SLIDING VANE PUMP OR TURBINE
20230407748 ยท 2023-12-21
Inventors
Cpc classification
F04C2240/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01C21/0818
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01C21/0809
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04C2/3446
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04C15/0057
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01C1/3566
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F04C2/344
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A positive-displacement pump or turbine includes a rotor casing that defines a rotor chamber having a contoured wall that forms a plurality of lobes. A rotor is positioned within the rotor chamber, and has an outer rotor surface spaced inward from the contoured wall at the lobes. Vanes are mounted around the outer rotor surface, and structures associated with the vanes follow a track or groove defined by the rotor chamber as the rotor spins, thereby forcing the vanes radially inwardly and outwardly to follow a curvature of the contoured wall.
Claims
1. A positive-displacement pump or turbine comprising: a rotor casing defining a rotor chamber having a contoured wall forming a plurality of lobes, and a sidewall defining a curved track spaced radially inwardly from said contoured wall; a rotor positioned in said rotor chamber, said rotor having an outer rotor surface spaced inwardly from said contoured wall at said lobes; and a plurality of vanes mounted at said rotor and spaced circumferentially around said outer rotor surface, said vanes comprising (i) distal end portions configured to slidably engage said contoured wall, and (ii) track followers engaging said curved track; wherein said vanes are forced radially inwardly and outwardly relative to said rotor by engagement of said track followers with said curved track during rotation of said rotor and said vanes.
2. The pump or turbine of claim 1, wherein said curved track maintains a uniform distance to said contoured wall around said rotor chamber.
3. The pump or turbine of claim 1, wherein said curved track comprises a groove formed in said sidewall of said rotor casing, and said track followers comprise projections extending from side edges of said vanes and into said groove.
4. The pump or turbine of claim 3, wherein said side edges of said vanes define recessed dimples and said projections comprise balls captured between said groove and respective ones of said recessed dimples.
5. The pump or turbine of claim 4, wherein said groove comprises a semi-circular cross-sectional shape and said recessed dimples comprise semi-spherical shapes.
6. The pump or turbine of claim 5, wherein said balls are spherical and slide or roll along said groove so that said recessed dimples maintain alignment with said groove during rotation of said rotor and said vanes.
7. The pump or turbine of claim 6, wherein about one-half of each of said balls is contained within one of said dimples and the other half is contained in said groove.
8. The pump or turbine of claim 1, wherein said rotor casing comprises an opposite sidewall defining an opposite track, and each of said vanes comprises a pair of said track followers arranged at respective opposite sides of said vanes, wherein said track followers engage respective ones of said tracks.
9. The pump or turbine of claim 5, wherein said tracks are identically-shaped and aligned with one another at opposite sides of said rotor chamber.
10. A pump or turbine comprising: a rotor casing comprising a contoured wall and spaced-apart side surfaces defining respective continuous grooves that are spaced inwardly from said contoured wall, said contoured wall cooperating with said side surfaces to define a rotor chamber; a rotor positioned in said rotor chamber; and a vane at an outer surface of said rotor, said vane comprising a radial locator; and wherein said radial locator is configured to follow said grooves to drive said vane radially inwardly and outwardly in response to rotation of said rotor.
11. The pump or turbine of claim 10, wherein said radial locator comprises dimples formed in opposite edges of said vane, and a ball captured between each of said dimples and a respective one of said grooves.
12. The pump or turbine of claim 11, wherein said side surfaces of said rotor casing cooperate with said opposite edges of said vane to form substantially fluid-tight barriers, and a distal edge of said vane forming a substantially fluid-tight barrier with said contoured wall.
13. The pump or turbine of claim 10, wherein said vane further comprises a distal end portion, and wherein said radial locator maintains said distal end portion in continuous sliding contact with said contoured wall when said rotor is rotating.
