GB2121892A - Fluid bearings - Google Patents

Fluid bearings Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2121892A
GB2121892A GB08315992A GB8315992A GB2121892A GB 2121892 A GB2121892 A GB 2121892A GB 08315992 A GB08315992 A GB 08315992A GB 8315992 A GB8315992 A GB 8315992A GB 2121892 A GB2121892 A GB 2121892A
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GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
pad
bearing
fluid
pilot
pressure
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
Application number
GB08315992A
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GB2121892B (en
GB8315992D0 (en
Inventor
Mohammed Ezzat Mohsin
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
National Research Development Corp UK
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National Research Development Corp UK
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Publication date
Application filed by National Research Development Corp UK filed Critical National Research Development Corp UK
Priority to GB08315992A priority Critical patent/GB2121892B/en
Publication of GB8315992D0 publication Critical patent/GB8315992D0/en
Publication of GB2121892A publication Critical patent/GB2121892A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2121892B publication Critical patent/GB2121892B/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F16ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16CSHAFTS; FLEXIBLE SHAFTS; ELEMENTS OR CRANKSHAFT MECHANISMS; ROTARY BODIES OTHER THAN GEARING ELEMENTS; BEARINGS
    • F16C32/00Bearings not otherwise provided for
    • F16C32/06Bearings not otherwise provided for with moving member supported by a fluid cushion formed, at least to a large extent, otherwise than by movement of the shaft, e.g. hydrostatic air-cushion bearings
    • F16C32/0629Bearings not otherwise provided for with moving member supported by a fluid cushion formed, at least to a large extent, otherwise than by movement of the shaft, e.g. hydrostatic air-cushion bearings supported by a liquid cushion, e.g. oil cushion
    • F16C32/064Bearings not otherwise provided for with moving member supported by a fluid cushion formed, at least to a large extent, otherwise than by movement of the shaft, e.g. hydrostatic air-cushion bearings supported by a liquid cushion, e.g. oil cushion the liquid being supplied under pressure
    • F16C32/0644Details of devices to control the supply of liquids to the bearings
    • F16C32/0648Details of devices to control the supply of liquids to the bearings by sensors or pressure-responsive control devices in or near the bearings

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Magnetic Bearings And Hydrostatic Bearings (AREA)

