Steel wire rope, elevator provided with steel wire rope, lubricant for steel wire rope, and use of lubricant for lubricating the steel wire rope
11136713 · 2021-10-05
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B66B9/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C10M125/10
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B66B7/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
D07B5/005
TEXTILES; PAPER
B66B7/1261
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B66B7/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
D07B1/14
TEXTILES; PAPER
B66B9/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B66B7/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A wire rope is disclosed that comprises metal wires, preferably steel wires, as a load-bearing material, which rope comprises at least one or more strands laid from said metal wires and which rope is lubricated with a lubricant. Another object is the use of the aforementioned lubricant for lubricating a steel rope. The lubricant comprises at least oil and powder substance, which powder substance comprises at least particles whose hardness is greater than 4 on the Mohs scale. A traction sheave elevator comprising such a wire rope as a suspension rope is disclosed, too.
Claims
1. A steel wire rope, comprising: one or more strands including steel wires; and a lubricant, the lubricant including an oil and an amount of a powder substance, wherein the lubricant is in a form of paste and the powder substance includes particles having a hardness that is greater than a Mohs Scale hardness of 4.
2. The steel wire rope according to claim 1, wherein the hardness of the particles is equal to or greater than a hardness of a steel of the steel wires of the one or more strands.
3. The steel wire rope according to claim 1, wherein each particle of the particles has an internal aspect ratio that is a ratio of a longest dimension of the particle to a shortest dimension of the particle, and the internal aspect ratio is between 1 and 5.
4. The steel wire rope according to claim 1, wherein a shape of each of the particles is spherical.
5. The steel wire rope according to claim 1, wherein the particles belong to a spinel group of minerals, the spinel group of minerals having crystal forms that are cubic or isometric.
6. The steel wire rope according to claim 1, wherein the powder substance includes manganese (II, III) oxide, Mn.sub.3O.sub.4, and/or manganese (IV) oxide, MnO.sub.2.
7. The steel wire rope according to claim 6, wherein the powder substance is manganese (II, III) oxide, Mn.sub.3O.sub.4, and/or manganese (IV) oxide, MnO.sub.2.
8. The steel wire rope according to claim 1, wherein a particle size of at least some of the particles is greater than an asperity of a contact surface of the steel wire rope and a counter contact surface of the steel wire rope.
9. The steel wire rope according to claim 1, wherein the lubricant includes a binder agent, a proportion of the binder agent in the lubricant being in a range of 0-5 weight-% of an amount of the lubricant.
10. A traction sheave elevator, comprising: an elevator car; and a plurality of suspension ropes, each suspension rope including one or more strands composed of steel wires, wherein the plurality of suspension ropes are led to pass over a traction sheave, the traction sheave provided with a hoisting machine, wherein each suspension rope of the plurality of suspension ropes is lubricated with a lubricant, the lubricant including an oil, and a powder substance, the powder substance including particles, the particles having a hardness that is greater than a Mohs Scale hardness of 4.
11. The traction sheave elevator according to claim 10, wherein each suspension rope includes strands, the strands include wires, and the wires include steel, and the hardness of the particles is equal to or greater than a hardness of the steel of the wires.
12. The traction sheave elevator according to claim 10, wherein each particle of the particles has an internal aspect ratio that is a ratio of a longest dimension of the particle to a shortest dimension of the particle, and the internal aspect ratio is between 1 and 5.
13. The traction sheave elevator according to claim 10, wherein the particles belong to a spinel group of minerals, the spinel group of minerals having crystal forms that are cubic or isometric, for instance octahedral.
14. The traction sheave elevator according to claim 10, wherein the powder substance in the lubricant of the suspension ropes of the traction sheave elevator comprises classified manganese (II, III) oxide, Mn.sub.3O.sub.4 and/or manganese (IV) oxide, MnO.sub.2.
15. A rope lubricant for a steel wire rope, the steel wire rope including one or more strands composed of steel wires, the rope lubricant comprising: an oil; and a powder substance, wherein the rope lubricant is in a form of paste and the powder substance includes particles having a hardness that is greater than a Mohs Scale hardness of 4.
16. The Rope lubricant according to claim 15, wherein the hardness of the particles is about equal to the hardness of a steel of the steel wires of the one or more strands of the steel wire rope, or greater than the hardness of the steel of the steel wires of the one or more strands of the steel wire rope.
17. The Rope lubricant according to claim 15, wherein each particle of the particles has an internal aspect ratio that is a ratio of a longest dimension of the particle to a shortest dimension of the particle, and the internal aspect ratio is between 1 and 5.
18. The Rope lubricant according to claim 15, wherein the particles belong to a spinel group of minerals, the spinel group of minerals having crystal forms that are cubic or isometric.
19. The Rope lubricant according to claim 15, wherein the powder substance includes manganese (II, III) oxide, Mn.sub.3O.sub.4, and/or manganese (IV) oxide, MnO.sub.2.
