Hydrostatic axial piston machine
09644617 ยท 2017-05-09
Assignee
Inventors
- Joerg Dantlgraber (Lohr, DE)
- David Breuer (Tuebingen, DE)
- Joerg Weingart (Guenzburg, DE)
- Michael Gaumnitz (Horb, DE)
- Marcus Simon (Bretten, DE)
- Andreas Illmann (Weil der Stadt, DE)
- Christoph Gesterkamp (Illingen, DE)
Cpc classification
F01B3/0052
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03C1/0652
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B1/24
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01B3/0085
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B1/124
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F04B1/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01B3/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B1/24
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B1/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B1/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
The disclosure relates to a hydrostatic axial piston machine having a housing, having a drive shaft, to which a flange disc is fastened in a rotationally fixed manner, and having a swash plate, to which a rotor disc, driven by the drive shaft or the flange disc, is rotatably mounted, and having a plurality of displacement units arranged distributed between the flange disc and the rotor disc and around the axis of the drive shaft, each displacement unit comprising a cylinder sleeve and a piston which extends into the cylinder sleeve and has a ball head and a spherical joint head which extends into the cylinder sleeve, wherein during operation, the piston plunges more or less far into the cylinder sleeve.
Claims
1. A hydrostatic axial piston machine comprising: a housing; a drive shaft; a flange disk arranged on the drive shaft and configured for conjoint rotation with the drive shaft; a rotatable rotor disk arranged so that an axis of rotation of the rotatable rotor disk is at an oblique angle with respect to an axis of the drive shaft and so that the rotatable rotor disk is configured to be taken along by one of the drive shaft and the flange disk; and a plurality of displacer units arranged in a manner distributed between the flange disk and the rotor disk and around the axis of the drive shaft, each displacer unit comprising: a cylinder sleeve, and a piston, having a ball head, and a spherical joint head projecting into the cylinder sleeve, wherein the piston of each displacer unit performs a stroke relative to a respective cylinder sleeve during operation, and wherein the joint head of each displacer unit is situated on the flange disk and the piston of each displacer unit is situated on the rotor disk.
2. The hydrostatic axial piston machine according to claim 1, wherein: the drive shaft is mounted in a first rotary bearing on a first side of the flange disk and a second rotary bearing on a second side of the flange disk, and the rotor disk is arranged between the flange disk and one of the first and second rotary bearings and has a central passage for the drive shaft.
3. The hydrostatic axial piston machine according to claim 1, wherein the rotor disk has a flat sliding surface opposite a sliding partner fixed in a direction of rotation of the drive shaft, and the rotor disk is centered relative to the sliding partner by a centering structure.
4. The hydrostatic axial piston machine according to claim 3, wherein the centering structure comprises: a centering collar on one of the sliding partner and the rotor disk; and a turned centering recess on the other of the sliding partner and the rotor disk.
5. The hydrostatic axial piston machine according to claim 1, wherein displacer spaces of the displacer units are configured to be connected fluidically to two working ports in alternation during operation by the joint heads, the flange disk and a distributor plate, on which the flange disk rests.
6. The hydrostatic axial piston machine according to claim 1, wherein the pistons and the joint heads define recesses open toward displacer spaces of the displacer units, the recesses being configured to compensate for a gap between the pistons and joint heads, and the cylinder sleeves.
7. The hydrostatic axial piston machine according to claim 1, wherein the oblique angle of axis of rotation of the rotor disk relative to the axis of the drive shaft is configured to be variable.
8. The hydrostatic axial piston machine according to claim 7, wherein the rotor disk rotates relative to a swashplate which is fixed in a direction of rotation of the drive shaft, has a central passage for the drive shaft, and the swashplate is at an oblique angle, relative to the axis of the drive shaft, that is configured to be variable.
9. The hydrostatic axial piston machine according to claim 7, wherein the oblique angle of the axis of rotation of the rotor disk is configured to be variable in opposite directions from a position in which the stroke of the pistons in the cylinder sleeves is zero.
10. The hydrostatic axial piston machine according to claim 1, further comprising: a pressure medium path, via which displacer spaces of the displacer units are filled from an interior of the housing.
