Improvements In and Relating to Gear Pumps
20190145405 ยท 2019-05-16
Inventors
Cpc classification
F04C2240/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05C2225/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04C2/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04C2/084
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04C15/0019
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F04C2/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04C15/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
Disclosed is a gear pump (10) comprising a contra rotating gear element pair (30 and 40) mounted within a housing (20), each gear element having complementary gear teeth sets providing a pumping action in use, said teeth being formed from an annulus (34 and 44) of generally rigid construction mounted on a relatively flexible inner section (35 and 45), the gear pair being mounted such that their respective annuli are biased into resilient contact with the housing to provide a sliding seal.
Claims
1. A gear pump comprising a housing supporting first and second gear elements having complementary teeth or other projections cooperable to provide a pressure differential in a fluid circuit by means of rotation of the first and second gear elements, the first, or the first and second elements being arranged in the pump for resilient contact of its/their teeth with the housing to provide sliding sealing contact between the teeth and the housing in use, wherein the first and/or second gear elements include a relatively rigid outer portion forming at least a portion of said teeth or other projections, and an inner relatively more flexible section between the outer portion and a centre of rotation of the or each gear element.
2. The gear pump as claimed in claim 1, wherein said first and second gear elements are contra-rotating elements and wherein the teeth of both gears come together in use in resilient contact.
3. The gear pump as claimed in claim 1, wherein the inner flexible section is formed from one or more of: flexible spokes; continuous elastomeric material; elastomeric material, foamed material and voids in the elastomeric material.
4. The gear pump as claimed in claim 3, wherein, where said inner section is formed from flexible spokes, said spokes are swept backwards in relation to the intended direction of rotation of the spokes.
5. The gear pump as claimed in claim 1, wherein said housing includes a portion biased towards one or more of the gear elements to provide further resilient contact.
6. A gear pump comprising a contra rotating gear element pair mounted within a housing, each gear element having complementary gear teeth sets providing a pumping action in use, said teeth being formed from an annulus of generally rigid construction mounted on a relatively flexible inner section, the gear pair being arranged such that their respective annuli are biased into resilient contact with the housing to provide a sliding seal.
7. Single use bioprocessing apparatus including a gear pump as claimed in claim 1.
8. (canceled)
9. A gear pump comprising a contra rotating gear element pair mounted within a housing, each gear element having complementary gear teeth sets providing a pumping action in use, said teeth being formed from an annulus of generally rigid construction mounted on a relatively flexible inner section, the housing having a region in contact with one or both gears of the pair said region being biased into resilient contact with the gears to provide a sliding seal.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0009] The invention can be put into effect in numerous ways, illustrative embodiments of which are described below with reference to the drawings, wherein:
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
[0014] The invention, together with its objects and the advantages thereof, may be understood better by reference to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like reference numerals identify like elements in the Figures.
[0015] Referring to
[0016] The detailed description in the paragraph above is conventional. However, in this pump both gear elements have teeth sets 34 and 44 mounted on an elastomeric boss 35 and 45 respectively. By design, the teeth 34 and 44 are a mutual interference fit, resulting in resilient contact between the respective teeth sets. In addition, the clearance between the housing and the teeth sets is such that the teeth sets are in resilient sliding contact with an inner wall of the housing at least at regions 22 of the wall, opposite to the region 70 of said teeth set contact. This resilient contact inhibits back leakage of fluid in the pump and thereby improves efficiency, without significantly increasing the drive torque required to operate the pump. The sliding contact at regions 22 is such that at least one tooth of each tooth set is in contact at all times, thereby minimising back flow leakage.
[0017]
[0018] In
[0019] In
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023] Although embodiments have been described and illustrated, it will be apparent to the skilled addressee that additions, omissions and modifications are possible to those embodiments without departing from the scope of the invention claimed. For example, external gear pumps have being described and illustrated, but internal gear pumps could be employed. Flow directions and orientations have been described, but the gear but pump be used in any orientation and, with the exception of gear elements 430 and 440 (which are unidirectional in view of the swept spokes) can operate in either direction, so can provide flow in a reverse direction if needed. An important aspect of this invention is that the gear teeth described make sealing contact with a portion of the housing where fluid flows in use. This can be achieved as described by forcing the gears toward the housing as a result of their mutual contact, or by virtue of their positioning on their respective shafts in the housing such that biasing force is exerted by the shaft acting on the gear, without significant biasing force resulting from the gear's mutual contact. In other words, the reaction force of the sliding contact force is taken by the gear's shafts. Another alternative is to bias the housing, or a portion of the housing toward the gears, for example by making the housing flexible, for example a flexible shell structure. In that latter case the gears can be made rigid or semi-rigid.
[0024] In practice, gears which provide lower cost alternatives are preferred for single use operation, i.e. those constructions and materials described above in relation to the figures. However, since numerous constructions of the gears having a core and relatively more rigid outer teeth, protrusions, or the like, have been described above, for clarity those constructions are summarised here along with other useful alternatives. Examples of core materials are: elastomer; polymer; fibre filled polymer/elastomer; foamed polymer/elastomer; metal; and metallic depositions. Examples of teeth etc. materials are: polymers; metals; metallic depositions; and ceramics. Combinations of those materials are envisaged.
[0025] Examples of gear constructions are:
1) a completely solid construction with a rigid/more rigid shell, e.g. formed from a denser grade of material on the outside, e.g. a plate finished shell around a foamed core formed in a mould during a foaming process; a heat, light or chemical surface hardening of a solid material; a rigid shell filled with a settable material such as elastomer, setting or thermosetting polymer, or
2) a construction which is not solid, i.e. a construction which has open areas such as the spaces formed by spokes, holes or open voids or a inner reduced thickness construction, where the non-solid construction is formed either from the same material throughout, but relying on the inherent greater elastic flexibility of the material adjacent the open areas, e.g. formed by chemical etching, electroforming, abrasion, cutting, forging, punching, stamping, machining, laser cutting/ablation, a layered construction (e.g. so called 3D printing) or laminates; or different materials mentioned above, relying on the inherent different flexibility of the different materials. Examples of constructions which are not solid are: is a rigid shell co-moulded with a flexible polymer core such as a rubberised plastics material; a spring steel shell with spokes formed from spring steel also. It is possible to make one driven gear only in the manner described above, with a different construction for the passive (undriven) gear. The passive gear could be formed as an outer shell with no inner formation because it will be kept substantially in place within the housing.