CENTRIFUGAL PUMP AND A PUMP HOUSING
20210079922 ยท 2021-03-18
Inventors
Cpc classification
F05D2300/43
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04D13/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04D29/426
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04D29/048
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04D17/161
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2240/515
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
A centrifugal pump for conveying a fluid, includes a pump housing, a rotor configured to convey the fluid disposed within the housing; and a stator which, together with the rotor, forms an electromagnetic rotary drive configured to rotate the rotor about an axial direction. The stator is a bearing and drive stator with which the rotor capable of being magnetically driven without contact and magnetically levitated without contact with respect to the stator. The rotor is passively magnetically levitated in the axial direction, and actively magnetically levitated in a radial plane perpendicular to the axial direction. The pump housing includes comprising a bottom and a cover, and the rotor is arranged in the pump housing between the bottom and the cover with respect to the axial direction. An indentation is disposed in the bottom or in the cover, the indentation being configured to generate a local turbulence.
Claims
1. A centrifugal pump for conveying a fluid, comprising: a pump housing; a rotor configured to convey the fluid disposed within the housing; and a stator which, together with the rotor, forms an electromagnetic rotary drive configured to rotate the rotor about an axial direction, the stator being a bearing and drive stator with which the rotor is capable of being magnetically driven without contact and magnetically levitated without contact with respect to the stator, the rotor being passively magnetically levitated in the axial direction, and actively magnetically levitated in a radial plane perpendicular to the axial direction, the pump housing comprising a bottom and a cover, and the rotor being arranged in the pump housing between the bottom and the cover with respect to the axial direction, at least one indentation is disposed in the bottom or in the cover, the indentation being configured to generate a local turbulence.
2. The centrifugal pump according to claim 1, wherein the rotor comprises an annular or disk-shaped magnetically effective core, and an impeller having a plurality of vanes configured to convey the fluid.
3. The centrifugal pump according to claim 1, wherein the cover includes an inlet for the fluid configured such that the fluid is capable of flowing into the pump housing in the axial direction, and the pump housing comprises an outlet for the fluid configured such that the fluid is capable of flowing out of the pump housing in a radial direction.
4. The centrifugal pump according to claim 2, wherein the stator has a plurality of stator poles arranged annularly, and the pump housing with the rotor arranged therein is configured so as to be inserted into the stator between the stator poles in such a way that the magnetically effective core of the rotor is surrounded by the stator poles.
5. The centrifugal pump according to claim 1, wherein the rotor has an outer diameter, and the at least one indentation has an extension with respect to a radial direction which is at least one fiftieth of the outer diameter of the rotor.
6. The centrifugal pump according to claim 1, wherein the rotor has an outer diameter, and the at least one indentation has an extension with respect to the radial direction which is at most half the outer diameter of the rotor.
7. The centrifugal pump according to claim 1, wherein the rotor has an outer diameter, and the at least one indentation has a depth with respect to the axial direction which is at least one hundred fiftieth of the outer diameter of the rotor.
8. The centrifugal pump according to claim 1, wherein the rotor has an outer diameter, and the at least one indentation has a depth with respect to the axial direction which is at most one tenth of the outer diameter of the rotor.
9. The centrifugal pump according to claim 1, wherein the at least one indentation has a circular profile perpendicular to the axial direction.
10. The centrifugal pump according to claim 1, wherein at least one indentation includes a first indentation in the cover and a second indentation in the bottom of the pump housing.
11. The centrifugal pump according to claim 1, wherein the at least one indentation is arranged in a radially outer edge region of the pump housing.
12. The centrifugal pump according to claim 1, wherein the pump housing is plastic.
13. The centrifugal pump according to claim 2, wherein the impeller is plastic.
14. The centrifugal pump according to claim 2, wherein the rotor has a jacket which completely encloses the magnetically effective core of the rotor, and which is a plastic.
15. A pump housing configured to receive the rotor for conveying the fluid, the pump housing configured for a centrifugal pump according to claim 1.