14. The pump or turbine of claim 10, wherein said contoured wall forms exactly four lobes of said rotor chamber, wherein said rotor comprises an outer rotor surface spaced inwardly from said contoured wall at said lobes, said contoured wall defining an inlet port and an outlet port at each of said lobes, and wherein said pump and turbine comprises exactly thirteen of said vanes spaced evenly along said outer rotor surface.
15. A method of operating a positive-displacement pump or turbine, said method comprising: rotatably driving a pump or turbine rotor located within a rotor chamber, the rotor having a plurality of vanes mounted at an outer surface thereof, the vanes having track followers; and urging the vanes radially inwardly and outwardly via engagement of the track followers with a curved track formed in a sidewall of the rotor chamber to maintain distal end portions of the vanes in sliding engagement with a contoured wall of the rotor chamber.
16. The method of claim 15, wherein said urging the vanes inwardly and outwardly in a radial direction comprises driving a ball associated with each of the vanes along a groove that forms the curved track.
17. The method of claim 16, wherein the groove is spaced a fixed distance from the contoured wall.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0031] Referring now to the drawings and the illustrative embodiment depicted therein, a positive-displacement single-rotor pump and/or turbine 10 is configured for use as a fluid energy exchanger, or optionally as a fluid pump. Pump and turbine 10 includes a pump or turbine body 12, which may be formed as a unitary casting, and has a stator or rotor casing 14 (
[0032] Rotor 30 fits into rotor chamber 32 such that outer rotor surface 30a is spaced inwardly from contoured wall 34 at least at lobes 20, 22, 24, 26 as shown in
[0033] The rotor's outer surface 30a is generally cylindrical, with a plurality of radially-aligned slots 52 extending inwardly for receiving respective sliding vanes 28 that engage cam-like contoured wall 34 as rotor 30 spins within rotor chamber 32 (
[0034] Referring to
[0035] To maintain desired contact between distal end portions 28a and contoured wall 34, grooves 40, 42 are evenly-spaced radially inward from contoured wall 34 along their lengths so as to mimic or follow the curvature of contoured wall 34. Furthermore, as described above, vanes 28 are forced to follow optimal radial positions due to the pre-defined curvature or geometry of grooves 40, 42. This minimizes fluid leakage between vanes 28 and contoured wall 34 during rotation. Grooves 40, 42 and balls 44 cooperate to draw vanes 28 radially inwardly as the vanes 28 trace the decreasing-volume portion of each lobe, which can reduce wear on both the contoured wall 34 and the distal ends 28a of the vanes 28 because the sliding contact of the vanes 28 with the wall 34 is not the only force pushing the vanes radially inwardly. It will be appreciated that even if balls 44, dimples 36, 38, and grooves 40, 42 were omitted, other factors would influence the radial position of vanes 28, namely, centrifugal force (once sufficient rotor speed is attained to overcome any frictional retention forces of vanes 28 in slots 52) and contact between distal end portions 28a and contoured wall 34. Such arrangements are more fully described in commonly-owned U.S. Pat. No. 9,759,066 entitled UNITARY PUMP AND TURBINE ENERGY EXCHANGER, which is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
[0036] Dimples 36, 38 and grooves 40, 42 may be created or formed through various processes, including, for example, machining dimples 36, 38 into side surfaces 28c, 28d of vanes 28, and machining grooves 40, 42 into first and second side surfaces 12a, 12b of rotor chamber 32. Alternatively, one or more of these features could be formed as a result of a molding process. Additionally, it should be appreciated that alternative turbines may include differences from the turbine 10 described above, in which case various features such as grooves and/or dimples may need to be formed with geometry that varies from what has been described herein. For example, the curvature of a groove may be varied from the curvature of the contoured wall, such as to open a gap between the distal ends of the vanes and the contoured wall along certain regions of the contoured well. It should also be appreciated that an alternative turbine may include more or less vanes, grooves, dimples, and/or balls apart from what has been described herein. Additionally, an alternative embodiment may include projections formed along the side edges of the vanes, instead of balls that roll or slide relative to the vanes 28 and the rotor casing 14. Additionally, other rotatable and/or slidable elements could be used as an alternative to balls, including wheels or the like. It is further envisioned that a continuous curved track, extending into the rotor chamber from the sidewalls of the rotor casing 14, may be received by recesses formed in the side edge of each vane.
