A BEARING ARRANGEMENT FOR AN ELECTRIC MOTOR OR GENERATOR
20180019636 ยท 2018-01-18
Inventors
Cpc classification
H02K5/173
ELECTRICITY
B60K2007/0092
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H02K5/15
ELECTRICITY
H02K7/085
ELECTRICITY
B60K2007/0038
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H02K5/16
ELECTRICITY
H02K5/10
ELECTRICITY
B60B27/0073
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H02K7/14
ELECTRICITY
B60Y2304/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
H02K5/10
ELECTRICITY
B60B27/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H02K7/14
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A bearing arrangement for mounting a wheel and an electric motor or generator having a stator and a rotor to a vehicle, the bearing arrangement comprising a sealing element and a bearing block, wherein the bearing block includes a first coupling element for coupling to a first radial wall of the rotor and the wheel, and a second coupling element for coupling to the stator and/or the vehicle, with a first bearing mounted between the first coupling element and the second coupling element to allow the first coupling element and the second coupling element to rotate relative to each other, wherein the first coupling element includes a mounting flange having a bolt hole arranged to extend through the mounting flange for receiving a bolt at a first aperture of the bolt hole for coupling the rotor and the wheel to the first coupling element, wherein the sealing element is arranged to be mounted over a second aperture of the bolt hole for inhibiting the ingress of dirt through the bolt hole.
Claims
1. A bearing arrangement for mounting a wheel and an electric motor or generator having a stator and a rotor to a vehicle, the bearing arrangement comprising a sealing element and a bearing block, wherein the bearing block includes a first coupling element for coupling to a first radial wall of the rotor and the wheel, and a second coupling element for coupling to the vehicle, with a bearing mounted between the first coupling element and the second coupling element to allow the first coupling element and the second coupling element to rotate relative to each other, wherein the first coupling element includes a mounting flange having a bolt hole arranged to extend through the mounting flange for receiving a bolt at a first aperture of the bolt hole for coupling the rotor and the wheel to the first coupling element, wherein the sealing element is arranged to be mounted over a second aperture of the bolt hole for inhibiting the ingress of material through the bolt hole into the electric motor or generator, wherein the mounting flange includes a plurality of bolt holes arranged to extend through the mounting flange for receiving a respective bolt at a first aperture of each of the bolt holes for coupling the rotor and the wheel to the first coupling element, wherein a plurality of sealing elements are arranged to be mounted over a second aperture of the respective bolt holes for inhibiting the ingress of material through the bolt hole into the electric motor or generator, wherein the plurality of sealing elements are coupled together.
2. A bearing arrangement according to claim 1, wherein the sealing element is arranged to be mounted over a second aperture of the bolt hole for inhibiting the ingress of dirt and/or water through the bolt hole into the electric motor or generator.
3. A bearing arrangement according to claim 1, wherein the sealing element includes a recess.
4. A bearing arrangement according to claim 1, wherein the sealing element is made of rubber.
5. A bearing arrangement according to claim 1, wherein a sealing compound is placed between the sealing element and the mounting flange.
6. A bearing arrangement according to claim 1, wherein the sealing element and mounting flange include a complementary keying feature to facilitate placement of the sealing element over the second aperture.
7. (canceled)
8. (canceled)
9. A bearing arrangement according to claim 1, wherein each of the plurality of sealing elements are coupled via a sprue.
Description
[0018] The present invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
[0032] For the purposes of the present embodiment, as illustrated in
[0033] The coils 254 are formed on stator tooth laminations to form coil windings. A stator cover 256 is mounted on the rear portion of the stator 252, enclosing the electronics module 255 to form the stator assembly 252, which may then be fixed to a vehicle and does not rotate relative to the vehicle during use.
[0034] The electronics module 255 includes two control devices 400, where each control device 400 includes an inverter and control logic, which in the present embodiment includes a processor, for controlling the operation of the inverter. However, the electronics module 255 can include any number of control devices.
[0035] To reduce the effects of inductance on the inverters, when switching current, the capacitor mounted on the stator is used as a local voltage source for the electric motor inverters. By placing a capacitor close to an inverter the inductance associated with the voltage source is minimised.
[0036] A rotor 240 comprises a front portion 220 and a cylindrical portion 221 forming a cover, which substantially surrounds the stator assembly 252. The rotor includes a plurality of permanent magnets 242 arranged around the inside of the cylindrical portion 221. For the purposes of the present embodiment 32 magnet pairs are mounted on the inside of the cylindrical portion 221. However, any number of magnet pairs may be used.
[0037] The magnets are in close proximity to the coil windings on the stator 252 so that magnetic fields generated by the coils interact with the magnets 242 arranged around the inside of the cylindrical portion 221 of the rotor assembly 240 to cause the rotor assembly 240 to rotate. As the permanent magnets 242 are utilized to generate a drive torque for driving the electric motor, the permanent magnets are typically called drive magnets.
[0038] The rotor 240 is attached to the stator 252 via a bearing arrangement that includes a bearing block 223 and a sealing element (not shown). The bearing block 223 can be a standard bearing block as would be used in a vehicle to which this motor assembly is to be fitted.
[0039] As illustrated in
[0040] For the purposes of the present embodiment the second coupling element 310 is fixed to a central portion of the stator's heat sink 253, for example by bolting the second coupling element 310 to the heat sink 253. The first coupling element 300 is arranged to be fixed to a central portion on the front radial wall of the rotor front portion 220, as described below.
[0041]
[0042]
[0043] Angular contact ball bearings can sustain significant axial loads in one direction together with radial loads. As a result of their design, when a radial load is applied an axial force component is produced. Accordingly, in circumstances when radial loads and axial loads in both directions are likely to be sustained, for example when used on a vehicle as a hub motor, it is desirable to use two angular contact ball bearings, for example matched angular contact ball bearings.
[0044] The first coupling element 300 and the second coupling element 310 act as the inner and outer rings, respectively, of the two angular contact ball bearings. The balls (not shown) of the angular contact ball bearings are mounted within cages (not shown) placed between the ball bearings inner and outer rings.
[0045] Although the bearing block 223 is described as having matched angular contact ball bearings, other types of ball bearings may be used.
[0046] As illustrated in
[0047] Each of the plurality of bolt holes 330 are arranged to extend through the mounting flange 320 for receiving a cylindrical bolt. The inner surface of each of the bolt holes 330 include a screw thread that is arranged to engage with a corresponding screw thread formed on a bolt to allow a bolt to be screwed into the bolt hole 330. A bolt, arranged to mount a rotor and wheel to the bearing block 223, is arranged to enter the bolt hole 330 via a first aperture 340 formed on the front face off the first coupling element's mounting flange.
[0048] As stated above, the bolt holes 330 extend through the mounting flange 320, with the bolt holes 330 having a second aperture 350 formed on the opposite face of the mounting flange 320 to the first aperture 340, as illustrated in
[0049] To prevent the ingress of dirt, water and/or other contaminates into the void between the electric motor's rotor and stator a sealing element is placed over each of the second aperture's 350 formed in the first coupling element's mounting flange 320, thereby preventing dirt, water and/or other contaminates entering through the bolt holes 330 into the electric motor prior to a bolt being placed into each of the respective bolt holes.
[0050] Each of the sealing elements mounted over the respective bolt holes second aperture 350 are preferably in the form of a rubber cap having a recess, where a cross sectional view of a preferred embodiment of a sealing element 600 is illustrated in
[0051] For a mounting flange 320 having a plurality of bolt holes 330, each with an associated sealing element 600, for ease of assembly preferably each of the sealing elements 600 are connected via a coupling element 620, for example a sprue, as illustrated in
[0052] To facilitate the placement of the sealing elements 600 over a respective second aperture 350, preferably each of the sealing elements 600 includes a keying feature 630 formed on the inner surface of the respective sealing elements 600 that are arranged to match corresponding features on the mounting flange 320.
[0053] For improved sealing between the respective sealing elements 600 and mounting flange 320, preferably a sealing compound is placed between the mounting surface of the respective sealing elements 600 and the surface of the mounting flange 320 prior to the mounting of the respective sealing elements 600 to the mounting flange 320.
[0054] Once a sealing compound has been applied to the mounting surface of the respective sealing elements 600 and/or the surface of the mounting flange 320, the respective sealing elements 600 are mounted onto the mounting flange 320 with each of the keying features 630 on the sealing elements 600 being placed in a corresponding keying feature on the mounting flange 320.
[0055]
[0056] To allow a rotor and wheel 1100 to be mounted to the bearing block 223, and correspondingly to a vehicle/stator, a bolt 1110 is inserted through corresponding bolt holes on the wheel and rotor and are screwed into a corresponding bolt hole formed on the mounting flange, as illustrated in
[0057] The rotor can thus be rotationally fixed to a vehicle with which it is to be used via the bearing block at the central portion on the front radial wall of the front portion 220 of the rotor. This has an advantage in that a wheel rim and tyre can then be fixed to the rotor at the central portion using the normal wheel bolts to fix the wheel rim to the central portion of the rotor and consequently firmly onto the rotatable side of the bearing block. The wheel bolts may be fitted through the central portion of the rotor through into the bearing block itself. An advantage of this arrangement is that the motor assembly 40 may be retrofitted to an existing vehicle by removing the wheel, bearing block and any other components such as the braking arrangement. The existing bearing block can then be fitted inside the assembly and the whole arrangement fitted to the vehicle on the stator side and the normal rim and wheel fitted to the rotor so that the rim and wheel surrounds the whole motor assembly. Accordingly, retrofitting to existing vehicles becomes very simple.
[0058] A further advantage is that there are no forces for supporting the vehicle on the outside of the rotor, particularly on the circumferential wall 221 carrying the magnets on the inside circumference. This is because the forces for carrying the vehicle are transmitted directly from the suspension fixed to one side of the bearing block (via the central portion of the stator) to the central portion of the wheel surrounding the rotor fixed to the other side of the bearing block (via the central portion of the rotor wall).
[0059] A V shaped seal is provided between the circumferential wall 221 of the rotor and the outer edge of the stator, thereby providing further protection to the ingress of dirt, water and/or other contaminants into the electric motor.