16. The centrifugal pump according to claim 1, wherein the rotor has an outer diameter, and the at least one indentation has a depth with respect to the axial direction which is at least one hundredth of the outer diameter of the rotor.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0052] The invention will be explained in more detail hereinafter with reference to the drawings.
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[0055]
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
[0063] At first, with reference to the sectional view in
[0064] The centrifugal pump is indicated as a whole with the reference sign 1. The centrifugal pump 1 for conveying a fluid comprises a pump housing 2 with an inlet 21 and an outlet 22 for the fluid to be conveyed. A rotor 3 is arranged in the pump housing 2, which, together with a stator 4 arranged outside the pump housing 2, forms an electromagnetic rotary drive with which the rotor 3 can be driven to rotate about an axial direction A.
[0065] The electromagnetic rotary drive is designed as an internal rotor, i.e. the rotor 3 is arranged inside the stator 4, so that the stator 4 surrounds the rotor 3. The rotor 3 is magnetically levitated without contact with respect to the stator 4. Furthermore, the rotor 3 can be magnetically driven without contact to rotate around a desired axis of rotation by the stator 4. The desired axis of rotation is that axis around which the rotor 3 rotates in the operating state, when the rotor 3 is in a centered and non-tilted position with respect to the stator 4. This desired axis of rotation defines an axial direction A. Usually, the desired axis of rotation defining the axial direction A coincides with the central axis of the stator 4.
[0066] In the following, a radial direction is referred to as a direction that is perpendicular to the axial direction A.
[0067] The rotor 3 comprises a magnetically effective core 31, which is designed in the form of a circular disk, or a circular cylinder, or annular. The magnetically effective core 31 refers to that region of the rotor 3 which interacts with the stator 4 for torque generation and the generation of magnetic bearing forces. Depending on the design, the magnetically effective core 31 can comprise one or a plurality of permanent magnets. Alternatively, it is also possible to design the magnetically effective core 31 without permanent magnets, for example as a reluctance rotor. The magnetically effective core 31 includes, at least partially, a ferromagnetic material, for example iron.
[0068] The magnetically effective core 31 preferably includes a jacket 35, which completely encapsulates the magnetically effective core 31, so that the magnetically effective core 31 does not contact the fluid to be conveyed. The jacket 35 is preferably made of a plastic but can also be made of a metallic material.
[0069] The rotor 3 further comprises an impeller 32 having a plurality of vanes 33 for conveying the fluid from the inlet 21 to the outlet 22. The impeller 32 is arranged on the jacket 35. The impeller 32 with the vanes 33 is preferably made of plastic and can, for example, be designed in one piece with the jacket 35. Of course, it is also possible to manufacture the individual vanes 33 or the entirety of vanes 33 in a separate production process and then connect them to the jacket 35, for example by a welding process. Of course, it is also possible to manufacture the impeller from a metallic material.
[0070] The impeller 32 is preferably designed as a radial impeller, which gets a flow of fluid in the axial direction A and then deflects the fluid in a radial direction.
[0071] The rotary drive with the stator 4 and the rotor 3 is designed, for example, as a so-called temple motor.
[0072] The characteristic feature of a design as a temple motor is that the stator 4 comprises a plurality of separate coil cores 41for example six coil cores 41each of which comprises a bar-shaped longitudinal leg 42, which extends from a first end in the axial direction A to a second end, wherein all first endsthese are the lower ends according to the representation in
[0073] The radially inward ends of the transverse legs 43 each form a stator pole 46. The stator poles 46 are arranged annularly around the pump housing 2 with the rotor 3 arranged. therein. The pump housing 2 is designed in such a way that it can be inserted into the stator 4, more precisely between the stator poles 46, so that the stator poles 46 surround the magnetically effective core 31 of the rotor 3. In the operating state, the stator poles 46 and the magnetically effective core 31 of the rotor 3 are located at the same level with respect to the axial direction A, if the rotor 3 is not deflected from its desired position. In the operating state, the rotor 3 is thus magnetically levitated without contact between the stator poles 46.
