SMALL SCALE REACTION WHEEL ASSEMBLIES
20170313445 · 2017-11-02
Assignee
Inventors
- Terence Marshall (Glendale, AZ, US)
- Paul Buchele (Glendale, AZ, US)
- Pietro Dileonardo (Glendale, AZ, US)
- James T. Hanks (Peoria, AZ, US)
Cpc classification
F16F15/30
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16F15/3156
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
Reaction wheel assemblies having relatively compact and lightweight form factors (referred to as “small scale” RWAs) are disclosed. Such small scale RWAs are well-suited for deployment onboard relatively small satellites, but are not restricted to usage within any particular device or platform. In one embodiment, the small scale RWA includes a primary support platform to which a rotor is coupled for rotation about a spin axis. An axially-expanded face-to-face (DF) duplex bearing pair is disposed between the rotor shaft and the support platform. The DF duplex bearing pair includes first and second rolling element bearings positioned around an intermediate portion of the rotor shaft. The first and second rolling element bearings have first and second bearing load lines, respectively, which are spaced by a tailored bearing load line separation (SLL).
Claims
1. A reaction wheel assembly, comprising: a primary support platform; a rotor having a rotor shaft and coupled to the primary support platform for rotation about a spin axis; and an axially-expanded face-to-face (DF) duplex bearing pair disposed between the rotor shaft and the primary support platform, the axially-expanded DF duplex bearing pair comprising: a first rolling element bearing positioned around the rotor shaft and having a first bearing load line; and a second rolling element bearing positioned around the rotor shaft and having a second bearing load line separated from the first bearing load line by a bearing load line separation (s.sub.LL).
2. The reaction wheel assembly of claim 1 wherein the axially-expanded DF duplex bearing pair is at least partially nested within the rotor.
3. The reaction wheel assembly of claim 1 wherein the rotor has a center of gravity (CG.sub.ROTOR), wherein the first rolling element bearing contains a first plurality of rolling elements located on a first side of a plane orthogonal to the spin axis and transecting CG.sub.ROTOR, and wherein the second rolling element bearing contains a second plurality of rolling elements located on a second opposing side of the plane orthogonal to the spin axis and transecting CG.sub.ROTOR.
4. The reaction wheel assembly of claim 3 wherein the first rolling element bearing and the second rolling element bearing are substantially equidistant from the plane orthogonal to the spin axis and transecting CG.sub.ROTOR.
5. The reaction wheel assembly of claim 1 wherein the first rolling element bearing contains a first plurality of rolling elements, wherein the second rolling element bearing contains a second plurality of rolling elements, and wherein the rotor comprises a rotor rim fixedly coupled to the rotor shaft and circumscribing the first plurality of rolling elements and the second plurality of rolling elements.
6. The reaction wheel assembly of claim 1 wherein the rotor comprises a rotor rim fixedly coupled to the rotor shaft, and wherein the reaction wheel assembly further comprises a spin motor disposed at least partially between the rotor shaft and the rotor rim.
7. The reaction wheel assembly of claim 6 wherein spin motor comprises: a motor stator disposed around the rotor shaft and fixedly coupled to the primary support platform; and an annular motor rotor mounted to an inner circumferential portion of the rotor rim.
8. The reaction wheel assembly of claim 7 wherein the annular motor rotor and the rotor rim combine to yield an annular inertial system having a center of gravity (CG.sub.SYSTEM) inboard of the axially-expanded DF duplex bearing pair.
9. The reaction wheel assembly of claim 1 wherein the primary support platform comprises: a radially-extending wall; a tubular central structure projecting from the radially-extending wall in an axial direction; and an inner cylindrical cavity provided within the tubular central structure, housing the axially-expanded DF duplex bearing pair, and into which the rotor shaft extends.
10. The reaction wheel assembly of claim 9 wherein the axially-expanded DF duplex bearing pair mates to an outer circumferential surface of the rotor shaft and an inner circumferential surface of the tubular central structure defining the inner cylindrical cavity.
11. The reaction wheel assembly of claim 10 further comprising inner and outer clamp nuts securing inner and outer portions of the DF duplex bearing pair to the rotor shaft and to the tubular central structure, respectively, the inner and outer clamp nuts at least partially contained within the inner cylindrical cavity.
12. The reaction wheel assembly of claim 1 wherein the rotor shaft has a length L.sub.SHAFT as taken along the spin axis, wherein the axially-expanded DF duplex bearing pair has a length L.sub.BEARING as taken along the spin axis, and wherein L.sub.BEARING>0.5 L.sub.SHAFT.
