COMPLIANT JOINT DRIVE ASSEMBLY
20220260174 · 2022-08-18
Inventors
Cpc classification
F16D1/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16K31/60
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H01B17/58
ELECTRICITY
F16K31/047
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16K31/041
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16K31/055
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D1/101
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F16K31/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16K31/05
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16K31/60
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A dielectric insulating insert assembly arranged to be positioned between a drive shaft and a driven shaft of a motorised drive assembly. The insert includes a body of dielectric material to form an insulating layer and having a non-circular cross-section and configured to engage, respectively, with the drive shaft and the driven shaft in torque transfer engagement, the insulating layer providing a dielectric barrier between the drive shaft and the driven shaft.
Claims
1. A dielectric insulating insert assembly arranged to be positioned between a drive shaft and a driven shaft of a motorised drive assembly, the insert assembly comprising: a body of dielectric material to form an insulating layer and having a non-circular cross-section and configured to engage, respectively, with the drive shaft and the driven shaft in torque transfer engagement, the insulating layer providing a dielectric barrier between the drive shaft and the driven shaft.
2. The insert assembly of claim 1, wherein the insert comprises a sleeve of dielectric material, the assembly further comprising mating interfaces at the drive shaft and the driven shaft shaped to engage with the insert in torque transfer engagement.
3. The insert assembly of claim 2, wherein the sleeve is shaped to define the non-circular cross-section and wherein the mating interfaces comprise a protrusion shaped to correspond to the shape of an interior of the sleeve provided at one of the drive shaft or the driven shaft and a recess shaped to correspond to the shape of an exterior of the sleeve provided at the other of the drive shaft and the driven shaft.
4. The insert assembly of claim 2, wherein the sleeve is shaped to define a plurality of sleeve sections each configured to fit around a corresponding one of a corresponding plurality of protrusions at the mating interface of one of the drive shaft or the driven shaft and to fit into a corresponding one of a corresponding plurality of recesses at the mating interface of the other of the drive shaft and the driven shaft.
5. The insert assembly of claim 4, wherein the insert and the mating interfaces are configured such that an air gap is defined between the drive shaft and the driven shaft when the shafts and the insert are assembled together.
6. The insert assembly of claim 1, wherein the insert comprises a block of dielectric material having the non-circular cross section and having a depth, and wherein the drive shaft and the driven shaft are each provided with a recess to receive the insert in a close fitting arrangement.
7. The insert of claim 6, wherein the insert is shaped to define a plurality of lobes.
8. The insert of claim 7, where the lobes have rounded ends and define, between adjacent loves, a rounded fillet.
9. The insert of claim 8, wherein the rounded ends have a diameter and the fillets have a diameter and the diameter of the fillets is smaller than the diameter of the rounded ends.
10. A ball shaft assembly comprising: a ball shaft, as a driven shaft; and an insert assembly as claimed in claim 1 fitted to the ball shaft.
11. The assembly of claim 10, further comprising a motor arranged to drive the ball shaft via a cam shaft, as a drive shaft, the insert located between and in torque transfer engagement with the ball shaft and the cam shaft.
12. The assembly of claim 10, further comprising: a handle to manually rotate the ball shaft.
13. The assembly of claim 10, wherein the motor is an electric motor.
14. A water supply system including the assembly of claim 10.
15. The water supply system of claim 14, being an aircraft water supply system.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0030]
[0031] The operational part of the valve comprises a ball shaft 10 having a hole 12 therethrough defining a flow passage. In use, the valve is arranged in a water or fluid pipe system such that in a first rotational position of the ball shaft 10, the hole is aligned with a fluid pipe to form a flow passage from the pipe and through the hole 12. To switch off the flow, the ball shaft is rotated e.g. by one quarter turn, so that the hole is no longer aligned with the pipe and, instead, flow from the pipe is blocked by the body 13 of the ball shaft.
[0032] In a motorised ball valve, the ball shaft is rotated by means of an electric motor 1. The electric motor 1 drives a cam shaft 4 which engages with the ball shaft 10. In the example shown (see
[0033] In the event that the motor fails, there is not only the risk of an electrical fault being transmitted to the wet end of the assembly, but there is also the problem that a motor failure will mean that the ball shaft cannot be rotated. In the event of failure of the motor, it may be necessary to change the position of the ball shaft to switch flow on or off. To address this, a manual handle 8 may be provided in close fitting arrangement around the ball shaft so that manual operation of the handle 8 can rotate the ball shaft 10. The handle 8 can be fitted to the ball shaft such that there is a form fitting or frictional engagement between them. Alternatively, a fixing element e.g. a locking pin (not shown) may be provided to secure the handle to the shaft.