[0074] The reflux 45 and the coil cores 41 are each made of a soft magnetic material because they serve as flux guiding elements for guiding the magnetic flux. Suitable soft magnetic materials are, for example, ferromagnetic or ferrimagnetic materials, i.e. in particular iron, nickel-iron or silicon-iron.
[0075] The parallel longitudinal legs 42 of the coil cores 41, which all extend parallel to the axial direction A, and which surround the rotor 3, are the ones that gave the temple motor its name, because these parallel longitudinal legs 41 resemble the columns of a temple.
[0076] The stator 4 further comprises a plurality of windings 6 for generating electromagnetic rotating fields, with which the rotor 3 can be magnetically driven without contact and can be magnetically levitated without contact with respect to the stator 4. The windings 6 are designed for example as six individual coils, wherein one coil is provided at each of the longitudinal leg 42 in each case. Each coil is arranged around the respective longitudinal leg 42, so that the coil axis is parallel to the axial direction A in each case. For example, each longitudinal leg 42 supports exactly one coil 61. Of course, such embodiments are also possible in which each longitudinal leg 42 supports more than one coil.
[0077] That plane, where the rotor 3 is levitated in the operating state, is also called the radial plane. The radial plane defines the x-y-plane of a Cartesian coordinate system whose z-axis extends in the axial direction A.
[0078] In a preferred embodiment, the electromagnetic rotary drive designed as a temple motor is designed according to the principle of a bearingless motor. This means that during the operation of the centrifugal pump 1, the magnetically effective core 31 of the rotor 3 interacts with the stator poles 46 of the stator 4 according to the principle of the bearingless motor described above, in which the rotor 3 can be magnetically driven without contact and magnetically levitated without contact with respect to the stator 4.
[0079] The principle of the bearingless motor has become sufficiently well known to the person skilled in the art in the meantime, so that a detailed description of the function is no longer necessary. The principle of the bearingless motor means that the rotor 3 is magnetically levitated, wherein the stator 4 is designed as a bearing and drive stator, which is both the stator of the electric drive and the stator of the magnetic levitation. For this purpose, the stator 4 comprises the windings 6 with which both the drive function and the levitation function is realized. An electromagnetic rotating field can be generated by the windings 6, which on the one hand exerts a torque on the magnetically effective core 31 of the rotor 3, which causes its rotation about the axial direction A, and which on the other hand exerts an arbitrarily settable shear force on the magnetically effective core 31 of the rotor 3, so that its radial positioni.e. its position in the radial planecan be actively controlled or regulated. In the case of a bearingless motor, in contrast to classical magnetic bearings, the magnetic levitation and the drive of the motor is realized by electromagnetic rotating fields, which exert a torque and a sellable shear force on the magnetically effective core 31 of the rotor 3. The rotating fields required for this can either be generated with different coils, or the rotating fields can be generated by mathematical superposition of the required fluxes and then with the aid of a single coil system, in this case the windings 6. In the case of a bearingless motor, it is therefore not possible to divide the electromagnetic flux generated by the windings 6 of the stator 2 into an electromagnetic flux, which only provides the drive of the rotor 3 and an electromagnetic flux which only realizes the magnetic levitation of the rotor 3.
[0080] According to the principle of the bearingless motor, at least three degrees of freedom of the rotor 3 can be actively regulated, namely its position in the radial plane and its rotation about the axial direction A. With respect to its axial deflection in the axial direction A, the magnetically effective core 31 of the rotor 3 is passively magnetically stabilized by reluctance forces, i.e. it cannot be controlled. With respect to the remaining two degrees of freedom, namely tilting with respect to the radial plane perpendicular to the desired axis of rotation, the magnetically effective core 31 of the rotor 3 is also passively magnetically stabilized. This means that the rotor 3 is passively magnetically levitated or passively magnetically stabilized by the interaction of the magnetically effective core 31 with the stator poles 46 in the axial direction A and against tilting (three degrees of freedom in total) and actively magnetically levitated in the radial plane (two degrees of freedom).