Abstract

A fluid bearing of the kind in which the fluid pressure at one or more load-bearing pads (4) is regulated by the pressure existing at at least one associated pilot pad (5). The resistance to flow offered by the pilot pad clearance (5, 21) is essentially of "orifice" or like type so as to be substantially independent of changes in the viscosity of the fluid and hence of temperature variations that give rise to those changes. The fluid line between the pressure source and the pilot pad contains a restrictor, which may be variable. The invention includes bearings having more than one main pad in which the pressure in only one of the main pads (4) is directly regulated by pilot pad (5) pressure, the pressure in the other main pad or pads being controlled by reference not to the pilot pad but to the pressures at the source and at the first pad (4). <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION Fluid bearings This invention relates to fluid bearings, by which we mean bearings between two parts which must be capable of relative motion and which must not touch. A recess or pad is formed in one of the members and is connected to a source of fluid under pressure, and the necessary clearance between the two bearing members is maintained by fluid escaping from this pad, which will be referred to as a main or load-bearing pad, to exhaust by way of a shallow clearance between the second bearing member and the border or "land" surrounding the pad.
The invention relates especially to fluid bearings in which a load-bearing pad is associated with a smaller pilot pad connected to the fluid source. The flow of fluid from the source to the load-bearing pad is regulated not by the conditions prevailing at the pad but by changes of pressure, clearance or the like sensed at the pilot pad. It is known that such bearings can offer advantages, for example, as to stiffness and fluid economy, compared with fluid bearings comprising main pads only.
In certain fluid bearings, for instance journal bearings, high relative speed occurs between the stationary and moving bearing members. In a typical hydrostatic journal bearing to support a shaft rotating at high speed, opposed main bearing pads confronting the shaft are formed at angular intervals and in a common radial plane in the housing surrounding the shaft, and power has to be expended to overcome shearing friction of the bearing fluid in two places in particular.
Firstly, under the lands through which the fluid from the pads must pass as a thin film through the bearing clearance in order to reach exhaust.
Secondly within the pads themselves, where because of the frictional drag set up by the relative movement of the bearing members circulatory motion may be set up, so leading to shearing between oppositely-moving layers of fluid in contact with each other. The work done in overcoming this friction manifests itself largely as heat, so that the fluid in the vicinity of the pads becomes hotter than at the source. This heat can lead to harmful effects which diminish the accuracy of all fluid bearings, especially of fluid bearings of sophisticated type that are constructed so as to maintain constant bearing clearance despite variations in bearing load.
One such design of bearing, capable of maintaining constant clearance between the bearing members despite variations in load, is described in UK Patent No. 1027395 and one figure of that patent is now essentially reproduced as Figure 1 of the drawings accompanying the present application. It is a diagrammatic section taken in a transverse plane through a longitudinal slideway bearing and associated fluid circuitry, and shows a main load-bearing pad 64 formed in one member 63a of the bearing, confronting a surface 62 of the other member 62a. Attached to member 63a is a bar 67 formed with a smaller pad 70, and confronting another bar 65 carried by member 62a. Bars 65 and 67 and pad 70 serve as the pilot bearing for main pad 64.Pilot pad 70 is connected to a pressure fluid source 108 by way of an automatic regulating valve 106 including a diaphragm 107, and an equalising valve 72 ensures that the pressure existing in pilot pad 70 (communicated to valve 72 by way of lines 105 and 71) is matched by an equal pressure supplied from source 108 through valve 72 and line 79 to pad 64. As UK Patent No.
1027395 explains in detail, the characteristics of valve 106, in which fluid from a pressure fluid source 108 has to force its way through the annular clearance between the clean-cut end of a cylindrical inlet conduit and a confronting plane spring diaphragm 107 located in a radial plane and with a pre-set spring bias against axial deflection, enables the bearing clearance to be maintained adequately constant despite variations of bearing load. Any tendency for the pilot bearing clearance to fall in response to increased load is at once reflected in a rise in pressure within pad 70, due to increased flow resistance of the clearance. This in turn is transmitted to equalising valve 72 by way of line 71 so ensuring that flow of fluid from source 108 through valve 72 direct to main load-bearing pad 64 is adjusted to create the same higher pressure within that pad.Bearing members 62a, 63a are thus forced apart again to re-seek the pilot bearing equilibrium condition corresponding to the pre-set bias of valve 106.
It should be particularly noted that the pilot bearing is said in UK No. 1027395 to comprise two bars 65 and 67, presenting accurately flat surfaces 66 and 68 which register with one another. The clear teaching of this decription, and of the accompanying drawings, is that the clearances to either side of pad 70 have appreciable width, just as have the clearances to either side of the main load-carrying pad 64. In UK No. 1027395 there is no teaching to the contrary, nor was there any reason for any such teaching. The relativeiy high resistance of a clearance of such width minimises the rate at which the source must deliver fluid, and leads to no practical disadvantages in a bearing of the kind described in UK No. 1027395 in which the two members 62a, 63a move back and forth relative to each other in a linear direction, without any suggestion of ever switching high relative speed.
Were there such high relative speed between members 62a and 63a, however, as could be the case in an equivalent journal bearing in which 62a was a fast-spinning shaft and 63a the surrounding housing, then the work required to overcome the shearing friction mentioned in the second paragraph of this specification would manifest itself in heat. This heat would cause the temperature of the bearing fluid to be higher within pads 64 and 70, and much higher within the clearances surrounding them, than at the source 108. The fluid within the pads, and especially within the surrounding clearances, will therefore be less viscous than on leaving the source 1 08. Because they are of appreciable width, the clearances to either side of pad 70 each have a resistance that is a function of the viscosity of the fluid.When that viscosity falls, therefore, as a result of a temperature rise as just described, the resistance of the pilot bearing falls although there may have been no change of bearing load. Therefore the pressure within pilot pad 70 will fall also, and this reduced pressure will be communicated by way of equalising valve 72 to main pad 64. Therefore the height of the bearing clearance, which should remain constant, will tend to fall, and so to restore the pressures in pilot pad 70 and consequently in main pad 64 to what they were before the rise in temperature.
The magnitude of the pressure so restored is what is required to balance the load on the main pad.
The bearing will therefore stabilise in a condition in which the clearance at the main pad is less than what is intended. Hence, in such a bearing valve 106 would fail to keep the main pad clearance constant.
The present invention seeks to provide a fluid bearing that can maintain constant clearance despite variations of bearing load, but is less susceptible to changes in clearance as a result of temperature and viscosity effects as just described. According to the invention, a fluid bearing comprises at least one main load-bearing pad associated with at least one pilot pad, in which there are means to supply the main pad with fluid at a pressure related to that existing in the pilot pad, in which there is a controlled restrictor between the source and the pilot pad, and in which the resistance to flow offered by the pilot clearance is essentially of "orifice" or like type so that it is substantially independent of the viscosity of the fluid passing through it.
The controlled restrictor may be a constant one, so that the bearing clearance will vary in response to changes in bearing load, although by good design such variations may be minimised.
Alternatively, the controlled restrictor may be of the kind that automatically opens or closes in response to the clearance at the pilot pad respectively closing or opening, whereby controlling the flow of fluid to the main pad so as to tend to stabilize the bearing clearance against changes in bearing load. The controlled restrictor may, for instance, be of the diaphragm-controlled kind described in UK Patent No. 1027395.
The bearing may comprise more than one main pad, mounted in one member of the bearing so as to confront the other bearing member in opposed directions and operating so as to stabilize the second member against movement in either direction along a given axis. In this case the pilot pads may be associated with only one main bearing pad, the pressure in the other main pad or pads being a function of the supply pressure and of the pressure in the first main pad.
The invention is defined by the claims and will now be described by way of example, with reference to the further accompanying drawings in which: Figure 2 is a diagrammatic section through a flat bearing; Figure 3 is a detail from Figure 2 on an enlarged scale, and Figure 4 is a diagrammatic radial section through a two-pad journal bearing.
The bearing of Figure 2 comprises a stationary member 1 and a second member 2 movable in the direction of arrow 3. A main load-bearing pad 4 and two associated pilot pads 5 are mounted in member 1, and a pressure fluid source 6 is connected to pilot pads 5 by way of a fixed restrictor 7 of viscous type. Source 6 is also connected by fluid line 8 to one end of an equalising valve 9, the other end of which is connected to fluid line 10 and so to fluid at the pressure existing within pilot pads 5. Valve 9 is of known type comprising a piston 11 carrying a flexible "O"-ring seal 12 which maintains sealing contact against the wall of the housing while piston 11 makes limited axial movement Piston 11 also carries a shaft 13 and a valve member 14.
As piston 11 moves, the gap varies between member 14 and a fixed ring 15. Fluid entering valve 9 by way of line 8 undergoes a pressure drop passing through the gap, and piston 11 seeks a position in which that pressure drop is such that the piston is at rest, with equal pressure to either side of it. Fluid entering the main pad 4 from valve 9 by way of outlet 1 6 and line 17 therefore tends to be at the same pressure as the fluid within pilot pads 5.
One of pilot pads 5 is shown on an eniarged scale in Figure 3. Fluid enters the pad from the source 6 and resistor 7 by way of inlet 20, and a raised land 21 forms a continuous border around the mouth of the pad. The clearance between the tip of this land and the confronting face of member 2 represents the effective clearance h of the bearing, and is of the same dimension as the clearance between member 2 and the land 22 of the associated main pad 4 although it is also possible for the clearances at the main and associated pilot pads to be different and the invention applies equally to such bearings. While land 22, for practical reasons including bearing stiffness, is of considerable width when measured in the plane of relative movement of members 1 and 2, it is particularly to be noted that land 21 is as narrow as is practically possible. In Figure 3 the land is in fact shown as tapering to a knife edge.
The restriction that fluid has to pass from pilot pads 5 through the clearance between lands 21 and member 2 is therefore of sharp-edged or "orifice" type, so that by known theory its resistance is determined by the equation:-
where A is the product of h and the peripheral length of the pilot pad, R is the pad resistance, Q is the flow through the pad, Cd is a constant and is known as the co-efficient of discharge, and p is the pad recess pressure. The resistance R is thus independent of the viscosity of the fluid. It follows that if the viscosity of the bearing fluid in the vicinity of pilot pads 5 varies because of heat generated by shearing friction due to the high relative velocity of members 1 and 2, the pressure within pads 5 will not change and therefore the equal pressure within'main load-carrying pad 4 will not change either.
Where restrictor 7 is a fixed, viscous restrictor as already described, the bearing of Figures 2 and 3 will be substantially insensitive to changes in viscosity of the bearing fluid. As to stability against variation of bearing load, the combination of at least one pilot pad with the main pad has several advantages compared with simply connecting main pad 4 to source 6 by way of resistor 7. For instance, the pilot pad can be arranged as in Figure 1 to follow the accurately flat surface 66 of a rail 65 whilst the surface (62, Figure 1) confronting the associated main pad can be of much less accuracy.If a sharp-edged orificetype restrictor 7a were substituted for 7, the potential advantage would be that performance of the bearing would be less subject to changes in ambient temperature, which would affect the bearing fluid temperature and viscosity not just in the pads but elsewhere in the circuit also. As another alternative, viscous restrictor 7 could be replaced by a variable restrictor (shown diagrammatically at 7b) which tends to open or else automatically according as to whether the pressure in pad 5 respectively rises or falls. Item 7b could, for instance, be a diaphragm-controlled restrictor of the kind described in UK Patent No.
1027395 but could also be an automaticallyoperative valve of viscous, sharp edged or other more conventional type. With such a restrictor the bearing could be substantially stable not only against temperature variations of the fluid in the vicinity of pads 4 and 5, but also against a change in bearing load. Any such change would result in an alteration of pressure at pads 4 and 5, tending to maintain clearance h constant despite the change.
In Figure 4, parts similar to those already described with reference to Figures 2 and 3 are similarly numbered. Figure 4 however shows a journal bearing in which a horizontal, fastspinning shaft 30 is held against either upwards or downwards vertical movement by main pad 4 (with associated pilot pads 5), and an associated and oppositely-directed main pad 31. Constant clearance between shaft 30 and the lands of pads 4, 31 is maintained by having an automatically variable valve 7b, with constructional options and mode of operation as already described, in the line between source 6 and pilot pads 5. In addition to equalising valve 9, which works as before, the circuit now includes an adding valve 32 of known type, comprising two pistons 33, 34 joined by a shaft 35.Piston 34 also acts as a valve member relative to an orifice plate 36, and movement of the piston assembly 33-35 varies the gap between the valve member and the plate and so imposes a variable pressure drop upon fluid passing through that gap. It will readily be seen that the connections of valve 32 to source 6, pilot pads 5 and main pad 31 are such that piston assembly 33-35-seeks a position in which the pressure at pad 31 equals the difference between the pressure at pilot pads 5 (and therefore at main pad 4 also) and source pressure. For reasons already explained, this difference should be substantially independent of the temperature and viscosity of the bearing fluid and will act so as to oppose any tendency for the clearance between shaft 30 and the lands of pad 4, 31 to vary in response to changes of the resultant vertical force P exerted by the shaft. Performance may be further enhanced by including a constant restrictor R,, of viscous or orifice or other suitable type, in the circuit as indicated by broken lines.

Claims (7)

Claims
1. A fluid-bearing comprising at least one main load-bearing pad (4) associated with at least one pilot pad (5), in which there are means (6, 9, 10, 1 7) to supply at least one main pad with fluid at a pressure related to that existing in an associated pilot pad, and in which there is a control restrictor (7) between the source and that pilot pad, characterised in that the resistance to flow offered by the clearance (5, 21) at a pilot pad is essentially of "orifice" or like type so that it is substantially independent of the viscosity of the fluid passing through it.
2. A fluid bearing according to Claim 1, characterised in that the controlled restrictor (7, 7a) is constant.
3. A fluid bearing according to Claim 1, characterised in that the controlled restrictor (7b, Figures 3, 4) is of the kind that automatically opens or closes in response to the clearance at the associated pilot pad respectively closing or opening, whereby controlling the flow of fluid to the associated pad so as to tend to stabilize the bearing clearance against changes in bearing load.
4. A fluid bearing according to Claim 3 characterised in that the controlled restrictor is of diaphragm-controlled type.
5. A fluid bearing according to Claim 1 characterised in that it comprises more than one main pad (4, 31, Figure 4) mounted in one member of the bearing so as to confront the other bearing member in opposed directions and operating so as to stabilize the second member against movement in either direction along a given axis.
6. A fluid bearing according to Claim 5 characterised in that the pilot pads (5) are associated with only one such main bearing pad (4), the pressure in the other main pad (31) or pads being a function of the pressure of the supply (6) and of the pressure in the first main pad (4).
7. A fluid bearing according to Claim 1, substantially as described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
GB08315992A 1982-06-11 1983-06-10 Fluid bearings Expired GB2121892B (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB08315992A GB2121892B (en) 1982-06-11 1983-06-10 Fluid bearings

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB8217026 1982-06-11
GB08315992A GB2121892B (en) 1982-06-11 1983-06-10 Fluid bearings

Publications (3)

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GB8315992D0 GB8315992D0 (en) 1983-07-13
GB2121892A true GB2121892A (en) 1984-01-04
GB2121892B GB2121892B (en) 1987-01-07

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Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5174039A (en) * 1990-08-17 1992-12-29 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Displacement-measuring apparatus, and static-pressure bearing device for use in the displacement-measuring apparatus
US5769545A (en) * 1996-12-04 1998-06-23 Bently Nevada Corporation Hydrostatic bearing for supporting rotating equipment, a fluid handling system associated therewith, a control system therefore, method and apparatus
US6142672A (en) * 1998-06-22 2000-11-07 Bently Nevada Corporation Fluid flow and control system for a hydrostatic bearing supporting rotating equipment: method and apparatus

Families Citing this family (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JP6127486B2 (en) * 2012-12-10 2017-05-17 株式会社ジェイテクト Hydrostatic fluid guide device

Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1088321A (en) * 1963-11-29 1967-10-25 Sheffield Corp Fluid bearing

Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1088321A (en) * 1963-11-29 1967-10-25 Sheffield Corp Fluid bearing

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5174039A (en) * 1990-08-17 1992-12-29 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Displacement-measuring apparatus, and static-pressure bearing device for use in the displacement-measuring apparatus
US5769545A (en) * 1996-12-04 1998-06-23 Bently Nevada Corporation Hydrostatic bearing for supporting rotating equipment, a fluid handling system associated therewith, a control system therefore, method and apparatus
US6142672A (en) * 1998-06-22 2000-11-07 Bently Nevada Corporation Fluid flow and control system for a hydrostatic bearing supporting rotating equipment: method and apparatus

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB2121892B (en) 1987-01-07
GB8315992D0 (en) 1983-07-13

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Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
732 Registration of transactions, instruments or events in the register (sect. 32/1977)
PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 19940610