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Claims  |
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What is claimed as new and desired to be protected by Letters Patent is set
forth in the appended claims:
1. In an apparatus for conveying a liquid, particularly fuel, a combination
comprising a housing having a liquid admitting inlet and a liquid
discharging outlet; a shaft fixedly mounted in said housing; an electric
motor installed in said housing and including a first rotor mounted on and
rotatable relative to said shaft; a pump installed in said housing and
having a second rotor mounted on and rotatable relative to said shaft to
thereby cause a liquid to flow from said inlet to said outlet, said second
rotor having five axially extending sockets; said first rotor comprising a
cylindrical extension extending short of said second rotor; and elastic
torque-transmitting means connecting said rotors and comprising five
discrete complementary projections for each of said sockets each
projecting in axial direction from said cylindrical extension into each of
said respective sockets of said second rotor.
2. A combination as defined in claim 1, wherein said projections are pins.
3. A combination as defined in claim 1, wherein said second rotor consists
of sinter material.
4. A combination as defined in claim 1, wherein said second rotor defines a
clearance and is rotatable directly on said shaft.
5. A combination as defined in claim 1, wherein said second rotor has an
axial bore whose diameter exceeds the diameter of said shaft so that said
shaft and said second rotor define an annular space.
6. A combination as defined in claim 5, wherein said pump comprises a
stationary portion defining with said second rotor a working chamber for
conveyed liquid and at least one passage connecting said chamber with said
space.
7. A combination as defined in claim 13, further comprising bearings
interposed between said shaft and said first rotor and arranged to receive
liquid from said annular space whereby such liquid cools and lubricates
said bearings.
8. A combination as defined in claim 7, wherein said bearings consist of
sintered material.
9. A combination as defined in claim 1, wherein said projections are formed
from elastomeric synthetic plastic material.
10. A combination as defined in claim 1, wherein said cylindrical extension
and said projections are integrally formed from elastomeric synthetic
plastic material.
11. In an apparatus for conveying a liquid, particularly fuel, a
combination comprising a housing having a liquid admitting inlet and a
liquid discharging outlet; a shaft fixedly mounted in said housing; an
electric motor installed in said housing and including a first rotor
comprising an armature, a commutator and a casing of elastomeric synthetic
plastic material, said first rotor being mounted on and rotatable relative
to said shaft; a pump installed in said housing and having a second rotor
mounted on and rotatable relative to said shaft to thereby cause a liquid
to flow from said inlet to said outlet, said casing comprising a
cylindrical extension surrounding said shaft and ending short of said
second rotor; and elastic torque-transmitting means forming an integral
part of said casing of elastomeric synthetic plastic material and
connecting said rotors, said elastic torque-transmitting means comprising
at least one pin-shaped projection integral with and projecting axially
from said cylindrical extension and a complementary socket in said second
rotor receiving said pin-shaped projection. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
The apparatus of the present invention constitutes an improvement over and
a further development of apparatus disclosed in the commonly owned U.S.
Pat. No. 3,873,243 as well as an improvement over and a further
development of apparatus disclosed in the commonly owned U.S. Pat. No.
3,870,910.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to fluid conveying apparatus in general, and
more particularly to improvements in assemblies wherein a pump driven by
an electric motor, conveys a liquid, especially a liquid fuel.
The copending application of Nusser et al. discloses a fuel pump assembly
wherein the pump and the electric motor are installed in a common housing
and the rotors of the pump and electric motor rotate about a fixed shaft.
The rotor of the pump is integral with an element of the rotor of the
electric motor. It is further known to provide a discrete coupling which
transmits torque from the rotor of the electric motor to the pump rotor.
The wear on such couplings is extensive so that the radial and/or
tangential play of the rotary parts increases beyond a permissible value
after a relatively short period of use of the pump assembly. It has been
observed that the pump assembly which embodies such a coupling is likely
to become inoperative at the most inopportune time and that the generation
of noise increases disproportionately as the wear upon the coupling
progresses.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
An object of the invention is to provide an apparatus wherein a
liquid-displacing pump is driven by an electric motor with novel and
improved means for transmitting torque from the rotary parts of the motor
to the rotary part or parts of the pump.
Another object of the invention is to provide a pump assembly, particularly
a pump assembly for conveying a liquid fuel, whose operation is quieter
than that of presently known assemblies, even after extended periods of
use of the improved assembly.
A further object of the invention is to provide a fuel pump assembly
wherein the torque-transmitting connection between the rotary elements of
the motor and the pump rotor is simpler, less expensive, more reliable and
longer-lasting than the aforedescribed conventional connections.
An additional object of the invention is to provide a fuel pump assembly
wherein the rotary elements of the motor can transmit torque to the pump
rotor through the medium of a very simple and inexpensive connection which
allows for replacement of component parts of the pump independently of the
electric motor or vice versa.
