TORSIONAL DAMPER
20230003278 · 2023-01-05
Inventors
Cpc classification
F16F2224/025
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16F15/126
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16H2055/366
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
A torsional damper is provided and is equipped with a hub fixed to a rotary shaft and having an outer circumferential surface circumferentially around the rotary shaft, an annular vibration ring having an inner circumferential surface circumferentially around the rotary shaft and with a diameter larger than that of the outer circumferential surface of the hub, and a rubber ring in a compressed state between the outer circumferential surface of the hub and the inner circumferential surface of the vibration ring, that is formed from a rubber composition containing EPDM as a main component, and has a loss coefficient (tan δ) of 0.18 or more when the surface temperature is 60±5° C., wherein when subjected to a resonance point tracking method, the maximum attained surface temperature (Tmax) of the rubber ring during continuous excitation at the resonance point and the rubber fitting width (b) satisfy a specific relational expression.
Claims
1-3. (canceled)
4. A torsional damper comprising: a hub fixed to a rotating shaft and having an outer peripheral surface on a circumference around the rotating shaft; an annular vibration ring having, on a circumference around the rotating shaft, an inner peripheral surface which is larger in diameter than the outer peripheral surface of the hub; and a rubber ring which is present in a compressed state between the outer peripheral surface of the hub and the inner peripheral surface of the vibration ring, which is made of a rubber composition primarily composed of EPDM, and which has a loss factor (tan δ) of 0.18 or more at a surface temperature of 60±5° C., wherein, when the torsional damper is subjected to a resonance point tracking process, a maximum attained surface temperature (Tmax) of the rubber ring at a resonance point during continuous excitation and a rubber fitting width (b) satisfy:
T max≤−2.6b+173.5, Formula (1)
20≤b≤100, and Formula (2)
T max≥−2.6b+124. Formula (3)
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
<Illustration of Torsional Damper>
[0024] The present invention is now described.
[0025] The present invention provides a torsional damper including: a hub fixed to a rotating shaft and having an outer peripheral surface on a circumference around the rotating shaft; an annular vibration ring having, on a circumference around the rotating shaft, an inner peripheral surface which is larger in diameter than the outer peripheral surface of the hub; and a rubber ring which is present in a compressed state between the outer peripheral surface of the hub and the inner peripheral surface of the vibration ring, which is made of a rubber composition primarily composed of EPDM, and which has a loss factor (tan δ) of 0.18 or more at a surface temperature of 60±5° C., wherein, when the torsional damper is subjected to a resonance point tracking process, a maximum attained surface temperature (Tmax) of the rubber ring at a resonance point during continuous excitation and a rubber fitting width (b) satisfy: Formula (1): Tmax≤−2.6b+173.5, and Formula (2): 20≤b.
[0026] The torsional damper as described above is hereinafter referred to also as the “torsional damper of the invention.”
[0027] The torsional damper of the invention is first described using
[0028]
[0029] A torsional damper 1 of the embodiment illustrated in
[0030] The torsional damper 1 has a hub 3, a vibration ring 5, and a rubber ring 7.
[0031] The hub 3 includes a boss part 31, a stay part 33, and a rim part 35.
[0032] The boss part 31 is provided at a central portion of the hub 3 in its radial direction. The boss part 31 is fixed to an end of the crankshaft (rotating shaft) and the hub 3 is driven to rotate around an axis of rotation X.
[0033] The stay part 33 extends in the radial direction from the boss part 31.
[0034] The rim part 35 is provided on an outer peripheral side of the stay part 33. The rim part 35 has a cylindrical shape and the vibration ring 5 is connected to an outer peripheral side of the rim part 35 via the rubber ring 7.
[0035] An outer peripheral surface of the rim part 35 is present on a circumference around the axis of rotation X.
[0036] A metallic material such as cast iron or the like can be used as a raw material to form each of the boss part 31, the stay part 33, and the rim part 35.
[0037] Further, each of the boss part 31, the stay part 33, and the rim part 35 is preferably made of particularly flake graphite cast iron, spheroidal graphite cast iron, hot-rolled steel sheet for use in automobile structures or the like. Examples of the flake graphite cast iron that may be illustrated include FC100, FC150, FC200, FC250, FC300 and FC350. Examples of the spheroidal graphite cast iron that may be illustrated include FCD350-22, FCD350-22L, FCD400-18, FCD400-18L, FCD400-15, FCD450-10, FCD500-7, FCD600-3, FCD700-2, FCD800-2, FCD400-18A, FCD400-18AL, FCD400-15A, FCD500-7A, and FCD600-3A. Examples of the hot-rolled steel sheet for use in automobile structures that may be illustrated include SAPH310, SAPH370, SAPH410, and SAPH440.
[0038] The vibration ring 5 is placed outside the hub 3 in its radial direction. An inner peripheral surface of the vibration ring 5 has a larger diameter than the outer peripheral surface of the hub 3. The inner peripheral surface is present on a circumference around the crankshaft (axis of rotation X).
[0039] Further, pulley grooves 51 over which the belt is stretched are formed at an outer peripheral surface of the vibration ring 5. The pulley grooves 51 serve as a pulley for power transmission.
[0040] A metallic material such as cast iron or the like can be used as a raw material to form the vibration ring 5.
[0041] The vibration ring 5 is preferably made of flake graphite cast iron. This is because the flake graphite cast iron has high vibration absorption performance and is also excellent in abrasion resistance. Examples of the flake graphite cast iron that may be illustrated include FC100, FC150, FC200, FC250, FC300 and FC350.
[0042] The rubber ring 7 is inserted into a gap portion between the outer peripheral surface of the hub 3 and the inner peripheral surface of the vibration ring 5. The rubber ring 7 serves to reduce torsional vibration of the crankshaft that occurs during driving in a vehicle or the like, thus preventing breakage, or to reduce noise and vibration due to engine vibration.
[0043] The rubber ring 7 can be obtained by forming a rubber composition primarily composed of an ethylene/propylene/diene ternary copolymer (EPDM) and additionally containing preferably carbon black and process oil into a cylindrical shape or other shapes through vulcanization using, for instance, a conventionally known method.
[0044] As for the compounding amount, the rubber composition contains EPDM in an amount of preferably 10 to 60 mass, more preferably 15 to 55 mass %, even more preferably 20 to 50 mass %, and still more preferably 30 to 50 mass %.
[0045] The carbon black content with respect to 100 parts by mass of EPDM is preferably 40 to 130 parts by mass, more preferably 50 to 100 parts by mass, and even more preferably 60 to 80 parts by mass.
[0046] The rubber composition may contain Chinese white, stearic acid, an antioxidant, a peroxide, a crosslinking agent or other components.
[0047] The loss factor (tan δ) of the rubber ring 7 at a surface temperature of 60±5° C. is 0.18 or more, preferably 0.18 to 0.40, more preferably 0.19 to 0.35, and even more preferably 0.20 to 0.28.
[0048] The loss factor (tan δ) at the surface temperature of 60±5° C. means a value obtained by measurement with a high frequency vibration tester according to the resonance point tracking process (natural frequency measurement). The measurement according to the resonance point tracking process is performed under the following conditions:
* Excitation amplitude: ±0.05 deg
* Phase during excitation: −90 deg
* Ambient temperature: 23±3° C.
* Rubber surface measurement method: Non-contact surface thermometer.
<Manufacturing Method>
[0049] There is no particular limitation on the method of manufacturing the torsional damper of the invention as described above.
[0050] The torsional damper can be manufactured for instance by a method to be described below.
[0051] First, a hub 30 and a vibration ring 50 as shown in
[0052] Then, as shown in
[0053] In the torsion damper of the invention, the rubber ring is present in a compressed state between the outer peripheral surface of the hub and the inner peripheral surface of the vibration ring.
<Examination of Structure of Torsional Damper that may Influence Temperature of Rubber Ring>
[0054] The inventor prepared torsional dampers of various structures which were different in vibration ring thickness (a), fitting width (b), rubber thickness (c), fitting diameter (d), and hub fitting portion thickness (e), and examined influences on the rubber ring temperature.
[0055] The vibration ring thickness (a) as used herein refers to, as shown in
[0056] The fitting width (b) refers to, as shown in
[0057] The rubber thickness (c) refers to, as shown in
[0058] The fitting diameter (d) refers to, as shown in
[0059] The hub fitting portion thickness (e) refers to, as shown in
[0060] The inventor prepared torsional dampers of various structures according to the embodiment shown in
* Excitation amplitude: ±0.05 deg
* Phase during excitation: −90 deg
* Testing time: Length of time before the surface temperature of the rubber ring is saturated.
* Ambient temperature: 23±3° C.
* Rubber surface measurement method: Non-contact surface thermometer.
[0061] The surface temperature of the rubber ring of the torsional damper was measured using a non-contact surface thermometer while performing the resonance point tracking process as described above.
[0062] An exemplary measurement result is shown in
[0063] As shown in
[0064] The surface temperature of the rubber ring at the time of saturation was taken as the maximum attained surface temperature (Tmax) of the rubber ring in the torsional damper of the relevant structure.
[0065] As described above, the inventor subjected the torsional dampers of various structures which were different in vibration ring thickness (a), fitting width (b), rubber thickness (c), fitting diameter (d), and hub fitting portion thickness (e) to the resonance point tracking process, thus measuring the maximum attained surface temperature (Tmax) of the rubber ring during the process.
[0066] Then, it was found that the maximum attained surface temperature (Tmax) of the rubber ring depends strongly on the fitting width (b) and the temperature of the rubber ring is not increased in a region shown in
[0067] The region is expressed by the following formulae:
T max≤−2.6b+173.5, and Formula (1)
20≤b. Formula (2)
[0068] Plotted points in
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Fitting width Tmax Sample No. [mm] [° C.] 1 23.2 105 2 26.0 95 3 29.7 85 4 35.0 71 5 30.7 84 6 30.7 85 7 30.7 82 8 30.7 74 9 25.6 64 10 30.7 63 11 30.7 70
[0069] As shown in
[0070] Then, looking at the positions of the plotted points shown in
[0071] The fitting width (b) is 20 mm or more according to Formula (2) but is more preferably 25 mm or more.
[0072] The fitting width (b) is preferably 100 mm or less, more preferably 80 mm or less, even more preferably 60 mm or less, still more preferably 40 mm or less, and even still more preferably 35 mm or less.
[0073] The torsional damper of the invention described above in detail is much less likely to cause rubber ring breakage due to heat generation.
[0074] There have heretofore existed suggestions for suppressing heat generation of a rubber ring by adjusting the material of the rubber ring (for example, the torsional damper described in JP 2018-96455 A).
[0075] However, there has not existed a technical concept that heat generation of a rubber ring is suppressed by adjusting the structure of a torsional damper, to be more specific, the length (fitting width) of a vibration ring in the direction of the axis of rotation X as in the present invention.
[0076] A person skilled in the art could not easily achieve the present invention in that the present invention presented the technical concept and further presented with specific mathematical formulae a region where heat generation of a rubber ring can be suppressed.