US20030138318A1 - Hermetically sealed rotary/nutating drive - Google Patents
Hermetically sealed rotary/nutating drive Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- US20030138318A1 US20030138318A1 US10/051,858 US5185802A US2003138318A1 US 20030138318 A1 US20030138318 A1 US 20030138318A1 US 5185802 A US5185802 A US 5185802A US 2003138318 A1 US2003138318 A1 US 2003138318A1
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- United States
- Prior art keywords
- bar
- housing
- rotor
- nutating
- drive
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Abandoned
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- 230000033001 locomotion Effects 0.000 claims abstract description 8
- 230000007246 mechanism Effects 0.000 abstract description 2
- 239000012530 fluid Substances 0.000 description 8
- 238000005452 bending Methods 0.000 description 7
- 238000007789 sealing Methods 0.000 description 6
- 230000003068 static effect Effects 0.000 description 3
- 239000007789 gas Substances 0.000 description 2
- 230000005540 biological transmission Effects 0.000 description 1
- 239000008280 blood Substances 0.000 description 1
- 210000004369 blood Anatomy 0.000 description 1
- 230000017531 blood circulation Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000002612 cardiopulmonary effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000000694 effects Effects 0.000 description 1
- 231100001261 hazardous Toxicity 0.000 description 1
- 238000004886 process control Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000005086 pumping Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000004065 semiconductor Substances 0.000 description 1
- 239000000126 substance Substances 0.000 description 1
Images
Classifications
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F04—POSITIVE - DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS
- F04D—NON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT PUMPS
- F04D29/00—Details, component parts, or accessories
- F04D29/08—Sealings
- F04D29/086—Sealings especially adapted for liquid pumps
-
- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F04—POSITIVE - DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS
- F04D—NON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT PUMPS
- F04D11/00—Other rotary non-positive-displacement pumps
-
- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F16—ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
- F16J—PISTONS; CYLINDERS; SEALINGS
- F16J15/00—Sealings
- F16J15/50—Sealings between relatively-movable members, by means of a sealing without relatively-moving surfaces, e.g. fluid-tight sealings for transmitting motion through a wall
- F16J15/52—Sealings between relatively-movable members, by means of a sealing without relatively-moving surfaces, e.g. fluid-tight sealings for transmitting motion through a wall by means of sealing bellows or diaphragms
- F16J15/525—Sealings between relatively-movable members, by means of a sealing without relatively-moving surfaces, e.g. fluid-tight sealings for transmitting motion through a wall by means of sealing bellows or diaphragms fixed to a part of a transmission performing a wobbling or a circular translatory movement
Definitions
- This invention relates to a device for transmitting rotary motion through a flexible hermetic seal, requiring no gaskets or sliding seal members. More particularly, it relates to said device wherein particular attention is focused on the configuration and mounting of the flexible seal, with the end in view to reduce the stress levels in the flexible seal as much as possible. As is well known, reducing the stress levels in any flexing component will improve its structural integrity and prolong its useful life. This invention offers the longest fatigue life at the highest speed for devices of its kind.
- This hermetic sealing invention would take the place of a typical mechanical seal (such as a face seal) in any rotary device where it is installed.
- my invention belongs to the class of those prior devices where two rotational elements that consist of input and output are rotatably journalled in opposite walls of a housing, and rotary motion between the input and output is transmitted by means of a rigid arm, that can nutate about a central point located between the ends of the arm.
- the opposite ends of the nutating arm move in circular paths, according to the rotation of the input and output elements.
- a flexible seal of one sort or another hermetically seals off the rotational elements from each other.
- the most successful flexible hermetic seal is a bellows, where one end of the bellows is attached to the housing, while the other end of the bellows is attached to the nutating arm.
- My invention embodies specific improvements on the said prior art. These said improvements, along with other improvements, are discussed below.
- An object of the present invention is to provide a unit for hermetic sealing between two in-line rotary devices, each of which device already independently exists.
- the invention is like a kit.
- the in-line rotary devices to be hermetically sealed are not pre-existing, these said rotary devices are accordingly newly designed, along with the various invented drives.
- the new drive can be readily adapted as a kit, to fit any two already existing in-line rotary devices without altering these various devices or changing any of the loading they would experience in their normal operation.
- my invention can be used as a kit with already existing pairs of rotary devices, while the prior art cannot be so used.
- Another object of the present invention is to supplant mechanical seals wherever possible. Mechanical seals leak, since they cannot be sealed hermetically.
- Another object of the present invention is to avoid high torsion stress in the bellows or tubular diaphragm seal. None of the prior devices has satisfactory provision to avoid said torsion stress.
- a further object of the present invention is to minimize bending stress in the bellows. In prior devices, that end of the bellows that is attached to the moving arm is attached too far from the center of nutation, so that said end of the bellows travels excessively. The result is, that at high speeds, dynamic bending stresses in the bellows can get large. Also, the prior devices are stressed higher in static bending than they should be. Said prior devices do not make full use of some of the design possibilities that are available for reducing static and dynamic bending stress.