Still another object of the invention is to provide a pump assembly for
conveying liquids which requires a minimum of maintenance, wherein the
conveyed liquid can be used with advantage to cool and/or lubricate the
parts which move with respect to each other, and wherein the wear upon
bearings and like parts is less pronounced than in many heretofore known
pump assemblies.
A further object of the invention is to provide a pump assembly wherein the
fluctuations in the rate of liquid flow are less pronounced than is known
pump assemblies, which is capable of automatically regulating the pressure
of conveyed liquid, and wherein the motor contributes to a more
satisfactory lubrication of bearings and/or other rotary parts.
The invention is embodied in an apparatus for conveying a liquid,
particularly in a fuel pump assembly, which comprises a housing having a
liquid-admitting inlet at one end and a liquid-discharging outlet at the
other end thereof, a shaft which is fixedly (non-rotatably) mounted in the
housing, an electric motor which is installed in the housing and has a
first rotor mounted on and rotatable relative to the shaft, a pump
installed in the housing and having a second rotor which is mounted on and
is rotatable relative to the shaft to thereby cause a liquid to flow from
the inlet, through the housing, and toward and through the outlet, and
elastic torque-transmitting means which connects the two rotors. The
torque-transmitting means may form part of one of the rotors (preferably
the first rotor) and is coupled to the other rotor. In accordance with a
presently preferred embodiment, the first rotor comprises a substantially
cylindrical extension which surrounds the shaft between the pump and the
first rotor and the torque-transmitting means forms part of the
cylindrical extension. Such torque-transmitting means may comprise at
least one elastic pin-shaped projection (for example, five projections)
which is parallel to the shaft and extends into a complementary socket of
the second rotor. The aforementioned cylindrical extension may constitute
an integral part of a synthetic plastic casing which surrounds a portion
of or the entire first rotor and rotates therewith when the electric motor
is on to drive the second rotor. The second rotor may consist of sintered
material.
The novel features which are considered as characteristic of the invention
are set forth in particular in the appended claims. The improved pump
assembly itself, however, both as to its construction and its mode of
operation, together with additional features and advantages thereof, will
be best understood upon perusal of the following detailed description of
certain specific embodiments with reference to the accompanying drawing.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
FIG. 1 is an axial sectional view of a fuel pump assembly which embodies
the invention; and
FIG. 2 is a transverse sectional view as seen in the direction of arrows
from the line II--II of FIG. 1.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
FIGS. 1 and 2 show an apparatus which constitutes a fuel pump assembly and
comprises a housing including an elongated cupped main section 1 and a
second section 2 constituting a closure or plug for the right-hand end of
the main section 1, as viewed in FIG. 1. The closure 2 abuts against and
partially surrounds a bearing member or insert 4 having a radially
outwardly extending flange 3 which abuts against the internal surface of
the main housing section 1. A ring-shaped sealing element 3a is interposed
between the flange 3 and the adjacent radially outermost portion of the
closure 2. The main section 1 is made of a suitable metal, and the parts
2, 4 consist of a synthetic plastic material. The central portion of the
bearing member 4 contains or includes a support for the right-hand end of
a fixed shaft 5 which extends through the central portion of the entire
main housing section 1. A portion of the shaft 5 which is close to its
left-hand end, as viewed in FIG. 1, is fixedly mounted in a stationary
part 6 of a fuel pump serving to draw fuel through an inlet 7 at the
left-hand axial end of the main housing section 1 and to convey such fuel
toward an outlet 8 at the right-hand axial end of the closure 2. The
stationary part 6 of the fuel pump resembles a disk which is surrounded by
an annular seal 6A engaging the internal surface of the adjacent portion
of the main housing section 1. The cross-sectional area of the main
housing section 1 decreases in a direction from the seal 6A toward the
inlet 7.
A check valve is installed partly in the closure 2 and partly in the
bearing member 4; its purpose is to prevent a return flow of fuel into the
housing via outlet 8. This valve comprises a spherical valve member 10
which is biased against a seat 11 of the bearing member 4 by a valve
spring 9 reacting against an internal shoulder of the closure 2. The valve
member 10 normally prevents the flow of fuel from an axial bore 12 of the
bearing member 4 into the outlet 8 but the check valve opens automatically
in response to a rise in fuel pressure, i.e., when the pump is in
operation to draw fuel into the housing 1, 2 via inlet 7.
The means for rotating the rotor 24 of the fuel pump is an electric motor
14 which is installed in the central portion of the main housing section 1
and comprises a rotor including an armature 13. The armature 13 is mounted
on an elongated sleeve 15 which surrounds the major part of the shaft 5.
The end portions of the sleeve 15 have friction bearings or sleeve
bearings 16, 17 which directly engage the respective portions of the
peripheral surface of the shaft 5. The material of the bearings 16, 17 is
preferably a sinter metal. The armature 13 includes customary windings and
laminae, and the rotor of the electric motor 14 further includes a
commutator 18 which is adjacent to the right-hand axial end of the shaft
5, as viewed in FIG. 1.
At least a portion of the armature 13 is surrounded by a casing 19 which
preferably consists of an elastomeric synthetic plastic material and has a
cylindrical extension 20 surrounding the sleeve 15 in the region of the
bearing 16. In the illustrated embodiment, the casing 19 surrounds the
laminae but not the windings of the armature 13. The front end face 21 of
the extension 20 of the casing 19 (which constitutes an element of the
rotor of the electric motor 14) is located to the left of the sleeve 15
and its bearing 16 and is provided with five integral equidistant axially
parallel elastic projections or pins 22 extending into complementary
sockets 23 provided in the rotor 24 of the fuel pump. The rotor 24 is
mounted with clearance on the adjacent portion of the shaft 5 so that the
parts 5, 24 define an elongated annular space 5A. As shown in FIG. 2, the
rotor 24 is formed with several radially outwardly extending slots 25 for
cylindrical or roller-shaped liquid displacing elements 26. The rotor 24
is mounted between the aforementioned stationary part 6 of the fuel pump
and a second disk-shaped stationary part 28 which is bolted (as at 10b) or
otherwise connected to the part 6. A distancing element 29 between the
stationary parts 6, 28 of the fuel pump surrounds the rotor 24 and has a
cylindrical internal surface 29' along which the liquid displacing
elements 26 roll when the rotor 24 is driven. The cylindrical internal
surface 29' is eccentric with respect to the shaft 5 which latter is
coaxial with the pump rotor 24.
The stationary part 28 is formed with a radially outwardly extending cutout
30 (see particularly FIG. 2) and with a slot 31 which is adjacent to but
spaced from one end of the radially outermost portion of the cutout 30.
The stationary part 6 is further formed with an axially parallel channel
32 the outer end of which is normally sealed by the plate-like valve
member 33 of a relief valve serving to allow fuel to flow back toward the
inlet 7 when the fuel pressure in the pump reaches a predetermined value.
The valve member 33 is mounted at one end of a yoke-like support 34 the
other end of which extends into a notch 6" communicating with a
kidney-shaped slot 6' of the stationary part 6. The support 34 may consist
of sheet metal and its central portion has an opening 34a receiving with
substantial clearance the adjacent portion of the shaft 5. The valve
member 33 is biased against the outer end of the channel 32 in the
stationary part 6 by a helical spring 36 which reacts against a retainer
5' on the shaft 5 and bears against the central portion of the support 34
in the region of the opening 34a.
The disk-shaped stationary part 28 of the fuel pump has a relatively large
central opening forms part of the cutout 30 and which receives with
clearance the leftmost portion of the cylindrical extension 20 of the
elastomeric casing 19.
A cylindrical sheet-metal sleeve 37 of magnetically conductive material
surrounds the rotor of the electric motor 14 in the main housing section 1
and carries permanent magnets 38 forming parts of the motor 14 and
surrounding the windings of the armature 13. The flange 3 of the bearing
member 4 has radially extending recesses or pockets for carbon brushes 40
which bear against the commutator 18. The rotor of the motor 14 is held
against axial movement relative to the shaft 5 by the rotor 24 of the fuel
pump and by one or more split rings 41 which are recessed into a
circumferential groove of the shaft 5 to the right of the bearing 17, as
viewed in FIG. 1.
The cutout 30 of the pump rotor 24 is bounded at its outer end by a concave
surface 30A which forms part of a cylinder and whose radius of curvature
is less than the radius of the rotor 24. The radial slots 25 of the rotor
24 are bounded at their inner ends by concave surfaces 25' which are
located radially inwardly of the arcuate surface 30A.
When the electric motor 14 is started, its rotor including the armature 13,
commutator 18 and casing 19 rotates on the shaft 5 and the
torque-transmitting projections 22 drive the rotor 24 of the fuel pump in
the main housing section 1. As the member 24 rotates, the displacing
elements 26 roll along the cylindrical internal surface 29' of the
distancing element 29 which performs a function similar to that of the
slide block in a radial piston pump. The elements 26 draw fuel into the
main housing section 1 via inlet 7 whereby such fuel flows through the
kidney-shaped slot 6' of the stationary part 6, into the adjacent radial
slots 25 of the rotor 24 and thereupon into the cutout 30. The fuel flows
from the cutout 30, around the rotor of the electric motor 14 and into the
bore 12 of the bearing member 4 to open the check valve including the
spherical valve member 10 and to leave the housing via outlet 8. If the
fuel pressure in the interior of the housing 1, 2 reaches a predetermined
value, the valve member 33 is lifted off the left-hand end of the channel
32 and permits some fuel to flow back toward the inlet 7.
The configuration of the cutout 30 in the stationary part 28 of the fuel
pump is selected with a view to insure a highly satisfactory rinsing of
the radial slots 25 in the region of the respective concave surfaces 25'.
Furthermore, a cutout having a configuration as shown at 30 in FIG. 2
insures that eventual bubbles of steam or another gas which develop in the
fuel are caused to rapidly leave the region of the fuel pump.
As the fuel flows radially in the cutout 30 as well as through the slot 31
in the stationary part 28 of the fuel pump, there develops a slight rise
of fuel pressure in a plenum or liquid filled working chamber, that is,
the enclosed space 24' which surrounds the rotor 24 and is surrounded by
the surface 29'. That face of the stationary part 6 which is adjacent to
the rotor 24 has a radially extending groove or passage 35 wherein the
fuel can flow from the plenum chamber 24' surrounding the rotor 24 into
the space 5A between the rotor 24 and shaft 5. The groove 34 is machined
into that portion of the stationary part 6 which communicated with the
region where the pressure of the body of fuel surrounding the rotor 24
reaches a maximum value. The fuel which enters the space 5A flows through
the sinter metal bearing 16, thereupon through the space between the shaft
5 and sleeve 15, through the sinter bearing 17, and into the outlet 8.
Such fuel insures a highly satisfactory lubrication of the bearings for
the rotor of the electric motor 14 and a cooling of such bearings.
The rotor of the electric motor 14 acts not unlike a centrifugal pump and
causes some fuel to flow in a direction from the periphery of the shaft 5
toward the internal surface of the sleeve 37. This draws additional fuel
into the space 5A and thence through the parts 16, 15, 17 to thus enhance
the cooling action of fuel upon the bearings on which the rotor of the
electric motor 14 rotates. Moreover, such centrifugal pumping action of
the rotor of the electric motor 14 causes eventually developing bubbles of
gas to flow away from the bearings, which is particularly important when
the pump assembly is used to convey fuel for Otto engines at elevated
temperatures. The evacuation of bubbles from the region of the shaft 5
prolongs the useful life of the bearings for the rotor of the electric
motor 14.
The number of elastomeric projections 22 which constitute the
torque-transmitting means between the two rotors can be reduced below or
increased above five. Also, these projections can be made integral or
rigid with the rotor 24 of the pump and then extend into suitable
complementary sockets of the rotor of the electric motor 14. The
arrangement which is shown in the drawing is preferred at this time
because the projections 22 can be formed as integral parts of the casing
19 which constitutes a useful component of the rotor of the electric motor
14.
An important advantage of the improved pump assembly is that the wear on
the torque-transmitting projections 22 is negligible. This is due to
relatively low specific stressing of such projections in view of the fact
that they consist of an elastomeric material. The elastic
torque-transmitting projections further contribute to a reduction of
fluctuations in the rate of fluid flow through the housing 1, 2 because
they can yield whenever the torque which the rotor of the electric motor
14 tends to transmit to the rotor 24 of the fuel pump reaches a
predetermined maximum value or peak value. Thus, the effect of eventual
fluctuations in RPM of the armature 13 upon the rate of fluid flow is much
less pronounced than in pump assemblies wherein the pump rotor is
compelled to share all angular movements and invariably rotates at the
exact speed of the rotary elements of the motor. Since the projections 22
can be withdrawn from the respective sockets 23, the motor 14 can be
removed independently of the pump and the parts of the pump can be
inspected and/or replaced independently of the motor. The pump assembly is
less expensive than presently known pump assemblies wherein a complete
coupling is needed to transmit torque to the pump rotor. Also, the
provision of elastic torque-transmitting means contributes significantly
to a reduction of noise, even after extended use of the pump assembly.
Another advantage of the improved pump assembly is that the rotor 24 of the
fuel pump is mounted directly on the shaft 5. This renders it possible to
reduce the radial play of the rotor 24 to a desirable minimum, i.e., to
provide between the parts 5 and 24 a space 5A of desired width. The
provision of one or more radial grooves 35 insures a highly satisfactory
cooling of the parts which rotate on the shaft 5 and prolongs the useful
life of bearings for the rotary parts of the electric motor 14. Also, the
provision of the cutout 30 contributes to an expulsion of bubbles of steam
or other gaseous medium from the region of the fuel pump.
Without further analysis, the foregoing will so fully reveal the gist of
the present invention that others can, by applying current knowledge,
readily adapt it for various applications without omitting features which
fairly constitute essential characteristics of the generic and specific
aspects of our contribution to the art and, therefore, such adaptations
should and are intended to be comprehended within the meaning and range of
equivalence of the claims.
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Description  |
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