13. A reaction wheel assembly, comprising: a housing assembly; a rotor having a rotor shaft, a rotor rim, and a center of gravity (CG.sub.ROTOR), the rotor coupled to the housing assembly for rotation about a spin axis; and a face-to-face (DF) duplex bearing pair disposed around the rotor shaft and circumscribing CG.sub.ROTOR.
14. The reaction wheel assembly of claim 13 wherein the housing assembly comprises a central tubular structure containing the DF duplex bearing pair and into which the rotor shaft extends.
15. The reaction wheel assembly of claim 14 wherein the rotor rim circumscribes at least a portion of the central tubular structure and the DF duplex bearing pair.
16. The reaction wheel assembly of claim 14 further comprising a spin motor having a motor rotor mounted to the rotor rim and having a motor stator mounted to the housing assembly at a location outboard of the central tubular structure.
17. The reaction wheel assembly of claim 13 wherein the DF duplex bearing pair comprises: a first rolling element bearing positioned around an intermediate portion of the rotor shaft and having a first bearing load line; and a second rolling element bearing position around the intermediate portion of the rotor shaft and having a second bearing load spaced from the first bearing load line by a bearing load line separation (S.sub.LL).
18. A reaction wheel assembly, comprising: a primary support platform including an inner tubular sidewall defining a central chamber; a rotor mounted to the primary support platform for rotation about a spin axis, the rotor comprising: a rotor rim circumscribing the inner tubular sidewall; and a rotor shaft joined to the rotor rim and extending into the central chamber; and a face-to-face (DF) duplex bearing pair disposed between the rotor shaft and the inner tubular sidewall and retained within the central chamber.
19. The reaction wheel assembly of claim 18 further comprising a spin motor at least partially nested within the rotor, the spin motor comprising: a motor rotor mounted to an interior portion of the rotor rim; and a motor stator mounted to the primary support platform.
20. The reaction wheel assembly of claim 19 wherein the motor stator and the motor rotor collectively form an inertial system having a center of gravity CG.sub.SYSTEM located substantially at the center of the DF duplex bearing pair.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0007] At least one example of the present invention will hereinafter be described in conjunction with the following figures, wherein like numerals denote like elements, and:
[0008]
[0009]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0010] The following Detailed Description is merely exemplary in nature and is not intended to limit the invention or the application and uses of the invention. The term “exemplary,” as appearing throughout this document, is synonymous with the term “example” and is utilized repeatedly below to emphasize that the following description provides only multiple non-limiting examples of the invention and should not be construed to restrict the scope of the invention, as set-out in the Claims, in any respect.
[0011] Embodiments of a small scale Reaction Wheel Assembly (RWA) having a relatively compact and lightweight form factor are provided. The small scale RWA features a unique, centralized bearing architecture, which contains a single axially-expanded, face-to-face (DF) duplex bearing pair disposed around a shaft of the RWA rotor. The axially-expanded DF duplex bearing pair includes first and second rolling element (e.g., ball) bearings, which each containing an annular row of rolling elements. The DF duplex bearing pair is “axially-expanded” or “split” in the sense that the two row of rolling elements are separated by a predetermined axial spacing (S.sub.A), as taken along the spin axis. The axial spacing between the rolling element rows (S.sub.A) and the rolling element/race contact angles (β) are tailored, by design, to create a desired bearing load line separation (S.sub.LL) between the respective bearing load lines of the rolling element bearings. The bearing load line separation (SLL) is, in turn, selected to impart the RWA with increased angular rotor stability and an improved moment capacity to better accommodate radial disturbance forces, while utilizing a single DF duplex bearing pair to support the rotor shaft. Additionally, the axially-expanded nature of the DF duplex bearing pair promotes uniform bearing loading to further prolong bearing life. As a further benefit, overall RWA reliability is enhanced by eliminating other rolling element bearings (e.g., a second duplex bearing pair), which otherwise increase the number of potential failure points within the RWA package. In certain embodiments, the axially-expanded duplex bearing pair is at least partially nested within the spin motor, which is, in turn, at least partially nested within the RWA rotor. Such a highly nested design further contributes to the lightweight, axially-compact form factor of the RWA. The end result is a small scale RWA that is both structurally robust and reliable, while further having a reduced part count, complexity, weight, envelope, and cost of manufacture as compared to conventional RWAs. A non-limiting exemplary embodiment of the small scale RWA will now be described in conjunction with
[0012]