- Yet another object of the present invention is to reduce over-constraint when it is assembled, so that any extra and unnecessary stresses due to misalignment will be minimized in the bearings, balls, spherical cavities, swivel joint and arm.
- Those prior devices that have rotors at both the input and output ends can be over-constrained unless the alignment is very accurate.
- FIG. 1 shows my invention installed between two already existing rotary devices.
- FIG. 2 is an elevation view of my invention
- FIG. 3 shows its plan view.
- FIG. 4 shows the special wind-up torsion tube used in my invention.
- FIG. 5 is an elevation view of another embodiment, where, instead of an output rotor, there is a paddle for rotating a fluid, as with a “teaspoon” centrifugal pump.
- FIG. 6 is a plan view of FIG. 5.
- FIG. 1 shows the invented drive 1 secured to a stand 2 , between two already existing rotary devices 3 and 4 .
- Items 2 , 3 , and 4 are mounted on a base plate 5 .
- a chamber 6 Also shown is a chamber 6 , with a thru-hole 7 in wall 40 , which chamber is also mounted on the base plate 5 .
- a boot 8 is affixed seal-tight on either end, to the chamber 6 and to the invention 1 .
- the chamber 6 , the boot 8 , and the invention 1 contain a fluid or a gas 9 , and prevent its escaping to the ambient 10 .
- driving/driven shaft 1 of the already existing rotary device 3 , said shaft 11 being inserted into the invention 1
- driving/driven shaft 12 of the already existing rotary device 4
- said shaft 12 also being inserted into the invention 1 .
- the invented drive 1 allows rotary device 3 to drive rotary device 4 (or visa-versa) while hermetically sealing off rotary device 3 from the ambient.
- FIGS. 2 and 3 Components of the invented drive are shown in FIGS. 2 and 3.
- the components are as follows: a cylindrical hole 13 with a keyway 14 is located on the axis of a rotor 15 .
- These items 12 , 13 and 15 can accommodate a rotating shaft 11 coming from rotary device 3 .
- (Shaft 11 is not a component of the invented drive unit).
- the rotor 15 is mounted on bearings 16 , and these bearings are mounted on the housing 100 . Included is a ball 17 , which is free to rotate within a spherical cavity 18 located in the rotor 15 .
- Mounted within the ball 17 , and supported by the bearings 71 is an arm 19 .
- Yoke 21 has extensions 22 to accommodate trunnions 23 and 24 (See FIG. 3), which are attached to a gimbal 25 .
- Gimbal 25 has two other trunrions attached to it.
- One trunnion 72 is attached to the top of the gimbal 25 and the other trunnion 27 at the gimbal's bottom (See FIG. 2). The trunnions 72 and 27 are journalled into the housing 100 .
- the items 21 , 22 , 23 , 24 , 25 , 72 and 27 as supported by the housing 100 , constitute a swivel universal joint; in which the azimuth axis passes through the trunnions 72 and 27 , and in which the elevation axis passes through the tannions 23 and 24 .
- a geometric center 50 of nutation exists where the azimuth and elevation axes intersect.
- Section 20 of the arm is mounted on bearing 25
- bearing 25 is mounted in a ball 26 .
- Ball 26 resides in a spherical cavity 27 located in the rotor 28
- rotor 28 is mounted on bearings 29 , which are in turn mounted on the housing 100 .
- a cylindrical hole 30 with a keyway 31 is located on the axis of rotor 28 .
- These items 30 , 31 and 28 can accommodate shaft 12 of the already existing rotary device 4 . (Shaft 12 is not a component of the invented drive unit).
- Rotor 28 is the output rotor of the drive.
- the axes of rotors 15 and 28 are ideally collinear.
- a tapered bellows 32 is attached seal-tight to a housing wall 33 at the largest bellows diameter, and also attached seal-tight to one end 34 of a wind-up torsion tube 35 at the smallest bellows diameter, said smallest bellows diameter and said end 34 of the wind-up torsion tube being located slightly beyond the geometric center 50 , where the arm 19 travel is zero.
- the wind-up tube 35 is attached at its other end 36 to the arm 19 .
- This clearance allows the wind-up tube to bend somewhat with respect to the arm 19 .
- Attached seal-tight to the outside wall of the housing 100 is a boot 8 , with its smaller end 38 attached seal-tight to the housing 100 .
- the other end 39 of the boot 8 is attached seal-tight to the wall 40 of the chamber 6 , which contains rotary device 3 .
- the hermetic sealing boundary exists by virtue of the wall 40 , the boot 8 , the housing wall 33 , the tapered bellows 32 , the wind-up tube 35 , and the arm 19 .
- the boot 8 while serving as part of the sealing boundary 40 , 8 , 33 , 32 , 35 , & 19 , also serves to keep the housing 100 from rotating around its longitudinal axis during operation of the drive.
- the arm 19 is allowed to nutate, but it is restrained from rotation. This is the reason why the arm 19 has to be isolated against the rotation of ball 17 by the bearing 71 .
- the arm 19 nutates about the geometric center 50 of nutation of the swivel joint ( 21 , 22 , 23 , 24 , 25 , 72 and 27 ), which geometric center 50 is a virtual pivot point for the nutation of the arm 19 .
- the arm section 20 of larger diameter nutates along with the arm 19 about the same virtual pivot point 50 .
- the purpose of the bearing 25 is similar to that of bearing 71 .
- Rotor 28 isolates the arm section 20 from the rotating ball 26 as it follows its circular path around the axis of rotor 28 .
- Rotor 28 is free to rotate about bearings 29 .
- a torque can be exerted about the axis of the rotor 28 by virtue of the force that can be transmitted by the end of the nutating arm section 20 via the bearing 25 , the ball 26 , and the cavity 27 within the rotor.
- the torque will exist when the shaft 12 to be driven by the rotor 28 resists rotation of the said rotor 28 via the hole 30 and the keyway 31 .
- a resisting torque is to be expected because the rotary device 4 is being driven, in this example, by rotary device 3 via the invented stet 1 .
- Minimizing the travel at the moving end of the bellows has the effect of reducing the movement of the other parts of the bellows as well, and this, (along with having the bellows diameter smaller near the fulcrum), contributes to minimizing the static and dynamic bending stresses in the bellows' wall.
- the long and narrow wind-up tube 35 protects the bellows 32 from the torsion stresses that it would otherwise experience when and if the nutating arm 19 should rotate. (Arm 19 could rotate if the bearings 71 or 25 show any tendency not to turn easily). When this happens, the rotation of the rotor 15 or the rotor 28 tends to rotate the arm 19 . Slight rotations of the nutating arm 19 are allowed by the swivel joint, because the swivel joint has to have some play in it.
- the boot 8 allows my invention to hermetically seal off one already existing rotary device 3 .
- a thru-hole 7 in the wall 40 (see FIG. 1), as well as hole 13 and keyway 14 can accommodate shaft 11 from said rotary device 3 .
- Hole 30 and keyway 31 can accommodate shaft 12 from the other already existing rotary device 4 .
- Lugs 44 attached to the stand 2 (see FIG. 1) resist azimuth and elevation torques coming from the housing 100 . These torques are generated by the moving components inside the housing 100 .
- the lugs protect the shafts 11 and 12 and their supporting bearings (which are inside the already existing rotary devices 3 and 4 ) from the forces caused by said azimuth and elevation torques.
- the bearings 16 and 29 of the invented device 1 will support the said forces caused by the said torques.
- Various rotors 15 and 28 of the same diameter can be provided with different standard sizes for the holes 13 and 30 , along with different standard keyways 14 and 31 , so that the invention unit can be readily applied as a kit to various pairs of already existing devices. Because of the invented device 1 , the rotary device 3 does not require a mechanical seal.
- the second embodiment of my invention is an improved version over the prior art of the so-called “teaspoon” centrifugal pumps.
- Prior art “teaspoon” centrifugal pumps have an unusual impeller, which impeller consists of a paddle mounted on the end of a nutating arm. The paddle spins the fluid around like a teaspoon in a teacup. With said form of impeller; the use of bearings immersed in the pumped fluid is avoided. (Bearings that are immersed in some fluids, such as blood, damage the fluid).
- Said prior art “teaspoon pumps” all have flexible seals of one sort or another, to hermetically seal off the nutating arm. Unfortunately, the seal designs are over stressed from the standpoint of achieving a long fatigue life, and the reliability that goes hand in hand with it. The need for reliability in such devices should be particularly urgent when said devices are used for medical purposes.
- the second embodiment of my invention is an improvement over the prior art of “teaspoon” pumps, because my design drastically reduces the torsion and bending stresses in the flexible seal.
- the second embodiment of my invention is constructed identically to the first embodiment, except for three changes:
- the first change is that a paddle 301 replaces ball 17 , bearing 71 , rotor 15 , and bearings 16 . (See FIGS. 2, 3, 5 , and 6 .)
- the second change is that flanges 401 and 402 are introduced.
- the third change is that arm 19 is now inserted into a slot 501 , which has been bored into the larger diameter section 20 (See FIG. 5).
- the paddle 301 circulates the fluid 9 to create the vortex necessary for centrifugal-type pumping.
- the flanges 401 and 402 , and the slot 501 allow the entire assembly of the swivel joint, the yoke 21 , the larger diameter section 20 , the ball 26 , the bearing 25 , the rotor 28 , the bearings 29 , and the housing 602 to be replaced, if said assembly should wear out.
- To remove/replace the aforesaid assembly it is only necessary to bolt/unbolt the flanges 401 and 402 , and slide the larger diameter section 20 off/on the arm 19 via the slot 501 . Remaining unchanged, and attached to the wall 40 by the boot 8 are the left hand side of the housing 601 , the arm 19 , the wind-up tube 35 , the bellows 32 , and the paddle 301 .
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- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
- Diaphragms And Bellows (AREA)
Abstract
A nutating drive with hermetic seal which includes a housing with an internal wall and a nutating bar passing through an opening in the wall. A flexible tubular diaphragm seal surrounds the bar and is sealed at one end to the wall about the wall opening and is sealed at its other end to the bar for providing a hermetic seal for the wall opening. A universal joint support mechanism connects the bar to the housing for gimbaled non-axial rotational support of the bar in the housing. An axially rotatable rotor is mounted for axial rotation in the housing and the bar is pivotally connected at one end to the rotor at a position offset from the rotor axis for imparting nutational movement to the gimbaled bar about a geometric center of nutation with axial rotation of the rotor. The tubular diaphragm has a conical configuration tapered from a maximum diameter at the wall and to a minimal diameter at the bar end and the tubular seal encloses the geometric center of the bar. The tubular diaphragm seal may have a bellows configuration. A torsion tube which is very flexible in torsion is coaxially received over the bar with one end of the flexible torsion tube circumferentially sealed and secured to the bar and the other end of the torsion tube circumferentially sealed and secured to the minimal diameter end of the tubular diaphragm seal.
Description
- This invention relates to a device for transmitting rotary motion through a flexible hermetic seal, requiring no gaskets or sliding seal members. More particularly, it relates to said device wherein particular attention is focused on the configuration and mounting of the flexible seal, with the end in view to reduce the stress levels in the flexible seal as much as possible. As is well known, reducing the stress levels in any flexing component will improve its structural integrity and prolong its useful life. This invention offers the longest fatigue life at the highest speed for devices of its kind.
- This hermetic sealing invention would take the place of a typical mechanical seal (such as a face seal) in any rotary device where it is installed.
- Transmission of rotary motion through a hermetic seal finds many applications. Some of these applications are process control pumps, valves and rotating machinery for environmentally hazardous gases/chemicals, “teaspoon” centrifuigal pumps for assisting blood circulation and cardiopulmonary bypass, mechanisms for control in contamination-free environments, such as the semi-conductor industry, and aircraft instruments.
- There are many inventions that can address the above applications, and all of them require some form of flexible seal. However, the seals in all of these inventions are far more stressed than they need to be. My invention has minimization of stresses in the flexible seal as one of its primary objects.
- Specifically, my invention belongs to the class of those prior devices where two rotational elements that consist of input and output are rotatably journalled in opposite walls of a housing, and rotary motion between the input and output is transmitted by means of a rigid arm, that can nutate about a central point located between the ends of the arm. The opposite ends of the nutating arm move in circular paths, according to the rotation of the input and output elements. A flexible seal of one sort or another hermetically seals off the rotational elements from each other. The most successful flexible hermetic seal is a bellows, where one end of the bellows is attached to the housing, while the other end of the bellows is attached to the nutating arm. My invention embodies specific improvements on the said prior art. These said improvements, along with other improvements, are discussed below.
- An object of the present invention is to provide a unit for hermetic sealing between two in-line rotary devices, each of which device already independently exists. In this sense, the invention is like a kit. In the prior art, because the in-line rotary devices to be hermetically sealed are not pre-existing, these said rotary devices are accordingly newly designed, along with the various invented drives. In my invention, the new drive can be readily adapted as a kit, to fit any two already existing in-line rotary devices without altering these various devices or changing any of the loading they would experience in their normal operation. Thus, my invention can be used as a kit with already existing pairs of rotary devices, while the prior art cannot be so used.
- Another object of the present invention is to supplant mechanical seals wherever possible. Mechanical seals leak, since they cannot be sealed hermetically.
- Another object of the present invention is to avoid high torsion stress in the bellows or tubular diaphragm seal. None of the prior devices has satisfactory provision to avoid said torsion stress. A further object of the present invention is to minimize bending stress in the bellows. In prior devices, that end of the bellows that is attached to the moving arm is attached too far from the center of nutation, so that said end of the bellows travels excessively. The result is, that at high speeds, dynamic bending stresses in the bellows can get large. Also, the prior devices are stressed higher in static bending than they should be. Said prior devices do not make full use of some of the design possibilities that are available for reducing static and dynamic bending stress.
- Yet another object of the present invention is to reduce over-constraint when it is assembled, so that any extra and unnecessary stresses due to misalignment will be minimized in the bearings, balls, spherical cavities, swivel joint and arm. Those prior devices that have rotors at both the input and output ends can be over-constrained unless the alignment is very accurate.
- FIG. 1 shows my invention installed between two already existing rotary devices.
- FIG. 2 is an elevation view of my invention, and
- FIG. 3 shows its plan view.
- FIG. 4 shows the special wind-up torsion tube used in my invention.
- FIG. 5 is an elevation view of another embodiment, where, instead of an output rotor, there is a paddle for rotating a fluid, as with a “teaspoon” centrifugal pump.
- FIG. 6 is a plan view of FIG. 5.
- FIG. 1 shows the invented drive 1 secured to a
stand 2, between two already existingrotary devices 3 and 4. 2, 3, and 4 are mounted on aItems base plate 5. Also shown is achamber 6, with a thru-hole 7 inwall 40, which chamber is also mounted on thebase plate 5. Aboot 8 is affixed seal-tight on either end, to thechamber 6 and to the invention 1. Thechamber 6, theboot 8, and the invention 1 contain a fluid or agas 9, and prevent its escaping to theambient 10. Also shown are driving/driven shaft 1, of the already existing rotary device 3, said shaft 11 being inserted into the invention 1, and driving/drivenshaft 12, of the already existingrotary device 4, saidshaft 12 also being inserted into the invention 1. The invented drive 1 allows rotary device 3 to drive rotary device 4 (or visa-versa) while hermetically sealing off rotary device 3 from the ambient. - 1.0 First Preferred Embodiment (See FIGS. 1 through 4)
- (a) The Components of the Drive
- Components of the invented drive are shown in FIGS. 2 and 3. The components are as follows: a
cylindrical hole 13 with akeyway 14 is located on the axis of arotor 15. These 12, 13 and 15 can accommodate a rotating shaft 11 coming from rotary device 3. (Shaft 11 is not a component of the invented drive unit). Theitems rotor 15 is mounted onbearings 16, and these bearings are mounted on thehousing 100. Included is aball 17, which is free to rotate within aspherical cavity 18 located in therotor 15. Mounted within theball 17, and supported by the bearings 71 is anarm 19.Arm 19 is stepped up to asection 20 of larger diameter, and thislarger diameter section 20 of the arm is tightly fitted into ayoke 21. Yoke 21 hasextensions 22 to accommodatetrunnions 23 and 24 (See FIG. 3), which are attached to agimbal 25. Gimbal 25 has two other trunrions attached to it. Onetrunnion 72 is attached to the top of thegimbal 25 and theother trunnion 27 at the gimbal's bottom (See FIG. 2). The 72 and 27 are journalled into thetrunnions housing 100. The 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 72 and 27, as supported by theitems housing 100, constitute a swivel universal joint; in which the azimuth axis passes through the 72 and 27, and in which the elevation axis passes through thetrunnions 23 and 24. Atannions geometric center 50 of nutation exists where the azimuth and elevation axes intersect.Section 20 of the arm is mounted on bearing 25, and bearing 25 is mounted in aball 26.Ball 26 resides in aspherical cavity 27 located in therotor 28, androtor 28 is mounted onbearings 29, which are in turn mounted on thehousing 100. Acylindrical hole 30 with a keyway 31 is located on the axis ofrotor 28. These 30, 31 and 28 can accommodateitems shaft 12 of the already existingrotary device 4. (Shaft 12 is not a component of the invented drive unit).Rotor 28 is the output rotor of the drive. The axes of 15 and 28 are ideally collinear. A tapered bellows 32 is attached seal-tight to arotors housing wall 33 at the largest bellows diameter, and also attached seal-tight to oneend 34 of a wind-uptorsion tube 35 at the smallest bellows diameter, said smallest bellows diameter and saidend 34 of the wind-up torsion tube being located slightly beyond thegeometric center 50, where thearm 19 travel is zero. The wind-uptube 35 is attached at itsother end 36 to thearm 19. There is a very small clearance 37 (See FIG. 4) between the wind-uptube 35 and thearm 19. This clearance allows the wind-up tube to bend somewhat with respect to thearm 19. Attached seal-tight to the outside wall of thehousing 100 is aboot 8, with itssmaller end 38 attached seal-tight to thehousing 100. Theother end 39 of theboot 8 is attached seal-tight to thewall 40 of thechamber 6, which contains rotary device 3. - (b) The Drive's Hermetic Sealing Boundary
- The hermetic sealing boundary exists by virtue of the
wall 40, theboot 8, thehousing wall 33, the tapered bellows 32, the wind-uptube 35, and thearm 19. - (c) Operation of the Drive
- The
boot 8, while serving as part of the sealing 40, 8, 33, 32, 35, & 19, also serves to keep theboundary housing 100 from rotating around its longitudinal axis during operation of the drive. - As an example of the operation of the drive, assume that the rotary device 3 is driving the
rotary device 4. Then, shaft 11 turnsrotor 15 via theround shaft hole 13 with thekeyway 14. Turning therotor 15 rotates theball 17, and also moves saidball 17 in a circular path around the axis of saidrotor 15. (Theball 17 rotates along with therotor 15 that encases it, because there is some frictional resistance between theball 17 and thespherical cavity 18 in which it resides). Movingball 17 along a circular path forces the end of thearm 19 to follow the same circular path as theball 17. The purpose of bearing 71 is to isolate thearm 19 from rotation of theball 17, as it moves along its circular path. By virtue of the swivel universal joint arrangement (21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 72 and 27), thearm 19 is allowed to nutate, but it is restrained from rotation. This is the reason why thearm 19 has to be isolated against the rotation ofball 17 by the bearing 71. Thearm 19 nutates about thegeometric center 50 of nutation of the swivel joint (21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 72 and 27), whichgeometric center 50 is a virtual pivot point for the nutation of thearm 19. Thearm section 20 of larger diameter nutates along with thearm 19 about the samevirtual pivot point 50. The purpose of thebearing 25 is similar to that of bearing 71. It isolates thearm section 20 from the rotatingball 26 as it follows its circular path around the axis ofrotor 28.Rotor 28 is free to rotate aboutbearings 29. A torque can be exerted about the axis of therotor 28 by virtue of the force that can be transmitted by the end of thenutating arm section 20 via thebearing 25, theball 26, and thecavity 27 within the rotor. The torque will exist when theshaft 12 to be driven by therotor 28 resists rotation of the saidrotor 28 via thehole 30 and the keyway 31. A resisting torque is to be expected because therotary device 4 is being driven, in this example, by rotary device 3 via the invented stet 1. Because of this resisting torque, various other loads will exist within the invented drive 1. These are the force at the larger diameter end of thearm 20, the force at the small diameter end of thearm 19, and the net counteracting force at the universal swivel joint. The net counteracting universal swivel joint force statically balances the force at the end of thearm 19 and the force at the end of itslarger diameter section 20. A force equal and opposite to the said universal swivel joint force is supplied by thehousing 100, and this force is in turn transmitted from thehousing 100 to the supportinglugs 44. Other loads existing within thehousing 100 are torques acting about the azimuth and elevation axes of the housing. These torques are generated by the forces at the ends ofarm 19 and thelarger diameter section 20, because these said forces are located off-center from the drive's axis of rotation. During operation of the invented drive 1, the supportinglugs 44 resist rotations of thehousing 100 in azimuth and elevation.Housing 100 rotation about its longitudinal axis is also prevented by theselugs 44 with the help of theboot seal 8. Theshallow groove 45 provides extra clearance, so that theyoke 21 does not touch thehousing 100 as said yoke oscillates back and forth during operation of the drive. - The travel and the amount of bending at the moving end of my tapered bellows 32 are both kept small, because this moving end is extended only slightly beyond the arm's virtual pivot point (fulcrum), where the motion of the
arm 19 is minimal. Said smaller end of the tapered bellows 32 is welded to oneend 34 of a long and thin wind-up ortorsion tube 35, whoseend 34 also extends slightly beyond the arm's pivot point, and whoseother end 36 extends back to the end of thearm 19 where it is attached seal-tight. Minimizing the travel at the moving end of the bellows has the effect of reducing the movement of the other parts of the bellows as well, and this, (along with having the bellows diameter smaller near the fulcrum), contributes to minimizing the static and dynamic bending stresses in the bellows' wall. - The long and narrow wind-up
tube 35 protects thebellows 32 from the torsion stresses that it would otherwise experience when and if thenutating arm 19 should rotate. (Arm 19 could rotate if thebearings 71 or 25 show any tendency not to turn easily). When this happens, the rotation of therotor 15 or therotor 28 tends to rotate thearm 19. Slight rotations of thenutating arm 19 are allowed by the swivel joint, because the swivel joint has to have some play in it. Most of that play would come from the 23, 24, 72, and 27, and, until the trunnions use up their clearance in the holes in which they are journalled, the universal swivel joint will not stop rotation of thetrunnions arm 19. Therefore, any torsion coming from either bearing 71 orbearing 25, would rotate thearm 19 about its longitudinal axis until the universal swivel joint stops it. Said torsion coming from the bearings (71 or 25), could be the result of the friction caused by normal operation, dirt, wear, and fatigue failure of a bearing. Because of the swivel joint and the long and narrow wind-uptube 35, the torsion on the bellows is never permitted to get large. Ifarm 19 should experience some rotation as a result of a sticky bearing (71 or 25), where said rotation is not yet opposed by the swivel joint, the long and skinny wind-uptube 35 will take up that rotation and thereby protect the bellows until the swivel universal joint stops any further rotation of thearm 19. The swivel universal joint will be designed for minimum play and maximum structural rigidity. Combined with the high flexibility of the wind-uptube 35, these aforesaid swivel joint characteristics will assure that the torsion stresses in both the wind-up tube and thebellows 32 will be negligible for all possible scenarios. - (d) Adaptability
- The
boot 8 allows my invention to hermetically seal off one already existing rotary device 3. A thru-hole 7 in the wall 40 (see FIG. 1), as well ashole 13 andkeyway 14 can accommodate shaft 11 from said rotary device 3.Hole 30 and keyway 31 can accommodateshaft 12 from the other already existingrotary device 4.Lugs 44 attached to the stand 2 (see FIG. 1) resist azimuth and elevation torques coming from thehousing 100. These torques are generated by the moving components inside thehousing 100. The lugs protect theshafts 11 and 12 and their supporting bearings (which are inside the already existing rotary devices 3 and 4) from the forces caused by said azimuth and elevation torques. Instead of the bearings within thedevice 3 and 4, the 16 and 29 of the invented device 1 will support the said forces caused by the said torques.bearings 15 and 28 of the same diameter can be provided with different standard sizes for theVarious rotors 13 and 30, along with differentholes standard keyways 14 and 31, so that the invention unit can be readily applied as a kit to various pairs of already existing devices. Because of the invented device 1, the rotary device 3 does not require a mechanical seal. - 2.0 Second Preferred Embodiment (See FIGS. 5 and 6)
- The second embodiment of my invention is an improved version over the prior art of the so-called “teaspoon” centrifugal pumps. Prior art “teaspoon” centrifugal pumps have an unusual impeller, which impeller consists of a paddle mounted on the end of a nutating arm. The paddle spins the fluid around like a teaspoon in a teacup. With said form of impeller; the use of bearings immersed in the pumped fluid is avoided. (Bearings that are immersed in some fluids, such as blood, damage the fluid). Said prior art “teaspoon pumps” all have flexible seals of one sort or another, to hermetically seal off the nutating arm. Unfortunately, the seal designs are over stressed from the standpoint of achieving a long fatigue life, and the reliability that goes hand in hand with it. The need for reliability in such devices should be particularly urgent when said devices are used for medical purposes.
- The second embodiment of my invention is an improvement over the prior art of “teaspoon” pumps, because my design drastically reduces the torsion and bending stresses in the flexible seal.
- To obtain all the improvements achieved by the first embodiment, the second embodiment of my invention is constructed identically to the first embodiment, except for three changes: The first change is that a
paddle 301 replacesball 17, bearing 71,rotor 15, andbearings 16. (See FIGS. 2, 3, 5, and 6.) The second change is thatflanges 401 and 402 are introduced. The third change is thatarm 19 is now inserted into aslot 501, which has been bored into the larger diameter section 20 (See FIG. 5). - The
paddle 301 circulates thefluid 9 to create the vortex necessary for centrifugal-type pumping. - The
flanges 401 and 402, and theslot 501 allow the entire assembly of the swivel joint, theyoke 21, thelarger diameter section 20, theball 26, thebearing 25, therotor 28, thebearings 29, and thehousing 602 to be replaced, if said assembly should wear out. To remove/replace the aforesaid assembly, it is only necessary to bolt/unbolt theflanges 401 and 402, and slide thelarger diameter section 20 off/on thearm 19 via theslot 501. Remaining unchanged, and attached to thewall 40 by theboot 8 are the left hand side of thehousing 601, thearm 19, the wind-uptube 35, thebellows 32, and thepaddle 301. - Because of its inertia, the fluid circulated by the
paddle 301 would necessarily exert a strong torque on thearm 19, and the wind-uptube 35 protects thebellows 32 in the same way here as for the first embodiment.
Claims (24)
1. A nutating drive with a hermetic seal comprising:
a housing;
a wall in said housing;
a nutating bar passing through an opening in said wall;
a flexible tubular diaphragm seal surrounding said bar and sealed at one end thereof to said wall about said opening and sealed at its other end to said bar for providing a hermetic seal for said wall opening;
universal joint support means connecting said bar to said housing for gimbaled non-axial rotational support of said bar in said housing;
an axially rotatable rotor mounted for axial rotation in said housing;
said bar connected with a bearing at one end thereof to said rotor at a position offset from the rotor axis for imparting nutational movement to said gimbaled bar about a geometric center of nutation with axial rotation of said rotor; and
said diaphragm seal having a tubular conical configuration tapered from a maximum diameter at said wall end to a minimal diameter at said bar end, and enclosing said geometric center of said bar.
2. The nutating drive of claim 1 , wherein said tubular diaphram seal has a bellows configuration.
3. The nutating drive of claim 1 , wherein said minimum diameter end of said tubular diaphragm seal is positioned adjacent said center of nutation.
4. The nutating drive of claim 1 , wherein said bar end bearing is pivotally connected to said rotor.
5. The nutating drive of claim 4 , wherein said pivotal connection is a ball and socket pivotal connection.
6. The nutating drive of claim 1 , including a second rotor mounted in said housing for axial rotation and axially aligned with the first said rotor, said rotors positioned on opposite sides of said wall and the other end of said bar connected with a bearing to said second rotor at a position offset from the rotor axis, and rotary drive connections on said rotors external of said housing for respectively axially connecting input and output drive shafts to said rotors.
7. The nutating drive of claim 6 including annular seal means annularly secured to exterior portions of said housing about one of said rotors and extending from said housing for annular hermetically sealed engagement with a housing for an independent unit to be coupled in driving engagement with said one of said rotors.
8. The nutating drive of claim 7 , wherein said housing includes mounting means for securing said housing to a support.
9. The nutating drive of claim 1 , including a torsion tube coaxially received over said bar with one end of said tube circumferentially sealed and secured to said bar and the other end of said tube circumferentially sealed and secured to the minimal diameter end of said tubular diaphragm seal.
10. The nutating drive of claim 9 , wherein said torsion tube extends through said wall opening.
11. The nutating drive of claim 1 , wherein said housing is provided with an access split for providing access to the interior of said housing in the area of said center of nutation for part replacement.
12. The nutating drive of claim 1 , including a pump impeller secured to the other end of said bar for providing a centrifugal pump.
13. A nutating drive with a hermetic seal comprising:
a housing;
a wall in said housing;
a nutating bar passing through an opening in said wall;
a flexible tubular diaphragm seal surrounding said bar and sealed at one end thereof to said wall about said opening and sealed at its other end to said bar for providing a hermetic seal for said wall opening;
universal joint support means connecting said bar to said housing for gimbaled non-axial rotational support of said bar in said housing;
an axially rotatable rotor mounted for axial rotation in said housing;
said bar connected with a bearing at one end thereof to said rotor at a position offset from the rotor axis for imparting nutational movement to said gimbaled bar about a geometric center of nutation with axial rotation of said rotor; and
a torsion tube coaxially received over said bar with one end of said tube circumferentially sealed and secured to said bar and the other end of said tube circumferentially sealed and secured to the minimal diameter end of said tubular diaphragm seal.
14. The nutating drive of claim 13 , wherein said torsion tube extends through said wall opening.
15. The nutating drive of claim 14 , said tubular diaphragm seal having a conical configuration tapered from a maximum diameter at said wall end to a minimal diameter at said bar end thereof, and enclosing said geometric center of said bar.
16. The nutating drive of claim 13 , wherein said tubular diaphram seal has a bellows configuration.
17. The nutating drive of claim 16 , wherein said minimum diameter end of said tubular diaphragm seal is positioned adjacent said center of nutation.
18. The nutating drive of claim 15 , wherein said bar end bearing is pivotally connected to said rotor.
19. The nutating drive of claim 18 , wherein said pivotal connection is a ball and ball socket pivotal connection.
20. The nutating drive of claim 13 , including a second rotor mounted in said housing for axial rotation and axially aligned with the first said rotor, said rotors positioned on opposite sides of said wall and the other end of said bar connected with a bearing to said second rotor at a position offset from the rotor axis, and rotary drive connections on said rotors external of said housing for respectively axially connecting input and output drive shafts to said rotors.
21. The nutating drive of claim 20 including annular seal means annularly secured to exterior portions of said housing about one of said rotors and extending from said housing for annular hermetically sealed engagement with a housing for an independent unit to be coupled in driving engagement with said one of said rotors.
22. The nutating drive of claim 21 , wherein said housing includes mounting means for securing said housing to a support.
23. The nutating drive of claim 13 , wherein said housing is provided with an access split for providing access to the interior of said housing in the area of said center of nutation for part replacement.
24. The nutating drive of claim 13 , including a pump impeller secured to the other end of said bar for providing a centrifuigal pump.
Priority Applications (2)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US10/051,858 US20030138318A1 (en) | 2002-01-22 | 2002-01-22 | Hermetically sealed rotary/nutating drive |
| US10/364,700 US20030147740A1 (en) | 2002-01-22 | 2003-04-03 | Rotary/nutating drive |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US10/051,858 US20030138318A1 (en) | 2002-01-22 | 2002-01-22 | Hermetically sealed rotary/nutating drive |
Related Child Applications (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US10/364,700 Continuation-In-Part US20030147740A1 (en) | 2002-01-22 | 2003-04-03 | Rotary/nutating drive |
Publications (1)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| US20030138318A1 true US20030138318A1 (en) | 2003-07-24 |
Family
ID=21973788
Family Applications (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US10/051,858 Abandoned US20030138318A1 (en) | 2002-01-22 | 2002-01-22 | Hermetically sealed rotary/nutating drive |
Country Status (1)
| Country | Link |
|---|---|
| US (1) | US20030138318A1 (en) |
Cited By (2)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US20090116952A1 (en) * | 2004-01-23 | 2009-05-07 | Miroslav Simera | Rolling Fluid Machine Especially With a Liquid Spraying at the Output |
| US20200138477A1 (en) * | 2012-06-30 | 2020-05-07 | Rollins Enterprises, Llc | Laser nil liposuction system and method |
-
2002
- 2002-01-22 US US10/051,858 patent/US20030138318A1/en not_active Abandoned
Cited By (3)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US20090116952A1 (en) * | 2004-01-23 | 2009-05-07 | Miroslav Simera | Rolling Fluid Machine Especially With a Liquid Spraying at the Output |
| US7762762B2 (en) * | 2004-01-23 | 2010-07-27 | Miroslav Simera | Rolling fluid machine especially with a liquid spraying at the output |
| US20200138477A1 (en) * | 2012-06-30 | 2020-05-07 | Rollins Enterprises, Llc | Laser nil liposuction system and method |
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Legal Events
| Date | Code | Title | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| STCB | Information on status: application discontinuation |
Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION |