Directional control valve with double-solenoid configurations
09964125 ยท 2018-05-08
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y10T137/86879
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F16K11/0704
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F15B2013/0412
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F15B21/003
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16K31/0679
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F15B13/0431
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16K31/0613
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F15B13/044
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F15B13/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16K11/07
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F15B13/044
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F15B21/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16K31/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A double-solenoid directional control valve comprising a valve body and a valve spool within the valve body, where the valve spool is configured to move within the valve body between a first position, a second position and a third position, where the third spool position lies between the first and second spool positions. In certain embodiments, the spool is maintained in the first and third positions by energizing at least a first or a second solenoid actuator, and where the spool is maintained in the second position by de-energizing both solenoid actuators.
Claims
1. A double-solenoid directional control valve comprising: a valve body; a first solenoid actuator; a second solenoid actuator; and a valve spool within the valve body, wherein: the valve spool is configured to move within the valve body between a first position, a second position and a third position, where the third spool position lies between the first and second spool positions, and where the spool is maintained in the first and third positions by energizing at least the first or the second solenoid actuator, and where the spool is maintained in the second position by de-energizing both the first and the second solenoid actuators; the first and second solenoid actuators are configured as pilot-operated type solenoid actuators; and one of the first or second solenoid controls a normally-closed pilot valve and the other solenoid controls a normally-open pilot valve.
2. The valve of claim 1, further comprising a set of centering springs configured to maintain the spool in the third position in the absence of pressurization from the normally-closed pilot valve or the normally-open pilot valve.
3. The valve of claim 2, where energizing both the first and second solenoids pressurizes the first pilot and maintains the valve spool in the first position.
4. The valve of claim 2, where de-energizing both the first and second solenoids pressurizes the second pilot and maintains the valve spool in the second position.
5. The valve of claim 2, where de-energizing the first solenoid and energizing the second solenoid de-pressurizes both pilots, and allows the centering springs to maintain the valve spool in the third position.
6. The valve of claim 5, wherein the valve is operated by a single electrical input, which is high (energized) when the spool is commanded to the first position, and low (de-energized) when the spool is commanded to the second position.
7. The valve of claim 6, wherein a high electrical input energizes both the first and second solenoids and maintains the spool in the first position.
8. The valve of claim 6, where electrical energy from the single electrical input is stored in the valve when the spool is in the first position.
9. The valve of claim 8, where at least one of a capacitor, a supercapacitor, or a battery is used to store electrical energy.
10. The valve of claim 8, where upon a transition of the single electrical input from high to low, stored electrical energy supplies power to temporarily energize at least one of the solenoid actuators.
11. The valve of claim 10, where upon a transition of the single electrical input from high to low, the stored electrical energy is used to energize the second solenoid actuator for a prescribed interval of time, which maintains the spool in the third position.
12. The valve of claim 6, where upon a transition of the single electrical input from low to high, only the second solenoid is initially energized for a prescribed period of time, which maintains the spool in the third position.
13. The valve of claim 6, where upon a transition of the single electrical input from low to high, the first solenoid is energized only after the second solenoid has been energized for a prescribed interval of time.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The following drawings form part of the present specification and are included to further demonstrate certain aspects of the present disclosure. The disclosure may be better understood by reference to one or more of these drawings in combination with the detailed description of specific embodiments presented herein.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EXEMPLARY EMBODIMENTS
(14) Pilot-Operated Example
(15) The lack of electrical power required to operate the three-position energy-saving valve can be circumvented by employing alternate actuation configurations for the three-position valve. Specifically, in a standard three-position double-solenoid valve (e.g.,
(16) Consider first the case of a pilot-operated double-solenoid valve. In such a valve, rather than move the spool directly, the solenoid actuators control fluid connectivity to a pilot fluid supply, which in turn moves the spool by pressurizing the first or second end of the spool. In a conventional solenoid-actuated pilot-operated valve, energizing only the first solenoid opens a first normally-closed pilot valve, which in turn uses the pressurized gas in the pilot to push the spool into the first position. Similarly, energizing only the second solenoid opens a second normally-closed pilot valve, which in turn uses the pressurized gas in the pilot to push the spool (back) into the second position. De-energizing both solenoids closes both pilot valves (i.e., depressurizes both sides of the spool), and allows the centering springs to move the spool into the third (centered) position.
(17) Rather than use both solenoids to control normally-closed pilot valves (as in the conventional case), the pilot-operated embodiment described here employs one solenoid that controls a normally-closed pilot, and one solenoid that controls a normally-open pilot. For example, the three-position valve described here can be configured such that the first solenoid (S1) controls a normally-closed pilot valve, while the second solenoid (S2) controls a normal-open pilot valve. An electrical schematic of a circuit 100 that may be used in exemplary embodiments to control a single-solenoid two position valve is shown in
(18) As shown in
(19) In specific embodiments, the circuit logic can be implemented in a microcontroller, including for example, a small 8-bit microcontroller to implement the switching logic.
(20) In this case, energizing both solenoids will open the first pilot and close the second, thus maintaining the spool in the first position; de-energizing both solenoids will shut off the first pilot and open the second, thus maintaining the spool in the second position; and de-energizing the first solenoid and energizing the second will shut off both pilot supplies and allow the centering springs to maintain the spool in the third position. This configuration is outlined in
(21) In contrast with the continuous unmet energy requirement to maintain P2 (indicated in
(22) Specifically, since this temporary energy is required in the transition from the first to the second position, and since the first position is associated with direct electrical power supplied by the standard single-solenoid command, energy supplied during this state can be stored electrically and used to energize the second solenoid for the brief period of dwell immediately following the directly energized state. Thus, this alternate configuration double-solenoid valve enables a method of operating the special case of a three-position valve described here (i.e., that dwells for a short period of time in the third position when moving between the first and second spool positions) that maintains electrical compatibility with a two-position single-solenoid valve command.
(23) Direct-Acting Example
(24) Consider now the case of a double-solenoid valve that moves the spool via direct solenoid actuation (i.e., without pilot operation). In a conventional direct-acting solenoid-actuated valve, energizing only the first solenoid pulls the core of the solenoid into a coil, which directly pushes the spool into the first position. Similarly, energizing only the second solenoid directly pushes the spool (back) into the second position. De-energizing both solenoids allows a set of centering springs to move the spool into the third (centered) position. In this configuration, the relationship of solenoid actuation and spool position is identical to the conventional pilot-operated case (illustrated in
(25) One such configuration of solenoid actuation for the three-position valve is illustrated in
(26) In a second alternate embodiment, illustrated in