[0081] As is common practice, within the framework of this invention, an active magnetic levitation refers to one that can be actively controlled or regulated, for example by the electromagnetic rotating fields generated by the windings 6. A passive magnetic levitation or a passive magnetic stabilization is one that cannot be controlled or regulated. The passive magnetic levitation or stabilization is based, for example, on reluctance forces which bring the rotor 3 back into its equilibrium position when it is deflected from its equilibrium position, e.g. when it is displaced in the axial direction A or when it is tilted.
[0082] The magnetically effective core 31 of the rotor 3 has a diameter d, wherein the diameter d means the outer diameter of the magnetically effective core 31. The magnetically effective core 31 further has a height HR, wherein the height HR is the extension in the axial direction A. It is particularly advantageous for the passive magnetic stabilization of the rotor 3, if the diameter d of the magnetically effective core 31 of the rotor 3 is greater than 2.6 times the height HR of the magnetically effective core 31 of the rotor 3, i.e. if the geometric condition d>2.6*HR is fulfilled.
[0083]
[0084] The pump housing 2 comprises a housing part 26 and a cover 25, wherein the cover 25 is arranged on the housing part 26 to close the pump housing 2. The housing part 26 and the cover 25 preferably include a plastic and are firmly and sealingly connected to each other, for example welded. In other embodiments, the housing part 26 and/or the cover 26 are made of a metallic material.
[0085] For a better understanding,
[0086] The housing part 26 comprises a lower cylindrical portion 261 and an upper cylindrical portion 262 which are arranged coaxially and one behind the other with respect to the axial direction A, wherein the upper cylindrical portion 262 has a larger diameter than the lower cylindrical portion 261. The lower cylindrical portion 261 of the housing part 26 comprises a bottom 27, which forms the lower end of the pump housing 2 according to the representation, and which is arranged perpendicular to the axial direction A.
[0087] The cover 25 rests on the upper end, according to the representation, of the upper cylindrical portion 262 and is firmly connected to it. The inlet 21 for the fluid to be conveyed is disposed on the cover 25. The inlet 21 is designed as inlet connection, which is preferably manufactured in one piece with the cover 25. The inlet 21 designed as an inlet connection extends in the axial direction A, so that the fluid can flow into the pump housing 2 in the axial direction. The inlet connection 21 preferably has an inlet surface 211, through which the fluid enters the inlet connection 21, and an outlet surface 212, through which the fluid leaves the inlet connection 21 and flows to the impeller 32. Preferably, the inlet surface 211 is larger than or equal to the outlet surface 212. The outlet 22 for the fluid to be conveyed is provided on the upper cylindrical portion 262. Here, the outlet 22 is designed as an outlet connection 22, which is preferably manufactured in one piece with the housing part 26. The outlet 22 designed as an outlet connection extends parallel to the radial plane, i.e. perpendicular to the inlet 21, so that the fluid flows out of the pump housing 2 in a radial direction. The outlet connection 22 has an inlet surface 221, through which the fluid enters the outlet connection 22, and an outlet surface 222, through which the fluid leaves the outlet connection 22. Preferably, the inlet surface 221 is smaller than the outlet surface 222, as also represented in
[0088] For the cylindrical design of the outlet connection 22 it is preferred that the outlet connection 22 is arranged with respect to the axial direction A in such a way that the central axis M of the outlet connection 22 is closer to the magnetically effective core 31 of the rotor 3 than to the cover 25 of the pump housing 2. This means that the outlet connection 22 is not arranged centrally in the upper cylindrical portion 262 of the housing part 26 with respect to the axial direction A but is displaced in direction of the bottom 27i.e. downwards according to the representation.
[0089] The rotor 3, which comprises the magnetically effective core 31, the jacket 35 and the impeller 32, is arranged in the pump housing 2 between the bottom 27 and the cover 25 of the pump housing 2, wherein the magnetically effective core 31 with the optional jacket 35 is arranged below the impeller 32 according to the representation. The magnetically effective core 31 including the jacket 35 is preferably designed cylindrically.
[0090] The pump housing 2 is inserted into the stator 4as can also be seen in
[0091] The rotor 3 is designed and arranged in such a way that in the operating state the magnetically effective core 31 of the rotor 3 is surrounded by the stator poles 46 and can be centered in the radial plane between the stator poles 46 by the electromagnetic fields generated by the windings 6 and can be driven to rotate about the axial direction A. If the rotor 3 is centered and not deflected with respect to the axial direction A, the magnetically effective core 31 is located centrally between the stator poles 46.
[0092] The rotor 3 has an outer diameter D, which is the diameter D of the magnetically effective core 31 including the jacket 35. If the jacket 35 is provided, the outer diameter D of the rotor 3 is larger than the diameter d (
[0093] The impeller 32 is preferably designed as a radial impeller 32 so that the vanes 33 deflect the fluid flowing in the axial direction A through the inlet 21 in a radial direction and convey it to the outlet 22.
[0094] According to the invention, at least one indentation is disposed in the bottom 27 and/or in the cover 25, which indentation is designed to generate a local turbulence. In the embodiment described here, a total of eight indentations 9 are provided, four of which are arranged in the cover 25 and four in the bottom 27.
[0095] In other embodiments, indentations 9 can also be disposed only in the cover or only in the bottom. The number of indentations 9 is also to be understood as an example. There can be only one indentation, or two or three indentations, or more than eight or significantly more than eight indentations, for example more than fifty. In principle, there is no upper limit to the number of indentations 9. The number and arrangement of the indentations can be adapted to the respective application, so that the desired reduction of the forces acting on the rotor 3, in particular the hydrodynamic forces, is achieved.
[0096] The indentation 9 or the indentations 9 represent a geometrical influence on the flow conditions inside the pump housing 2 whose purpose is to reduce the forces acting on the impeller 32 or on the rotor 3, respectively, in particular the forces acting in the axial direction A, as well as the moments which try to tilt the rotor 3 against the radial plane. Thus, the indentations 9 improve the stabilization of the rotor 3 with respect to all those degrees of freedomhere threewith respect to which the rotor is passively magnetically levitated or stabilized. The indentations 9 arranged in the bottom 27 or in the cover 25 thus change the flow behavior in such a way that the position of the rotor 3 can be set with less effort and travel.
[0097] The reduction of the forces, in particular the hydrodynamic forces, is based on the flow turbulence or the creation of turbulences caused by the indentations 9, which represent a local change of shape of the pump housing 2.
[0098] The embodiment according to the invention with the at least one indentation 9 can thus in principle take place without geometric barriers to reduce flow velocities, and without pressure-compensating bores through the rotor, as well as without narrow, wedge-shaped fluid gaps which, as for example in classical hydrodynamic bearings, cause a local increase in pressure. Rather, the indentations 9 lead to local turbulences and flow separation, which reduce the force effects of laminar or turbulent flow on the surfaces of the rotor 3 exposed to the flow. These turbulences or flow separations reduce the dynamic lift acting on the rotor 3 and thus the forces acting on the rotor 3.
[0099] Naturally, embodiments of the invention are also possible in which, for example, pressure-equalizing bores are additionally provided through the rotor 3. Such an embodiment is explained further on with reference to the second embodiment.
[0100] Each indentation 9 can be designed as a dimple, depression, countersink, bore or similar to locally swirl the flow. For example, the indentations 9 can be spherical or cylindrical. They can have a square or rectangular profile. The indentations can also be designed pyramid-shaped, cone-shaped, truncated cone-shaped, annular or with a free-form geometry. For manufacturing reasons, however, such geometries are preferred for the indentations 9 that can be generated with drilling or milling tools. For this reason, those designs of the indentation 9 are preferred in which each indentation 9 has a circular profile perpendicular to the axial direction A, i.e. is designed spherically or cylindrically.
