GB2121121A - Seal for a rotary machine - Google Patents
Seal for a rotary machine Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- GB2121121A GB2121121A GB08211476A GB8211476A GB2121121A GB 2121121 A GB2121121 A GB 2121121A GB 08211476 A GB08211476 A GB 08211476A GB 8211476 A GB8211476 A GB 8211476A GB 2121121 A GB2121121 A GB 2121121A
- Authority
- GB
- United Kingdom
- Prior art keywords
- rotor
- stator
- seal
- gap
- zone
- 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.)
- Granted
Links
Classifications
-
- 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
- F16J15/16—Sealings between relatively-moving surfaces
- F16J15/34—Sealings between relatively-moving surfaces with slip-ring pressed against a more or less radial face on one member
- F16J15/3404—Sealings between relatively-moving surfaces with slip-ring pressed against a more or less radial face on one member and characterised by parts or details relating to lubrication, cooling or venting of the seal
- F16J15/3408—Sealings between relatively-moving surfaces with slip-ring pressed against a more or less radial face on one member and characterised by parts or details relating to lubrication, cooling or venting of the seal at least one ring having an uneven slipping surface
- F16J15/3412—Sealings between relatively-moving surfaces with slip-ring pressed against a more or less radial face on one member and characterised by parts or details relating to lubrication, cooling or venting of the seal at least one ring having an uneven slipping surface with cavities
-
- 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
- F16J15/16—Sealings between relatively-moving surfaces
- F16J15/40—Sealings between relatively-moving surfaces by means of fluid
- F16J15/406—Sealings between relatively-moving surfaces by means of fluid by at least one pump
Landscapes
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
- Sealing Using Fluids, Sealing Without Contact, And Removal Of Oil (AREA)
Abstract
A hydrodynamic, non-contacting end-face seal for a rotary machine comprises a rotor (1) mounted on the machine shaft (3) and an annular stator (2) having a surface facing the flat and smooth surface of the rotor at a short distance therefrom. The stator encloses the machine shaft, is eccentrically positioned with respect to the rotor center, and is urged towards the rotor surface by a helical spring (7). The surface of the stator ring is shaped to form a circular rim separated from the rotor surface by a very small gap of varying width (H, h), and the space enclosed by this rim is raised to a higher pressure than the surroundings by the hydrodynamic action of the surface velocity of the rotor on the liquid in the machine, by making the gap width (h) between the rotor and stator of a mechanically permissible minimum at all points of the rim at which the velocity vector of the rotor surface extends from the inside of the rim to the outside, and the gap width (H) larger at all points of the rim at which the velocity vector extends from the outside to the inside. The gap width is changed in accordance with pressure conditions in the machine against the action of the helical spring, or under the control of a pressure or fluid velocity sensor via a mechanical or hydraulic mechanism. The spring (7) may be replaced by a bellows or a series of springs. The surface of the annular stator may have two or four lobes. The roles of the rotor and stator may be reversed. <IMAGE>
Description
SPECIFICATION
Seal for a rotary machine
This invention relates to a seal for a rotary machine, and more particularly to a noncontacting end-face seal adapted to separate two spaces maintained at different pressures and to prevent fluid from passing from the high-pressure zone to the low-pressure zone.
Two types of seals are in common use, viz.
contacting and non-contacting seals. Generally speaking, a mechanical contact between the seal faces, such as for example in U.S. Patent No.
2 250 348, practically eliminates leakage but at the expense of high friction losses, wear and consequent short service life. U.S. Patent No.
4 026 564 seeks to reduce the friction by introducing a relatively large gap between the seal faces, but this inevitably leads to leakage losses.
Non-contacting face seals of the type shown in
U.S. Patent No. 3 751 045 represent a compromise, putting up with some leakage by reducing the gap to a small value just sufficient to avoid any rubbing contact.