20. A method, comprising: applying a lubricant to a rope to lubricate the rope, wherein the rope includes metal as a load-bearing material, wherein the lubricant includes at least an oil and a powder substance, wherein the powder substance includes particles having a hardness that is greater than a Mohs Scale hardness of 4.
21. The method according to claim 20, wherein the rope includes strands, the strands includes wires, and the wires include steel, and the hardness of the particles is equal to or greater than a hardness of the steel of the wires of the strands of the rope.
22. The method according to claim 20, wherein each particle of the particles has an internal aspect ratio that is a ratio of a longest dimension of the particle to a shortest dimension of the particle, and the internal aspect ratio is between 1 and 5.
23. The method according to claim 22, wherein the internal aspect ratio is between 1 and 2.
24. The method according to claim 20, wherein the powder substance includes manganese (II, III) oxide, Mn.sub.3O.sub.4, and/or manganese (IV) oxide, MnO.sub.2.
Description
(1) In the following, the invention will be described in detail by the aid of an example of its embodiment with reference to the attached drawing, wherein
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(8) Owing to the difference between the counterweight 2 and the elevator car 1 plus the load at any given time in the car, the rope forces T.sub.CTW and T.sub.CAR exerted on the elevator ropes 3 are of different magnitudes on different sides of the traction sheave 4. When the elevator car 1 contains less than one-half of the nominal load, the counterweight is generally heavier than the elevator car 1 with load. In this case the rope force T.sub.CTW between the counterweight 2 and the traction sheave 4 is greater than the rope force T.sub.CAR between the elevator car 1 and the traction sheave 4. Correspondingly, when the elevator car 1 contains over one-half of the nominal load, the counterweight 2 is generally lighter than the elevator car 1 with load. In this case the rope force T.sub.CTW between the counterweight 2 and the traction sheave 4 is smaller than the rope force T.sub.CAR between the elevator car 1 and the traction sheave 4. In the situation presented in
(9)
(10) The lubricant 8 of a suspension rope 3 of an elevator according to the invention comprises at least some base oil suited to the purpose, some thickener, i.e. solid powder-like additive, that is preferably non-organic, and later referred as “powder substance”, and also if necessary some binder agent, such as polyisobutene or some other suitable organic compound. The base oil, more briefly referred to as “oil”, is e.g. some suitable synthetic oil that contains various additives, such as e.g. wear resistance agents and corrosion resistance agents. The task of the oil is, among other things, to prevent water from entering the rope 3 and to protect the rope from corrosion and wear. Anti-fretting and possibly also anti-seize types of lubricants are applicable to the purpose according to the invention as a lubricant of an elevator rope 3, even though there are restrictions caused by the application.
(11) The powder substance of the lubricant 8 comprises one or more fine-grained solid substances comprising small particles of different sizes. At least a part of the particles, preferably a majority of the particles are suitably hard. The hardness of those particles on the Mohs scale is about equal to the hardness of the steel of the wires 9 of the rope, or greater than the hardness of the steel of the wires 9. Preferably the solid powder substances belong to the spinel group of minerals where common crystal forms are cubic or isometric, for instance octahedral.
(12) Steel wires most usually used in elevators belong to strength classes 1370 N/m.sup.2, 1570 N/m.sup.2, 1770 N/m.sup.2 and 1960 N/m.sup.2, where the strength is calculated as nominal tensile strength. However, even stronger steel wires are used. Commercial elevators are provided even with steel wires whose nominal tensile strength is between 2000-3000 N/m.sup.2. Usually stronger steel wires are also harder than steel wires with smaller strength.
(13) The particles in the powder substance have a high specific weight. Thus the specific weight of the particles is many times greater than the specific weight of the used oil. For that reason the particles tend to descent onto the bottom of lubricant 8 at least in a long term storage. Preferably the lubricant 8 comprises additives that slow that kind of precipitation down or even prevent it.
(14) The binder agent is arranged to keep the other materials of the lubricant 8, i.e. the oil, and the powder substance better together. The binder agent is e.g. an organically-based mass, such as a butene compound or some other substance suited to the purpose, e.g. a resin-based or wax-based substance.
(15) The lubricant 8 is manufactured simply by mechanically mixing its different constituent parts with each other. The mixing ratios of the different constituents of the lubricant 8 are e.g. approx. 10-40%, preferably approx. 15-30%, suitably approx. 20%, oil; e.g. approx. 60-95%, preferably approx. 70-85%, powder substance; and e.g. approx. 0-5%, preferably approx. 0.2-3%, suitably approx. 0.3-0.6%, e.g. 0.4%, binder agent. The aforementioned percentage figures are percentages by weight. Owing to the large amount of powder substance, the structure of the lubricant 8 is a paste. With the help of the binder agent and powder substance, the lubricant 8 stays on the rope well and does not detach easily.
(16) The lubricant 8 according to the invention differs from conventional lubricating grease in that, among other things, preferably the lubricant comprises a very high proportion of powder substance and less oil. The powder substance can account for e.g. at most 95%, in which case the proportion of base oil remains at 5% at the highest. Whereas with lubricating greases according to prior art the proportion of base oil in the grease is 80-90%, in which case the proportion of powder substance and other substances remains only at 10-20%.
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(18) Both the ropes had the nominal diameter of 8 mm. The rejection limit in the tests was set to the value where the diameter of the ropes had become 6% thinner from the nominal diameter. In that case the rejection limit was 8*0.94=7.52 millimeters.
(19) It can be seen from
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(21) It can be seen from the graph that in the case of a steel rope lubricated with a paraffin-based lubricant according to prior art, which is represented by the curve p1 in
(22) Correspondingly, in the case of a steel rope lubricated with the lubricant 8 according to the invention, which is represented by the curve n1 in
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(24) Besides the round or almost round shape, the hardness of at least a part of the particles 10, preferably a majority of the particles 10 on the Mohs scale is about equal to the hardness of the steel of the wires 9 of the rope, or greater than the hardness of the steel of the wires 9. One possible type of substances to be used are solid substances belonging to the spinel group of minerals which have crystal forms that are cubic or isometric, for instance octahedral, and therefore the particles of the these substances can approximately resemble spherical particles. For example, classified manganese (II, III) oxide, Mn.sub.3O.sub.4, is a substance that can be used as a powder substance in the lubricant 8 according to the invention. The hardness of Mn.sub.3O.sub.4 on the Mohs scale is about 5.5, which value corresponds to the hardness of the cutting edge of a good carbon steel blade of a knife.
(25) It is also possible that manganese (IV) oxide or manganese dioxide, MnO.sub.2 is used as a powder substance in the lubricant 8 according to the invention. The hardness of MnO.sub.2 on the Mohs scale is about 5. In that case the hardness of MnO.sub.2 is also greater than the hardness of the steel of the most commonly used wires 9.
(26) Preferably the hardness of the particles 10 of the main substance of the powder substance is greater than 4, for instance between 4 and 6, and suitably between 5 and 5.5 on the Mohs scale.
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(28) The inventor believes that the lubrication performance of the lubricant 8 according to the invention is that the more or less spherically shaped hard particles 10 of the powder substance form a layer between the sliding and/or rolling surfaces of the suspension rope 3 and traction sheave 4, which layer prevents the contact between surface asperities. At the same time the particles 10 form a complex slip plane 12, which is not easily sheared and thus increases the friction but at the same time reduces wear of the surfaces. Due to their more or less spherical shape the hard particles 10 do not cause abrasive wear. Because of the different sizes of the particles 10 they can lock each other effectively in a dynamic contact situation between the contact surfaces.
(29) The size distribution of the particles 10 is preferably such that a part of the particles 10 are greater than the asperity of the surfaces of the suspension rope 3 and the groove of the traction sheave 4. For example, one possible size distribution of the particles 10 is as follows: the powder substance contains 0% particles greater than 63 μm, 1% particles between 20 and 63 μm, 16% particles between 6.3 and 20 μm, 63% particles between 2 and 6.3 μm, and 20% particles smaller than 2 μm. Other size distributions with other particle sizes and percent distributions are also possible. A part of the particles 10 are smaller than the asperity of the surfaces of the suspension rope 3 and the groove of the traction sheave 4. In case of greater proportion of small particles, the total surface area of the particles being in contact with oil is larger.
(30) It is clearly verified by the tests described above that, owing to the high proportion of powder-like powder substance with hard and more or less spherical particles 10 contained in the lubricant 8, the lifetime of an elevator suspension rope 3 lubricated with the lubricant 8 is considerably longer than the lifetime of elevator ropes lubricated with prior-art lubricants, and in addition the friction factor between the rope 3 and the traction sheave 4 is greater than when using conventional lubricants, which enables more advantageous dimensioning.
(31) One characteristic aspect, among others, of the elevator according to the invention is that the elevator is provided with suspension ropes 3 that are lubricated with the lubricant 8 that contains the powder substance with hard solid particles 10 mentioned above, and the load-bearing material of the suspension ropes 3 is metal, e.g. steel. The whole mass of the lubricant 8 comprises a suitable aforesaid percentage of the powder substance with the substantially hard and substantially spherical particles 10. In addition, the lubricant 8 can contain the aforementioned binder agents and other additives.
(32) The use of the aforementioned lubricant 8 that contains powder substance for lubricating a rope laid from metal wires 9 is further characteristic for the solution according to the invention.
(33) It is obvious to the person skilled in the art that different embodiments of the invention are not only limited to the examples described above, but that they may be varied within the scope of the claims presented below. Thus, for example, the composition of the lubricant and the mixture ratio of the different constituents can also be different to what is described above.
(34) Likewise it is obvious to the person skilled in the art that instead of synthetic oil, mineral oils or vegetable oils suited to the purpose can also be used as an oil in the lubricant.