measured powder fill level of the cavity amounts here at least to 60%, to 80%, and/or to 90%. Attempts are made to configure the fill level to be as high as possible, which, in manufacturing terms, in each case indicates a technical challenge. With the description of the method, the technical realization of the fill level or the filling of the cavities with powder is described in more detail. The geometrically measured fill level is understood here to mean the level of filling of the cavity, which effects the filling as a result of powder spillage. The fact that a small hollow in the order of magnitude of particles is present in each case between the individual particles of the powder filler means that the specification of the fill level remains unconsidered.
[0041] A metal alloy, in particular a metal alloy based on iron or an alloy comprising iron is used as the bearing bush or the bearing bush wall. An alloy of this type can be manufactured on the one hand in a practical way by the already described useful screen printing method or by another additive manufacturing method and can be reinforced in a suitable form by a thermal treatment process in the form of a sintering process.
[0042] The powder which is arranged in the cavities here comprises in turn a material, which has a higher melting point than the material of the wall structure. If the wall structure consists as already described, for instance, of a metal based on iron, it is then expedient to configure the powder on a tungsten basis, for instance. During manufacture this is advantageous for instance in that the wall structure of the bearing bush can be shown by a sintering process or another corresponding thermal treatment process, while the material introduced there inside the cavities does not melt or sinter. With the example of tungsten, it is also still clear that in a further embodiment, the powder in the cavities also has a higher density than the material of the wall structure. This brings about still higher damping properties than a material with a lower density.
[0043] In some embodiments, there is a method for manufacturing a damping element, such as, for instance, the described bearing bush. The following steps may be carried out here by means of a screen printing method:
[0044] A first subregion of a first layer is firstly printed with a first screen printing paste. Furthermore, a second subregion of the first layer is printed with a second screen printing paste. Here the second subregion is designed so that in the respective layer plane it is enclosed by the first subregion. In the structure of several layers which follow one above the other, this results in volume regions (volumes) which are filled with the second screen printing paste. Furthermore, a drying step of the first layer follows, wherein this drying step can also be divided into two sub steps, wherein a drying step firstly takes place after the first subregion is printed and a further drying step takes place after the second subregion is printed.
[0045] This described printing process of a first and the second subregion is continued successively and further layers are produced in the process until a three-dimensional green body is formed. In this green body, as mentioned, the second subregions of the layers form a volume enclosed by the first subregions. Furthermore, a thermal treatment process is carried out, which has a process temperature which brings about a sintering process of a material of the first screen printing paste and with the material of the second screen printing paste, the sintering process is essentially absent at the process temperature.
[0046] In some embodiments, a plurality of volumes is produced by the method, said volumes being enclosed in the green body by a material of the first regions. This material of the first regions, which is established on an iron basis, for instance, encloses the volumes, by the material of the second regions being present, for instance a tungsten alloy. By means of the described thermal treatment process or sintering process, the material of the first regions, in other words an iron alloy, for instance, is sintered to form a self-supporting structure, a wall structure of the damping element, for instance the bearing bush.
[0047] The material of the second regions, which form the described volumes, does not sinter or only sinters to a minimal degree at the described process temperature. With a significant movement of the damping element, the material of the second regions breaks down to form a powder. After the thermal treatment process, the volumes of the green body form the cavities of the damping element (in particular the bearing bush) filled with powder. This powder in the cavities has a marked damping influence on the strong vibration-loaded components.
[0048] Basically, after manufacturing the green body by means of the described screen printing method, a debinding process is incorporated before the thermal treatment process (sintering process) described, which is preferably generally likewise a thermal process. In this regard, binding means of the screen printing pastes are burned out by means of thermal decomposition, for instance. The temperatures during the thermal treatment process for debinding are generally below the temperatures for thermal treatment for the sintering process. Here the debinding or sintering process is to be controlled so that all components of the second screen printing paste which are volatile up to the maximum sintering temperature were completely removed from wall regions of the first material which are no longer permeable for gases up to the point in time of their formation.
[0049] An overview display of an electric motor 30 is shown in
[0050] As already described, with electrical machines such as the electric motor 30 shown in
[0051] This frequently results in resonant natural oscillations of the shaft 4 and the rotor 58 and in a high dynamic excitation and forwarding of mechanical shock events with relative movements in the region of a few μm within the bearing and the bearing bush 2 surrounding the bearing. These relative movements are in turn forwarded into the housing 62 in the form of mechanical oscillations, wherein vibrations and acoustic phenomena may result, in other words a significant noise development. Against the background of this problem, it is described below how the bearing bush 2 can be designed in the form of a damping element 32, so that the described oscillations are not forwarded to such an extent into the bearing shield 28 and furthermore into the housing 62. This in turn results in vibrations and unwanted acoustic phenomena on the electric motor 30 being reduced or prevented.
[0052] To this end, the bearing bush 2, as shown in
[0053]
[0054] A cut V and VI from
[0055] In some embodiments, the cavities 16 are filled as high as possible with the powder 18. A powder fill level 24 is produced here, which is shown in
[0056] The described bearing bush 2 or the damping element 32 may be used to damp oscillations which are introduced into the bearing shield 28 or the housing 62 via the rotor axis 4. Here, however, with the layered structure and through the cavities filled with powder with a very small wall thickness, high demands are placed on the manufacturing technique of the bearing bush 2. A suitable manufacturing method, which enables the high demands on the bearing bush 2, is described in more detail.
[0057] Here
[0058] To this end, as shown in
[0059] In
[0060]
[0061] A drying process of this type can last 5 seconds, for instance. If a further drying step is carried out after the first subregion 36 is dried and the second subregion 42 is printed, a layer can therefore be printed in 15-20 seconds. With a conventional layer thickness of 100 μm, it is possible to establish a green body 48 with a height of 1 mm in approx. 200 seconds. This is the layer thickness which is applied during printing. This differs from the layer thickness 14, which was defined in relation to the bearing bush, wherein generally a shrinking at a sintering process of 20% vol is to be calculated. The described manufacturing time represents an above average high production speed for an additive manufacturing method.
[0062] Furthermore, the materials for generating the green body 48 or the bearing bush 2 are to be detailed again. It is expedient to use a material based on iron for the first screen printing paste. Corresponding powders of the material to be manufactured, in other words for instance a powder of an iron alloy, are provided with suitable organic or also inorganic binding means, so that a rheologically favorable screen printing paste is produced. The first screen printing paste may include particles made from iron powder (generally an iron alloy), so that the wall structure 26 of the bearing bush 2 is furthermore essentially based on iron.
[0063] The second screen printing paste 44, which is pressed into the second sub regions 42, comprises here a functional portion of a material, which has a high damping effect on the one side, in other words possibly also a high density, and in the process has a sintering temperature or a melting temperature, which is higher than that of the iron alloy used. The need for this is explained again below with respect to the description of
[0064] The green body 48 described in
[0065] According to the thermal treatment process 52 shown in
LIST OF REFERENCE CHARACTERS
[0066] 2 bearing bush [0067] 4 rotating shaft [0068] 6 wall of the bearing bush [0069] 8 wall thickness [0070] 10 bearing bush diameter [0071] 12 layers [0072] 14 layer thickness [0073] 16 cavities [0074] 18 powder [0075] 20 axial direction [0076] 21 radial direction [0077] 22 cavity cross-section [0078] 24 powder fill level [0079] 26 wall structure [0080] 28 bearing shield [0081] 30 electric motor [0082] 32 damping element [0083] 34 screen printing method [0084] 36 first subregion [0085] 38 first layer [0086] 40 first screen printing paste [0087] 42 second subregion [0088] 44 second screen printing paste [0089] 46 further layers [0090] 48 green body [0091] 50 volume [0092] 52 thermal treatment process [0093] 54 debinding process [0094] 58 rotor [0095] 60 stator [0096] 62 housing [0097] 64 screen [0098] 66 scraper [0099] 68 substrate