[0034] As mentioned above, to provide the required strength and to satisfy other standards such as safety, life and hygiene standards, the various shafts and the key feature will often be made of metal e.g. steel. If there is a problem with the electrics at the motor end of the assembly, these would be transmitted directly to the ball shaft and can cause problems such as electric shocks or arcing. To avoid this problem, the assembly of the present disclosure includes a dielectric insulator insert 20 to be fitted between the ball shaft 10 (or, more generally, driven end) and the electric motor 1 (or, more generally, drive end).
[0035] The dielectric insulation insert is structured to have dielectric properties and is shaped to provide torque transmission from the electric motor 1 to the ball shaft 10. The shape of the insert should be such as to be able to withstand a short torque peak if the ball shaft end is fixed or blocked. To achieve the torque transfer property, the insert is shaped to define lobes or lugs or ribs or the like that engage into corresponding features provided at the ball shaft and the electric motor. The important thing is that the engagement portion has a shape that can engage with the shafts between which it is located in a manner that torque applied to one of the shafts is transferred to the other shaft via the insert.
[0036] The insert according to the disclosure may have different forms, as will be described further below, but it is a discrete component made from a body of dielectric material and has a shape arranged to mate with a corresponding shape on the cam shaft and/or the ball shaft or a bushing 6 provided on the ball shaft 10. The mating structure should be such that any misalignment can be accommodated. The insert is a simple, re-usable component easily manufactured from a readily available starting material which can be appropriately shaped and then easily slotted and secured between the cam shaft (or, more generally drive end) and the ball shaft (or, more generally, driven end) to ensure reliable torque transfer between the ends. In an example, particularly for use in wet or harsh environments, all of the components required for torque transfer are made of steel, particularly stainless steel expect for the dielectric insert 20 which functions as a dielectric barrier between the steel parts.
[0037] Whilst the insert may have different shapes, ideally, to ensure reliable torque transmission, the shape should be such as to define multiple points of engagement, as such a structure has been found to transfer the required torque optimally. The camshaft pushes the insert, and the insert pushes the ball shaft. Multiple forces act on distances to the centre of moment. The total moment is the sum of all these moments produced by the individual forces. Such a shape can be realised as, for example, a shaped sleeve (see below with reference to
[0038] In one example, as shown in
[0039] As shown in
[0040] If the dielectric insert 20 is sized to fit fully within the recess, and not extend beyond the interface, an air gap 17 is also required to complete the dielectric barrier between the cam shaft and the ball shaft, as shown in
[0041] In another example, the recess could be in the cam shaft and the protrusion could be at the interface of the ball shaft.
[0042] The example shows a corrugated sleeve with five corrugations but other designs may have different numbers of corrugations.
[0043] The insert can be quickly and easily fitted and does not require precise alignment, since it will naturally slot into the right shape even if initially located slightly out of alignment. It is therefore impossible to assemble the insert incorrectly.
[0044] In another example, described with reference to
[0045] In another variation, as shown e.g. in
[0046] Other forms of insert, not shown here, can also be envisaged, such as a double-layer sleeve filled with sand or fluid or the like that is not pre-shaped but takes up the shape of the recess/protrusions on assembly.
[0047] The dielectric insulation insert provides electrical insulation between the dry and wet parts of the motorised ball valve assembly whilst ensuring torque transfer between the shafts of the respective parts. The insert must have dielectric properties. Various dielectric materials are known and can be used, for example, but not exclusively, plastic, e.g. PEEK, G10 etc., rubber (EPDM) or aluminium with an oxidised layer on the entire outer surface as a dielectric barrier. The material selected should have superior strength in terms of compression rather than in the tension or shear directions, as the torque is transferred in the compression direction as shown in
[0048] The dielectric barrier and compliant joint drive have been described above in the context of a ball shaft valve assembly. This is only an example of where the dielectric barrier can provide advantages and can find application. The dielectric barrier assembly of this disclosure can, however, find application in other assemblies where torque is transmitted between a drive end and a driven end. The scope of the invention is as defined by the claims.