[0037] As best shown in
[0038] Turbine body 12, including rotor casing 14 that may be unitarily formed as a one-piece unit, such as via a casting process utilizing ferrous or non-ferrous alloy, such as steel or aluminum alloys. However, it is further envisioned that non-metals may be used, such as thermoplastics, fiber-reinforced thermoplastics, thermoset plastics, and fiber-reinforced thermoset plastics. It is further envisioned that the rotor casing may be made from plastics or relatively weaker materials, with a hardened insert (such as a metal liner) used to form contoured wall 34, which may be integrated with outer rim 50 to form wear-resistant and strong bores 48. Optionally, pump or turbine body 12 may include one or more base brackets and/or an upper bracket to facilitate mounting turbine 10 in a desired location within a system.
[0039] Although the unitary pump and turbine energy exchanger of the illustrated embodiment has exactly four lobes 20, 22, 24, 26 and exactly thirteen vanes 28 that are evenly spaced circumferentially around rotor 30, it will be appreciated that a pump and turbine energy exchanger may be configured with different numbers of lobes and different number of vanes, without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. For example, substantially any even number of lobes, four or greater, may achieve substantially the same balanced-force effect as the four-lobe embodiment that is primarily described herein. In the case of a six-lobe variant, for example, a lobe would be positioned every 60-degrees around a rotor chamber. Furthermore, in the illustrated embodiment, vanes 28 are generally rectangular in shape and are made of a substantially rigid material, such as metal or reinforced plastic. However, it is envisioned that flexible vanes may be suitable for some applications.
[0040] It should be appreciated that a track follower adapted to movably or slidably couple or locate a side surface of a vane relative to a surface of a contoured wall may take alternative forms apart from a ball while remaining within the spirit and scope of the present invention. A track follower could be a groove, recess, or recessed coupling feature defined at or coupled to a vane, in which the track follower receives or engages a curved track to follow the curved track defined at or coupled to a side surface and/or contoured wall of a rotor chamber. The curved track in this case may take many forms including that of a protrusion or raised feature relative to the side surface and/or the contoured wall, an elongated ridge, or a continuous track structure that is raised or protruding outwardly from the side surface and/or contoured wall. Alternatively, a track follower could be a protrusion or coupling feature defined at or coupled to a vane, in which the track follower is received by a curved track that could take various forms, including for example, a groove or recess defined at a side surface and/or a contoured wall of a rotor chamber, an elongated recess or channel, or a track or pathway that is recessed beneath or outboard of the side surface and/or the contoured wall.
[0041] Accordingly, the pump and turbine system and methods of operation of the present invention, as a turbine or pump, or simultaneously as a turbine and pump, reduces internal fluid leakage at a series of vanes to operate with increased efficiency and reliability by positively locating the vanes to ensure proper engagement between the vanes and a contoured wall within a rotor chamber. The rotor may be driven to rotate, for example, by one or more fluids entering and exiting the rotor chamber at different lobes, to thereby rotate the vanes and rotor by applying elevated fluid pressure to one side of the vanes. Optionally, the rotor may be externally driven by a motor or other power source, which may be coupled to a rotor shaft. Regardless of the driving force for the rotor and vanes, rotation of the vanes moves the balls through the grooves, with the balls following the radially inward and outward contours of the grooves to thereby move the vanes radially inward and outward to maintain desired engagement between the vanes and the contoured wall.
[0042] Changes and modifications in the specifically-described embodiments may be carried out without departing from the principles of the present invention, which is intended to be limited only by the scope of the appended claims as interpreted according to the principles of patent law including the doctrine of equivalents.