There are many instances in which the escape of a fluid must be prevented at all costs, such as poisonous, corrosive, radioactive, or very expensive fluids, and there may be other reasons.
Long service life is also a desirable quality. The present invention therefore aims to provide a noncontacting face seal for these tasks, and further to provide such a seal at low initial and low maintenance cost by using simple components in its construction, and to make the seal long-lasting by preventing wear and tear due to contact between the seal faces.
The present invention provides a noncontacting end-face seal for a rotary machine, the seal comprising a rotor mounted on a shaft of the machine and rotatable therewith and a stator connected to the housing of the machine, the rotor and the stator having opposing smooth surfaces separated by a gap of at least two sizes of width, the seal being characterized by one of the two opposing surfaces being smooth and uniform and the other opposing surface being in the shape of a closed curved having an inside enclosing the shaft and an outside contained within the contours of the opposite surface, the said closed curve forming a partition between a zone of high pressure and a zone of lower pressure and being so formed that a tangent to every point of the said curve forms an acute, positive or negative angle with the relative velocity vector passing through that point or coincides therewith and that at all points of the said curve where the relative velocity vector is directed from the zone of higher pressure to the zone of lower pressure the width of the gap between the said opposing surfaces is smaller than it is at those points where the relative velocity vector is directed from the zone of lower pressure to the zone of higher pressure.
The invention is based on the following principle:
A fluid in a gap, of width h, between a stationary surface and a moving one is dragged by the moving surface in the direction of the velocity
vector, v, the fluid flow, Q1, per unit length being
expressed by the equation
(1) Q1=v.h/2.
In the case of the moving surface progressing
from a low-pressure to a high-pressure zone (P2
and P1 respectively) there is also a pressure
induced flow, Q2, in the opposite direction, and
this is expressed by the equation
h3 P1-P2 (2) 12 L
L being the length of the gap in the direction from high to low pressure, and j z the viscosity of the fluid.
In order to prevent fluid from passing through the gap from the high-pressure zone to the lowpressure zone, Q1 must be equal to, or exceed, Q2, i.e. conditions must be created in which one of the faces of a gap seal always moves in the direction from low-pressure to high-pressure. Since such motion is not obtainable with one rotating axisymmetric surface and one stationary surface, the solution lies in providing a rotor and a stator separated by a narrow gap, so constructed that flow conditions are not uniform along the circumference, but differ for every point of the sealing surfaces.
The gap seal according to the invention comprises: 1. A rotor mounted on the machine shaft and rotating therewith and having a smooth, preferably planar surface; 2. A stator surface distanced from the rotor surface by a gap, said surface forming a partition between zones of different pressures and being in the shape of a closed curve of a solid height having an inside enclosing the rotor shaft and an outside contained within the rotor periphery. The curve is further characterized by the property that a tangent to any point of the curve forms an acute, positive or negative, angle with the velocity vector of the rotor passing through this point.All points of the stator surface at which the rotor velocity vector extends from the inside towards the outside of the curve are separated from the rotor surface by a gap of predetermined width, and all points of the stator surface at which the rotor velocity vector extends from the outside towards the inside of the curve are separated from the rotor surface by a gap of a width different from that at the points with outwardly extending velocity vectors.
Taking now the case of the pressure on the outside of the curve being greater than that on the inside thereof, then at each point of the curve at which the velocity vector is directed outwardly, fluid is carried in that direction against the pressure differential; conversely at all points at which the velocity vector is inwardly directly, fluid is carried in an inward direction, assisted by the pressure differential. Since the curve is preferably
symmetrical and symmetrically positioned with
respect to a rotor diameter, fluid will be carried
inwardly over one half of the curve and carried
outwardly over the other half.By providing a wide
gap along the outflow portion and a narrow gap
along the inflow portion, the oufflow through the
wide gap -- pressure on both sides of the curve
being equal - will be larger than the inflow through the narrow gap, as shown by equation (1); this because the flow is proportional to the gap width. However, the pressure differential will cause an inward flow in accordance with equation (2), and in order to obtain a perfect seal, the outflow must equal or exceed the total inflow. By judiciously selecting the shape of the curve, its breadth, and the width of the gap, it is possible to balance inflow and outflow for a specific pressure head.