11. The hydrostatic axial piston machine according to claim 10, further comprising: a low-pressure port connected to the interior of the housing.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
(1)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(2) The axial piston machine shown in
(3) The displacer spaces of the axial piston machine shown are each formed by a cylinder sleeve 31, a joint head 32 and a piston 33. The joint head and the piston are each of spherical design at the ends which form the boundary of the displacer space. In addition to the sealing function, the kinematically necessary joint function is thereby simultaneously formed. In addition, this arrangement has the advantage that the joint function is performed with a hydrostatic relief of 100 percent both on the part of the joint head and on the part of the piston owing to the principle involved (ball in tube). Owing to the principle involved, the highly stressed joints of the hydraulic machine are therefore of low-friction design.
(4) Moreover, this arrangement has the advantage that all the elements are connected positively to one another owing to the principle involved. As a result, it is possible to dispense completely with a nonpositive connection between the joint head and the cylinder sleeve or between the cylinder sleeve and the piston (e.g. by means of springs). As a result, the displacer principle involves little friction owing to the principle involved. By virtue of the positive connection of the displacer, there is a suitability for high speeds of rotation owing to the principle involved.
(5) The joint head and the piston have recesses, which allow gap compensation between the balls and the cylinder sleeve, which expands under pressure. The recess is designed in such a way that the remaining gap between the cylinder sleeve and the joint head or between the cylinder sleeve and the piston remains constant in a controlled manner under pressure or becomes smaller or becomes larger under pressure because the ball expands in a pressure-dependent manner. It is thereby possible to selectively influence the leakage losses via these gaps.
(6) The joint heads 32 are secured on the flange disk 34 and convert the hydraulic forces from the displacer spaces into a torque at the drive shaft 35. The axes of the joint heads are oriented parallel to the axis of the drive shaft. The centers of the ball heads of the joint heads 32 are thus all situated in the same plane perpendicular to the axis of the drive shaft. With the aid of two retaining rings 44, the joint heads 32 and the cylinder sleeves are held relative to one another in such a way that only a pivoting movement takes place between them. The pistons 33 are secured on the rotor disk 36 and perform a stroke motion relative to the cylinder sleeves 31. The axes of the pistons 33 extend obliquely to the axis of the drive shaft in accordance with the variable obliquity of the rotor disk.
(7) The rotor disk is taken along synchronously with the speed of rotation of the flange disk 34 by a driver pin 37, which is mounted in a hole in the drive shaft and engages in slots in a collar of the rotor disk, wherein a pivoting movement between the drive shaft and the rotor disk takes place upon rotation. Driving can also be accomplished by means of a Cardan joint, a constant-velocity joint or similar, for example. The rotor disk is rotatably mounted on the pivoting cradle (swashplate) 38, e.g. by means of a hydrostatic bearing or by means of a rolling bearing. The rotor disk is centered on the swashplate by means of a centering collar 54 on the swashplate and a turned centering recess 55 on the rotor disk.
(8) The drive shaft 35 is rotatably mounted on both sides of the flange disk 34 with the aid of taper roller bearings 56 and 57 in the bottom 58 of a housing cup 59 and in a housing cover 51. The rotor disk 36 and the swashplate 38 are arranged between the flange disk 34 and the taper roller bearing 56, i.e. between the flange disk 34 and the bottom 58 of the housing cup 59, and each have a central passage 48, 49 for the passage of the drive shaft 35. The drive shaft passes through the bottom 58 to the outside and, on the outside, has a shaft stub so that it can be connected thereby to a driving machine part or a machine part to be driven.
(9) The stroke adjustment of the pistons is accomplished, as in a conventional swashplate design, by means of an adjusting system which a first adjusting piston 40 with a large effective area designed as a sleeve, which is controlled by a valve (not shown specifically), and an adjusting piston 41 of small effective area, which is subjected continuously to the high pressure at a working port. The adjusting pistons are single acting pistons and operate in opposition to one another in relation to the pivoting axis of the swashplate. Acting in the same direction as adjusting piston 41 is a return spring 42, which defines a rest position of the swashplate.
(10) The swashplate can be pivoted in opposite directions from a zero position, in which it occupies a position in which the pistons 33 do not perform a stroke. The terms pivoting via zero or pivoting through are also used. Thus, the hydrostatic machine is suitable for use as a variable displacement motor in an open circuit and for secondary control, i.e. for control of the speed or torque of the machine independently of the instantaneously applied high pressure, where it is possible not only to change the direction of rotation but also to make a transition from motor operation to pump operation. Here, secondary control contrasts with primary control, in which the delivery rate of the pump, i.e. of the primary unit, is specified. In a secondary control system, the pump is generally pressure-regulated but the pressure specified can be variable.
(11) Commutation is accomplished by means of a high-pressure passage and a low-pressure passage, which lead from connection points (not shown specifically) situated on the housing cover 51 to a distributor plate 52, which is arranged non-rotatably relative to the housing cover, between the flange disk 34 and the housing cover 51. The flange disk 34 and the distributor plate 52 form a sliding pair. Formed in the distributor plate are two arc-shaped apertures (not shown), each of which is open toward one of the passages in the housing cover 51 and with which individual passages 53 in the flange disk, which each lead through a joint head 32 to a displacer space, come into overlap during rotation of the flange disk 34.
(12) The arrangement according to the illustrative embodiment allows a continuous drive shaft 35 and hence through-drive and the arrangement of a plurality of machines in series. Through-drive of this kind is also possible if, in a variant of the axial piston machine shown, the flange disk 34 is situated close to the bottom and the rotor disk and the swashplate are situated close to the cover or if the shaft stub is situated at the cover end.
(13) As in conventional hydrostatic axial piston machines of swashplate construction, commutation of the displacers is accomplished by a distributor plate 52 and the flange disk 34. As a result, adjustment is possible irrespective of the requirements for commutation and of the hydrostatic mounting of the flange disk. Large pivoting angles and pivoting through can be achieved.
(14) In addition or as an alternative to the illustrated commutation of the displacers by the flange disk, the displacers can also be commutated by the pivoting cradle 38, rotor disk 36 and pistons 33. By means of the additional commutation, the flow losses during commutation can be reduced. The maximum speed of the machine can be raised. In particular, it appears advantageous if, in the case of a hydraulic machine which, by virtue of adjustment via zero, can be operated both as a hydraulic motor and also as a hydraulic pump, for example when used in a travel drive and then when braking, additional filling of the displacer spaces by means of the pivoting cradle 38, rotor disk 36 and pistons 33 is possible as well as filling via the distributor disk. This is because, without an additional pressure medium path for filling, the displacer spaces must be filled exclusively via the kidney-shaped low-pressure aperture in the distributor plate 52 in the case of a low pressure gradient in pump mode in an open hydraulic circuit. The axial piston machine shown therefore has hollow pistons 33 and holes 45 in the rotor disk 36 which are associated with the pistons. In the angular range in which the holes 53 in the flange disk 34 cross the kidney-shaped low-pressure aperture in the distributor plate 52, these holes cross a groove 47 in the swashplate 38, said grooves being connected by one or more openings 46 to the interior of the housing. For the sake of clarity, the opening 46 and the groove 47 are depicted in the FIGURE even though, in reality, they are turned relative to the position shown and are actually not visible in the section according to the FIGURE.
(15) Filling of the displacer spaces of a hydraulic machine used in an open hydraulic circuit from the low pressure via at least two pressure medium paths is used not only in the hydraulic machine shown with a double-ball drive mechanism but also in hydraulic machines of conventional swashplate construction, in hydraulic machines with a floating-cup drive mechanism or in any other adjustable displacer drive mechanism (particularly one on a piston/bore basis).
(16) The principal advantages of a hydrostatic axial piston machine according to the disclosure, particularly the hydrostatic axial piston machine described as an illustrative embodiment, may be regarded as the following:
(17) direct conversion of the hydraulic power of the displacer into torque in a manner free from transverse forces;
(18) significantly better starting behavior as a hydraulic motor in comparison with swashplate designs, better starting behavior than oblique-axis designs;
(19) significantly extended conversion range (useful pivoting range in practice) as compared with oblique-axis designs;
(20) a reduction in consumption by the hydraulic machines;
(21) machine can pivot through (in addition to the abovementioned characteristics) and is therefore suitable as an open-circuit hydraulic motor (secondary control);
(22) a reduction in costs since an open circuit requires fewer components than a closed circuit;
(23) in principle, the machine is capable of through drive (multiple arrangement possible as in swashplate designs).
(24) direct conversion of the hydraulic power of the displacer into torque in a manner free from transverse forces;
(25) significantly better starting behavior as a hydraulic motor in comparison with swashplate designs, better starting behavior than oblique-axis designs;
(26) significantly extended conversion range (useful pivoting range in practice) as compared with oblique-axis designs;
(27) a reduction in consumption by the hydraulic machines; machine can pivot through (in addition to the abovementioned characteristics) and is therefore suitable as an open-circuit hydraulic motor (secondary control);
(28) a reduction in costs since an open circuit requires fewer components than a closed circuit;
(29) in principle, the machine is capable of through drive (multiple arrangement possible as in swashplate designs).