[0101] In
[0102] Usually, each indentation 9 has an extension E in the radial direction, which means the maximum width of the indentation 9 with respect to the radial direction, and a depth T, which means the maximum extension of the indentation with respect to the axial direction A.
[0103] In the case of the design as a blind hole shown in
[0104] In practice, it has proven to be advantageous if for each indentation 9 the respective extension E in the radial direction is at least one fiftieth of the outer diameter D of the rotor 3, i.e. E is greater than or equal to 0.02 D. It is also advantageous if for each indentation 9 the respective extension E in the radial direction is at most half of the outer diameter D of the rotor 3, i.e. E is smaller or equal to 0.5 D.
[0105] With respect to the axial direction A, it has proven to be advantageous if for each indentation 9 the respective depth T in the axial direction A is at least one hundred and fiftieth of the outer diameter D of the rotor 3, i.e. is greater than or equal to 0.015 D. It is particularly preferred if the respective depth T in the axial direction A is at least one hundredth of the outer diameter D of the rotor 3, i.e. if T is greater than or equal to 0.01 D.
[0106] Furthermore, with respect to the axial direction A, it is preferred if for each indentation 9 the respective depth T in the axial direction A is at most one tenth of the outer diameter D of the rotor 3, i.e. T is smaller than or equal to 0.1 D.
[0107] With respect to the position of the indentation 9 or the indentations 9, it is preferred that the indentation 9 or the indentations 9 is/are arranged in a radially outer edge area of the bottom 27 and/or the cover 25. As represented in
[0108] In preferred embodiments of the invention, the pump housing 2 and/or the impeller 32 and/or the jacket 35 of the rotor 3 are made of a plastic. Preferably, the pump housing 2 and the impeller 32 and the jacket 35 of the rotor 3 are made of a plastic. The pump housing 2 and the impeller 3 and the jacket 35 can all be made of the same plastic or at least two different plastics.
[0109] The selection of suitable plastics naturally depends on the respective application. Suitable plastics are, for example: polyethylenes (PE), polypropylenes (PP), low density polyethylenes (LDPE), ultra-low density polyethylenes (ULDPE), ethylene vinyl acetates (EVA), polyethylene terephthalates (PET), polyvinylchloride (PVC), polyvinylidene fluorides (PVDF), acrylonitrile buta diene styrenes (ABS), polyacrylics, polycarbonates.
[0110] In other likewise preferred embodiments of the invention, the pump housing 2 and/or the impeller 32 and/or the jacket 35 of the rotor 3 are made of one metallic material or of several different metallic materials. Examples of preferred metallic materials are titanium or stainless steels.
[0111]
[0112] In the following, only the differences to the first embodiment described above will be discussed. In particular, the reference signs have the same meaning as already explained in connection with the first embodiment. It is understood that all previous explanations apply in the same way or in the analogously same way to the second embodiment.
[0113] In the second embodiment, further measures are still realized, which, depending on the application, can further improve the stabilization of the rotor 3 with respect to the axial direction A and with respect to tilts against the radial plane, i.e. with respect to the three passively magnetically stabilized degrees of freedom. It is understood that all these measures can all be realized, but not all of them need to be realized. This means that such embodiments are also possible in which, for example, one or more of the measures described with reference to the second embodiment are combined with the first embodiment.
[0114] In the second embodiment of the centrifugal pump 1 according to the invention represented in
[0115] The outlet 22 of the pump housing 2 is designed in the analogously same way as explained for the first embodiment, i.e. in such a way that the inlet surface 221 of the outlet connection 22 is smaller than the outlet surface 222 of the outlet connection 22, and that the outlet connection 22 is arranged with respect to the axial direction A in such a way that the central axis M is closer to the annular magnetically effective core 31 of the rotor 3 than to the cover 25 of the pump housing 2. With reference to the dotted lines in the outlet 22, it is represented in
[0116] The size of the outlet surface 222 of the outlet connection 22 and the size of the inlet surface 211 of the inlet connection 21, including the respective surrounding wall, are usually predefined by standards. The outer diameter of both the inlet connection 21 at the inlet surface 211 and the outer diameter of the outlet connection 22 at the outlet surface 222 is dimensioned such that the centrifugal pump 1 can be connected to normal pipes or tubes in a flow system.
[0117] Furthermore, the rotor 3 has a cover plate 36 which is designed like an annular disk and which covers the vanes 33 of the impeller 32 at their edge facing the inlet 21 or the cover 25, wherein a centrally arranged opening 361 is provided in the cover plate 36 through which the fluid can flow to the impeller 32.
[0118] Optionally, the magnetically effective core 31 of the rotor 3 can have a central bore 37 which extends in the axial direction A completely through the magnetically effective core 31 and the optional jacket 35.
[0119] Alternatively, or in addition, the rotor 3 can comprise a balancing hole 38 or a plurality of balancing holes 38, wherein each balancing hole 38 extents in the axial direction A completely through the magnetically effective core 31 of the rotor 3 and the optional jacket 35. Each balancing hole 38 preferably is arranged decentral, i.e. not in the center of the rotor 3.
[0120] In the second embodiment, a plurality of balancing holes 38 is provided, namely eight balancing holes 38.
[0121] The balancing holes 38 are preferably arranged on a circular line, wherein the center of the circle is located in the center of the rotor 3. This means, if the central bore 37 is disposed in the rotor 3, the balancing holes 38 are arranged in a circle around the central bore 37. Preferably, at most or exactly eight balancing holes 38 are provided, which are preferably arranged equidistantly around the central bore 37 of the rotor 3 or around the center of the rotor 3.
[0122] Each balancing hole 38 has a diameter in each case, which is smaller than the diameter of the central bore 37.
[0123] A plurality of rear vanes 39 is provided on the axial end face of the rotor 3 facing away from the cover 25 and facing the bottom 27. In the operating state, these rear vanes 39 are opposite the bottom 27 of the pump housing 2. In the second embodiment, a total of eight rear vanes 39 is provided.
[0124] The rear vanes 39 can be realized, for example, by providing recesses in the jacket 35 of the rotor 3, so that the rear vanes 39 are each formed between two adjacent recesses.
[0125] Furthermore, it is of course also possible to design the rear vanes 39 as elevations. For this purpose, for example, a structure similar to an impeller can be generated, which is then attached to the axial end face of the rotor 3, so that the rear vanes 39 are opposite the bottom 27 of the pump housing 2. Of course, the rear vanes 38 can also be manufactured individually and then be attached to the axial end face of the rotor 3.
[0126] Preferably, each rear vane 39 starts at the radial outer edge of the axial end face of the rotor 3 and extends from there radially inwards. Each rear vane 39 can extend to the center of the axial end face or to the central bore 37, or each rear vane 39, as shown in
[0127] In the second embodiment, an annular or circular disk-shaped pressure plate 321 is disposed on the impeller 32, which is aligned perpendicular to axial direction A. The pressure plate 321 is arranged, with respect to the axial direction A, between the magnetically effective core and the end of the impeller 32 facing the cover 25 of the pump housing 2, for example halfway up the vanes 33 of the impeller 32. The pressure plate 321 extends between the vanes of the impeller 32. If the rotor 3 has a cover plate 36, the pressure plate 321 is arranged, with respect to the axial direction A, between the magnetically effective core 31 and the cover plate 36 and parallel to the cover plate 36. The pressure plate 321 extends between all vanes 33. With respect to the radial direction, the pressure plate 321 is arranged centered with respect to the rotor 3 and extends in the radial direction at least so far that it covers all balancing holes 38 at an axial distance. In the embodiment represented in
[0128]