In the accompanying drawings which represent, by way of example, diagrammatical illustrations of three embodiments of non
contacting end face seals according to the
invention,
Figure 1 is a section through a face seal
provided with an eccentrically positioned circular
stator surface;
Figure 2 is a section along B-B of Figure 1
illustrating the flow geometry between rotor and
stator;
Figure 3 is a section through another
embodiment of a face seal, having a stator surface
symmetrical with respect to the rotor surface;
Figure 4 is a section along C-C of Figure 3;
and
Figure 5 is a plan view of still another stator
surface.
With reference to Figures 1 and 2 of the
drawings, a rotor 1 fastened to a machine shaft 3
and rotating clockwise (as indicated by an arrow)
is separated from a stator 2 by a gap of width h for
half its circumference and of width H for the other
half. The stator 2 is in the shape of an annular surface of median radius R and breadth L. The
stator centre is eccentric to the rotor centre by a
distance e, the centres of the rotor and of the
stator lying on a bisector line A-A. Viewing the
upper half of Figure 2, i.e. the portion above the
bisector A-A, and especially point D on the
stator, it becomes apparent that each point of the
rotor at a radius R has a velocity v from the inside
to the outside of the stator surface.As a result the
fluid in the gap is moved across the breadth of the
stator at velocity vr, vr being the component of the
velocity v in the direction of the stator radius R.
It is also apparent that at every point in the
upper half, above the bisector, there is an
outwardly directed velocity vector which
decreases to zero while approaching the bisector
line. It is likewise evident from the portion of the
diagram containing point D' (below the bisector),
that at every point of the rotor the velocity vector v' is inwardly directed, from the outside towards
the inside of the stator surface. By making the gap
H on the side above the bisector larger than the gap h below the bisector a larger fluid voiume is
moved outwardly than inwardly at every two
points positioned symmetrically with respect to
both sides of the bisector.This can be shown
analytically to be so by consulting eq. (1), the net
outward flow being:
(3) dQt = dO1 - dO; or integrated for the circumference of the stator (4) Qt=w-e-R (Hh).
The foregoing description refers to only one embodiment of the invention, viz. to a smooth surfaced rotor and to a stator surface in the shape of a closed curve. The same result will, however, be obtained by exchanging the tasks of the rotating and the stationary parts, since the effect here described is due to the relative velocity between stator and rotor.
In the alternative construction, therefore, the
stator will have a smooth, planar surface, while
the rotor is provided with a raised, closed curve on
its surface, the curve being separated from the
stator surface by a gap of varying width, in
accordance with the relative velocity vector at
every point of the curve.
The flow through the gap is the difference
between the above outflow and the inflow due to the pressure gradient P1 - P2 (equation 2). Hence
the flow, Q, through the gap is
(5) O=R.(H-h).w.e -- 76 R (H3 + h3).(P1 - P2)/12' IU.L' For given operational conditions, viz. a pressure differential P1 - P2, rotational speed w, and fluid viscosity , a seal geometry, consisting of H, h, L, and e, can be selected such that Q is either zero or
positive, thereby preventing fluid flow from the
high-pressure to the low-pressure zone.
Figure 1 also shows some constructional details of an end-face seal according to the
invention. The stator 2 is of annular shape having
a cylindrical bore and is axially displaceable along
a cylindrical hub 5 which forms an internal
extension of a housing 4. The cylindrical surface of
the hub is eccentric to the shaft axis by the
distance e, causing the eccentric position of the
stator; the two bodies are mutually sealed against
the penetration of fluid by a circular gasket or
O-ring 6. A helical spring 7 serves to urge the stator
towards the rotor surface. The helical spring 7
may be replaced by any suitable means for urging
the stator towards the rotor surface, e.g. a bellows
or a series of suitably disposed small helical
springs. It should be understood that in the
drawing the gaps H and h and the difference
between them are, for the sake of clarity, shown
much widerthan they are in practice, viz. fractions
of a millimetre.
The face seal illustrated in Figures 3 and 4 is
almost identical with that of Figures 1 and 2,
except for the fact that the stator curve 2a is
symmetrical in relation to the shaft axis, resulting in balanced pressure distribution on the rotor. The stator curve is composed of two merging circular arcs which are separated from the rotor surface by two wide gaps H1 and two narrow gaps h,. The flow direction shown is that obtained by a clockwise rotation of the rotor.
Still another shape of the stator curve is illustrated in Figure 5, showing a curve symmetrical with respect to the rotor axis and composed of four circular arcs. As in the foregoing figure, each of the four arcs is divided into a narrow-gap and a wide-gap surface. Yet other configurations are possible involving different combinations of equal arcs, each showing the gap widths, h and H. The final choice will be governed by manufacturing and other considerations.
Whenever leakage must be prevented at low speed and at standstill, the seal of the invention can be provided with a barrier, such as a ring (S in
Figure 5) either placed within or enclosing the closed curve and separated from the opposite surface by a gap of width h or less.
During the actual test carried out with a circular face seal, a pressure differential of ii kg/cm2 was attained, the seal having the following dimensions and working under the following conditions:
Eccentricity e = 21 mm
Breadth ' L=4mm Wide gap H = 0.018 mm
Narrow gap h = 0.010 mm
Viscosity ju = 0.030 Pa sec.
Ang. velocity w = 100 rad/s
In order to prevent fluid from passing through the seal regardless of the pressure head it is necessary to adjust the width of the gap as dictated by changing pressure heads. This can be accomplished by suitably calculating and choosing the dimensions and properties of the helical spring 7 of the Figure 1. Another possibility is to connect the stator to a mechanical or hydraulic mechanism adapted to move the stator in an axial direction towards, or away from, the rotor surface, in accordance with a signal received from a sensor, this sensor being susceptible to changes in pressure or in fluid velocity.
As an alternative use of the invention, fluid may be permitted to pass through the gap, either to the inside or to the outside of the curved stator surface, thereby obtaining a pumping effect similar to the action of a centrifugal or centripetal pump. It will be understood that in this case openings must be provided inside and outside of the curve serving as inlet and outlet for the fluid to be pumped. Such pumps will be of great value wherever contamination of the fluid pumped must be prevented at all costs. Since there is no mechanical contact of rotating parts in this kind of pump no solid particles can be abraded which may enter the fluid. One of the proposed applications would be a blood pump as used in heart and kidney operations, where any kind of poilution could be fatal.
In the foregoing only two configurations of the stator surface have been described, but it will be understood that many other kinds of curves may be employed for the same purpose, the condition, in accordance with the invention, being that there are alternate stretches in which the velocity vectors are respectively directed towards the inside and the outside of the curve. The curve must not necessarily be symmetrical, neither with regard to its own bisector nor with regard to the rotor axis; but it is self-evident that the symmetrical curve such as, for instance, depicted in Figure 4, loads the rotor symmetrically, which is advantageous for the balance of the rotating parts.
Instead of providing uniform gap widths, h and
H, along a complete arc of the closed curve, the width may gradually increase and decrease in accordance with the changes in the vector component vr (Figure 2).