[0013] In further embodiments, housing assembly 12 can include a different number of components joined together utilizing any combination of fasteners, welding, threaded attachment, and other joinder techniques. For example, bearing cover 19, end cap 20, and rotor cover 22 are non-essential to the operation of RWA 10 and may be eliminated in certain embodiments. In such embodiments, RWA 10 will still typically include primary support platform 18 or another structure (whether a single piece or assembled from multiple pieces) serving as a mechanical plant or structurally robust chassis, which is suitable for supporting rotor 14 and the other internal components of RWA 10. As shown in
[0014] Primary support platform 18 includes a radially-extending wall or diaphragm 28 and a centralized bearing containment structure 30 (identified in
[0015] As shown most clearly in
[0016] RWA 10 further includes a generally annular spin motor 46, which is mounted within rotor cavity 45 (
[0017] As previously described, spin motor 46 is largely or wholly nested within RWA rotor 14. Similarly, centralized bearing containment structure 30 is generally nested or contained within spin motor 46. Such a highly nested motor-rotor-bearing design provides several advantages. First, by nesting spin motor 46 within RWA rotor 14, the axial dimension of RWA 10 (the dimension of RWA 10 taken along spin axis 16) can be further reduced. Second, such a highly nested design enables outer rotor 50 of spin motor 46 and rotor rim 42 to collectively form a single inertial system 42, 50 during rotation of RWA rotor 14. Inertial system 42, 50 has a Center of Gravity (“CG.sub.SYSTEM”), which is represented in
[0018] In the exemplary embodiment of
[0019]
[0020] As represented in
[0021] For the reasons explained above, duplex bearing pair 54 is properly considered a face-to-face or “DF” bearing pair with the bearing load lines or vectors of rolling element bearings 56, 58 extending inwardly toward the center of the bearing envelope. Additionally, bearing pair 54 is axially-expanded or split as the two row of rolling elements 64 are separated by a predetermined axial spacing (S.sub.A), as taken along spin axis 16. Notably, the bearing load lines (LL.sub.1-2) represented by dashed lines 70, 72 are offset or spaced by bearing load line separation (S.sub.LL). The bearing load line separation (S.sub.LL) is determined by the geometry of duplex bearing pair 54 and, specifically, by the duplex pair bearing spacing (S.sub.A) and the rolling element/raceway contact angle (β). In illustrated embodiment, rolling element bearings 56, 58 may be obtained from a supplier as a duplex bearing pair, which are intended to be positioned in intimate contact. The desired bearing load line separation (S.sub.LL), in this particular case, may be created by retrofitting the duplex bearing pair with ring spacers 60 and 62, which provide a desired axial standoff between inner and outer rings 66, 68 of bearings 56, 68. In further embodiments, the desired bearing load line separation (S.sub.LL) elements 64 of bearings 56, 68 can be achieved by adjusting the rolling element/race contact angle (β) in addition to or in lieu of the duplex pair bearing spacing (S.sub.A). For example, such an axial spacing can also be achieved in further embodiments by otherwise axially spreading the angled contact surfaces of bearings 56, 58 by, for example, producing a single, axially-elongated outer ring to replace outer rings 68 and outer spacer 62 and/or by producing a single, appropriately-sized inner ring to replace inner rings 66 and inner spacer 60. In one embodiment wherein rotor shaft 40 has a length L.sub.SHAFT as taken along spin axis 16 and axially-expanded DF duplex bearing pair 30 has a length L.sub.BEARING as taken along spin axis 16, the length of bearing pair 30 is greater than half the length of rotor shaft 40 such that L.sub.BEARING>0.5 L.sub.SHAFT.
[0022] The usage of a non-spaced DF duplex bearing pair within the centralized bearing architecture of RWA 10, however, can present technical challenges relating to rotor stability and the momentum capacity of RWA 10. Specifically, it has been determined that the usage of a non-spaced DF duplex bearing pair within the centralized bearing architecture of RWA 10 provides, in essence, a single point at which the bearing load lines converge on rotor shaft 40. In a dynamic (e.g., launch) environment wherein significant off-axis forces are applied to RWA 10 and RWA rotor 14, undesirable rotation of rotor 14 along axes orthogonal to spin axis 16 can consequently occur. This is typically not a concern in the context of traditional or legacy RWA designs, which include two duplex bearing pairs positioned at opposing ends of the rotor shaft. However, in the context of the centralized bearing architecture of RWA 10, off-axis rotor motion or “wobble” is a significant concern, especially as RWA rotor 14 increases in size and mass. The solution to this technical problem is, at least in part, realized by imparting DF duplex bearing pair 54 with axially-expanded configuration contained within a relatively compact, centralized single bearing architecture. By imparting DF duplex bearing pair 54 with an axially-expanded configuration, rotor stiffness and moment capacity are increased to levels adequate to satisfy the mission requirements of RWA 10, while still allowing the usage of a single DF duplex bearing pair to support rotor 14.
[0023] It will be appreciated that the bearing load line separation (S.sub.LL) of DF duplex bearing pair 54 is a tunable parameter, which can be adjusted in relation to any number of factors, such as the mass of RWA rotor 14 and the environmental parameters (e.g., magnitude of vibrations and random disturbance forces) small scale RWA 10 is required to survive to satisfy its mission requirements. Generally, increasing the bearing load line separation (S.sub.LL) of DF duplex bearing pair 54 will boost the moment capacity of RWA 10, albeit with the potential penalty of a slight increase in the overall axial dimension of the RWA envelope. Thus, the bearing load line separation (S.sub.LL) of axially-expanded DF duplex bearing pair 54 will typically be scaled upwardly as rotor mass increases and/or as the magnitude of the disturbance forces to which RWA 10 may be subjected become more severe. When RWA 10 is deployed onboard a small satellite, S.sub.LL is ideally chosen to be relatively small to minimize overall RWA dimensions and weight, while also being sufficiently large to provide stiffness and moment capacity characteristics sufficient to allow RWA 10 to tolerate (without structural damage) the impact, random disturbance force launch environment encountered when delivering RWA 10 and its host satellite into orbit. Additionally, in certain embodiments, the load line separation (S.sub.LL) can be tailored to provide a desired angular stiffness to, for example, set a first rotor angular mode frequency in am inner minimizing undesired rotor motions due to bearing excitations occurring during RWA operation.
[0024] Rolling element bearings 56, 58 can be retained within centralized bearing containment structure 30 in a number of different manners, providing that a controlled axial preload is applied to inner rings 66 and to outer rings 68 of bearings 56, 58. In the illustrated example, inner and outer clamp nuts 74 and 76 are contained within inner cavity 34 and utilized to secure rolling element bearings to rotor shaft 40 and bearing containment structure 30, respectively. As can be seen most readily in
[0025] There has thus been provided embodiments of small scale RWA including a centralized bearing architecture, which contains a single, axially-expanded DF duplex bearing pair disposed around an intermediate portion of the rotor's shaft. The DF duplex bearing pair contains first and second rolling element (e.g., ball) bearings, which each have a bearing load line. The bearing load lines may be separated by a spacing or separation (S.sub.LL), as determined by the axial spacing (S.sub.A) between the rolling element rows of the bearings and the contact angles (β) of the bearings. In this manner, the bearing load line separation (S.sub.LL) may be tailored to impart the RWA with increased rotor stability and moment capabilities. As a result, the small scale RWA may better accommodate off-axis disturbance forces and provide optimized dynamic performance, while utilizing a single duplex bearing to support the RWA rotor. More generally, the part count, weight, size, and production costs of the small scale RWA is favorably reduced as a result of such a simplified, centralized bearing architecture. The reliability of the RWA is also enhanced by eliminating possible failure point in the form of a second duplex bearing pair. Still further features that may contribute to the lightweight, axially-compact design of the small scale RWA in at least some embodiments include a highly nested design wherein the axially-expanded duplex bearing pair is at partially nested within the spin motor, which is at least partially nested within the rotor. The small scale RWA is consequently well-suited for usage onboard small satellites, but is not limited to deployment onboard any particular vehicle or platform.
[0026] Embodiments of the small scale RWA leverage provide a reduced product architectural response through a highly functional component integration and a modified bearing suspension. In contrast to other RWA architectures relying upon two duplex bearing pairs, the bearing suspension may incorporate and consist of a single duplex bearing pair. A single duplex bearing pair is thus utilized to manage the rotor inertia demands defined by the mission requirements of the RWA. Stated differently, the small scale RWA may include a rotor suspension system that contains only or consists of a single duplex bearing pair. An axially-expanded DF duplex bearing pair is incorporated into the RWA in an axially-spread configuration, which separates its duplex halves by an axial spacing sufficient to support multi-axis loading demands of the type generated in a dynamically-imposed environment; e.g., impact or vibration forces generated during satellite launch. Combined with a dynamically-tuned RWA structure, the axially-expanded duplex bearing pair allows mechanical loads to be properly managed within the RWA. Such an alternate bearing configuration and RWA architecture can dramatically reduce production costs and assembly time for higher volume commercial production.
[0027] While multiple exemplary embodiments have been presented in the foregoing Detailed Description, it should be appreciated that a vast number of variations exist. It should also be appreciated that the exemplary embodiment or exemplary embodiments are only examples, and are not intended to limit the scope, applicability, or configuration of the invention in any way. Rather, the foregoing Detailed Description will provide those skilled in the art with a convenient road map for implementing an exemplary embodiment of the invention. It being understood that various changes may be made in the function and arrangement of elements described in an exemplary embodiment without departing from the scope of the invention as set-forth in the appended Claims.