高压工况下以水为工作流体的轴向活塞机缸体膛面轮廓

Meike Ernst, M. Ivantysynova
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引用次数: 3

摘要

建筑,农业,林业,航空航天装备:斜盘设计轴向活塞机(APMSPD)是各种液压系统中选择的正位移机器。这些高效的单位的性能是微妙地铰链在三个主要的润滑界面的严格设计,每个努力保持机器的移动部件的头发的宽度分开,以避免潜在的灾难性的金属对金属接触,同时限制高压流体泄漏到单位的低压情况。在这三者中,最困难的是活塞-气缸界面,因为特别是在高压运行时,APMSPD的活塞必须承受相当大的侧载荷。这种侧负载带来的挑战程度很大程度上取决于润滑剂(即液压系统的工作液)的选择。虽然液压系统仍然以石油为主,但在过去的几十年里,水液压系统再次出现。水的无毒性、易燃性、可获得性、低成本和绿色足迹,几乎是一种理想的液压流体;然而,考虑到它的粘度,这种错觉就消失了,它的粘度低到足以引起上述界面的严重负载支撑问题,从而阻碍了市场上适用于高压作业的APMSPD的设计。为了实现这种操作,研究了APMSPD中活塞通过的缸体孔的微表面整形,作为增强负载支撑的有效手段。目前工作的重点是表面轮廓,这些孔的壁向内弯曲。过去对该剖面的探索通过半径和位移定义了其形状;目前的研究将这个定义细化为两个半径和一个位移,从而显著地打开了设计空间。在一项跨越几种不同工况的模拟研究中,采用Maha流体动力研究中心开发的非等温流固耦合模型捕捉了这种设计的尺寸变化对负载支撑和功率损失的影响。由此产生的设计趋势揭示了这种表面轮廓处理这些操作条件的潜力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Axial Piston Machine Cylinder Block Bore Surface Profile for High-Pressure Operating Conditions with Water as Working Fluid
Construction, agriculture, forestry, aerospace equip- ment: axial piston machines of swash plate design (APMSPD) are the positive displacement machines of choice in a wide variety of hydraulic systems. The performance of these highly efficient units is delicately hinged on the rigorous design of three major lubricating interfaces, each striving to keep the machine’s moving components a hair’s width apart in order to avert poten- tially catastrophic metal-to-metal contact, whilst simultaneously limiting the leakage of high-pressure fluid into the unit’s low- pressure case. Of the three, the most difficult in its conception for these duties is the piston-cylinder interface, owing to the fact that especially during high-pressure operation, the pistons of APMSPD must bear a considerable side load. The measure of challenge this side load presents is heavily modulated by the choice of lubricant (i.e., the hydraulic system’s working fluid). While the use of oil still dominates the hydraulics industry, the past few decades have seen the re-emergence of water hydraulics. In its non-toxicity, its inflammability, its availability, its low cost and green footprint, water embodies an almost ideal hydraulic fluid; however, the illusion unravels in giving consideration to its viscosity, which is low enough to raise serious load-support concerns for the aforementioned interface, therewith barricading the design of marketable APMSPD for high-pressure operation with water. In aiming to enable such operation, micro surface shaping on the bores in the cylinder block through which the pistons in APMSPD move has been examined as an effective means of enhancing load support. The focus of the present work is a surface profile that has the walls of these bores curving inwards. A past exploration of this profile defined its shape via a radius and a shift; the present investigation refines that definition to two radii and a shift, thereby significantly opening the design space. In a simulation study spanning several different operating conditions, the effect of dimensional variations of this design on load support and power loss is captured with a non-isothermal fluid-structure interaction model developed by the Maha Fluid Power Research Center. The resulting design trends reveal the potential of this surface profile to handle these operating conditions.
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