Cooling structure of oil cooling motor
09991764 ยท 2018-06-05
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F16C33/6659
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H02K5/1732
ELECTRICITY
F16C33/664
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H02K5/15
ELECTRICITY
H02K9/19
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H02K5/15
ELECTRICITY
H02K5/173
ELECTRICITY
F16N31/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H02K9/19
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A cooling structure of an oil cooling motor may include a housing, a front cover and a rear cover each mounted at both sides of a housing along a length direction of the housing, a rotor shaft extending through the housing and have both ends rotatably supported by bearings of the front cover and the rear cover, a rotor disposed in the housing and rotatably supported by the rotor shaft, a front oil supply groove and a rear oil supply groove formed on opposing inner sides of the front cover and the rear cover and configured to temporarily store oil stored in a bottom of the housing and scattered by churning of the rotor, and a front cover passage and a rear cover passage configured to communicate with the front oil supply groove and the rear oil supply groove, respectively.
Claims
1. A motor, comprising: a housing comprising a first opening and a second opening opposing the first opening; a first cover covering the first opening and comprising a first inner surface, wherein the first inner surface comprises a first bearing recess; a second cover covering the second opening and comprising a second inner surface, wherein the second inner surface comprises a second bearing recess; a first bearing disposed in the first bearing recess; a second bearing disposed in the second bearing recess; a stator housed in the housing; a rotor shaft comprising a first end portion and a second end portion, wherein the first and second end portions are rotatably supported by the first and second bearings, respectively; a rotor disposed in the housing and rotatably supported by the rotor shaft with respect to the stator; a first oil supply groove formed into the first inner surface of the first cover and configured to retain oil; a second oil supply groove formed into the second inner surface of the second over and configured to retain oil; a first oil passage connecting between the first oil supply groove and the first bearing recess; and a second oil passage connecting between the second oil supply groove and the second bearing recess; an oil guide installed on the first inner surface adjacent to the first bearing recess and comprising one or more walls that define an oil retaining space for retaining oil from the first bearing recess, wherein the oil guide partially encloses an outer circumferential surface of a lower portion of the first bearing, wherein the one or more walls of the oil guide comprise a horizontal wall and a vertical wall vertically bent upwardly from the horizontal wall.
2. The motor of claim 1, further comprising a bearing retainer fixed to the second cover and configure to retain the second bearing inside the second bearing recess.
3. A motor, comprising: a housing comprising a first opening and a second opening opposing the first opening; a first cover covering the first opening and comprising a first inner surface, wherein the first inner surface comprises a first bearing recess; a second cover covering the second opening and comprising a second inner surface, wherein the second inner surface comprises a second bearing recess; a first bearing disposed in the first bearing recess; a second bearing disposed in the second bearing recess; a stator housed in the housing; a rotor shaft comprising a first end portion and a second end portion, wherein the first and second end portions are rotatably supported by the first and second bearings, respectively; a rotor disposed in the housing and rotatably supported by the rotor shaft with respect to the stator; a first oil supply groove formed into the first inner surface of the first cover and configured to retain oil; a first oil passage connecting between the first oil supply groove and the first bearing recess; and an oil guide installed on the first inner surface adjacent to the first bearing recess and comprising one or more walls that define an oil retaining space for retaining oil from the first bearing recess, wherein the oil guide partially encloses an outer circumferential surface of a lower portion of the first bearing, wherein the one or more walls of the oil guide comprise a horizontal wall and a vertical wall vertically bent upwardly from the horizontal wall.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
DESCRIPTION OF SPECIFIC EMBODIMENTS
(10) Hereinafter, example embodiments of the present invention will be described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings.
(11) As discussed above, in the case of the motor of 15 to 20 kW or more, the cooling method or the cooling efficiency becomes a hot issue on the design of the motor.
(12) That is, since the motor cooling method of an example of a hybrid vehicle adopts a method of making oil flow in a top portion of the motor by pumping in the state in which half of a bottom portion of a stator within the motor is dipped in cooling oil and making the oil flow in a lower end thereof through a cooling passage disposed at the stator side by gravity, the motor cooling method may effectively cool the stator but may not effectively cool heat generation of a rotor or a permanent magnet due to an eddy current.
(13) Further, a method of forming a passage in the rotor to inject oil in a hollow direction of a shaft and scattering the oil due to churning and centrifugal force of the rotor when the rotor rotates has been known, but the oil scattered from the rotor may cool only a stator core and may be vulnerable to cooling of a bearing side rotatably supporting a rotor shaft which is a direct heat generation source.
(14)
(15) An inside of the housing 100 is fixed with a stator 110. Further, the rotor shaft 400 which is provided to be ratable based on a center within the housing 100 and is disposed radially inwardly of the stator 100 rotates by a magnetic field of the stator 110. In this case, the rotor 410 integrally rotating with the rotor shaft 400 rotates and is dipped in cooling oil filled in a bottom of the housing 100 each time the rotor shaft 400 rotates, and thus the cooling oil is churned.
(16) Further, the front cover 200 and the rear cover 300 are each mounted at both ends of the housing 100 along a length direction of the housing 100. Here, the rotor shaft 400 is disposed to penetrate through a center of the front cover 200 and a center of the rear cover 300.
(17) Opposing inner sides of the front cover 200 and the rear cover 300 are each provided with the front oil supply groove 210 and the rear oil supply groove 310. The front oil supply groove 210 and the rear oil supply groove 310 may have a depressed shape in which oil stored in the bottom of the housing 100 is scattered by the churning of the rotor 410 so as to be temporarily received.
(18) Further, the front cover passage 220 and the rear cover passage 320 which communicate with the front oil supply groove 210 and the rear oil supply groove 310, respectively, are provided.
(19)
(20)
(21)
(22)
(23) Further, a portion of a lower edge of the inner circumferential surface of the bearing retainer 700 is provided with a lower protrusion 720 protruding radially inwardly, and thus the cooling oil flowing downward may be additionally stored.
(24) As described above, in accordance with the cooling structure of an oil cooling motor in accordance with the example embodiments of the present invention, it is possible to improve the durability of the motor by supplying the oil scattered to the wall surface to the bearing in addition to the oil directly churned into the bearing, storing the supplied oil, and improving the bearing performance.
(25) The example embodiment of the present invention is described above, but the present invention is not limited to the foregoing example embodiments. Accordingly, all modifications easily changed from the example embodiments of the present invention by a person having ordinary skill in the art to which the present invention pertains are included within a scope recognized to be equivalent.