Claims (11)
1. A non-contacting end-face seal for a rotary machine, the seal comprising a rotor mounted on a shaft of the machine and rotatable therewith and a stator connected to the housing of the machine, the rotor and the stator having opposing smooth surfaces separated by a gap of at least two sizes of width, the seal being characterized by one of the two opposing surfaces being smooth and uniform and the other opposing surface being in the shape of a closed curve having an inside enclosing the shaft and an outside contained within the contours of the opposite surface, the said closed curve forming a partition between a zone of higher pressure and a zone of lower pressure and being so formed that a tangent to every point of the said curve forms an acute, positive or negative angle with the relative velocity vector passing through that point or coincides therewith and that at all points of the said curve where the relative velocity vector is directed from the zone of higher pressure to the zone of lower pressure the width of the gap between the said opposing surfaces is smaller than it is at those points where the relative velocity vector is directed from the zone of lower pressure to the zone of higher pressure.
2. A seal as claimed in Claim 1, wherein the rotor surface is smooth and planar and the stator surface is in the form of the said closed curve.
3. A seal as claimed in Claim 1 , wherein the stator surface is smooth and planar and the rotor surface is in the form of the said closed curve.
4. A seal as claimed in Claim 2, wherein the
stator surface is of an annular and circular shape
of uniform breadth, the centre of the stator surface
being positioned at a distance from the axis of the
rotor surface, the stator surface being spaced from
the rotor surface by a narrow gap at all points
lying on one side of an imaginary straight line
drawn through the centres of the rotor and of the
stator surfaces, and by a wider gap at all points lying on the other side of the said imaginary line.
5. A seal as claimed in Claim 2, wherein the stator surface is in the form of two or more equal annular circular arcs forming a closed curve and joined at their end points, the stator surface forming alternate wide and narrow gaps with the rotor surface, each gap extending for one half of the length of each arc.
6. A seal as claimed in any of Claims 1 to 5, including means for altering the distance between the respective surfaces of the rotor and the stator.
7. A seal as claimed in Claim 6, wherein the stator surface forms an integral part with an annular body which is axially movable with respect to the rotor surface and is urged towards the rotor surface by elastic means.
8. A seal as claimed in Claim 6, wherein the rotor is axially movable along the shaft of the machine and is urged towards the stator surface by elastic means.
9. A seal as claimed in Claim 7 or 8, wherein the elastic means is a helical spring.
10. A seal as claimed in Claim 1, wherein the opposing surfaces of the rotor and the stator are planar.
11. A non-contacting end-face seal according to Claim 1 , substantially as herein described with reference to, and as shown in, Figures 1 and 2,
Figures 3 and 4, or Figure 5 of the accompanying drawings.
Priority Applications (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
GB08211476A GB2121121B (en) | 1982-04-21 | 1982-04-21 | Seal for a rotary machine |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
GB08211476A GB2121121B (en) | 1982-04-21 | 1982-04-21 | Seal for a rotary machine |
Publications (2)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
GB2121121A true GB2121121A (en) | 1983-12-14 |
GB2121121B GB2121121B (en) | 1985-10-02 |
Family
ID=10529819
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
GB08211476A Expired GB2121121B (en) | 1982-04-21 | 1982-04-21 | Seal for a rotary machine |
Country Status (1)
Country | Link |
---|---|
GB (1) | GB2121121B (en) |
Cited By (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
EP0153768A1 (en) * | 1984-01-26 | 1985-09-04 | SKF Industrial Trading & Development Co, B.V. | Shaft seal |
WO2014184603A1 (en) * | 2013-05-16 | 2014-11-20 | Dresser-Rand Sa | Bi-directional shaft seal |
-
1982
- 1982-04-21 GB GB08211476A patent/GB2121121B/en not_active Expired
Cited By (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
EP0153768A1 (en) * | 1984-01-26 | 1985-09-04 | SKF Industrial Trading & Development Co, B.V. | Shaft seal |
WO2014184603A1 (en) * | 2013-05-16 | 2014-11-20 | Dresser-Rand Sa | Bi-directional shaft seal |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
GB2121121B (en) | 1985-10-02 |
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Legal Events
Date | Code | Title | Description |
---|---|---|---|
PCNP | Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee |