US20070201995A1 - Bearing protection for inverter-driven motor - Google Patents

Bearing protection for inverter-driven motor Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20070201995A1
US20070201995A1 US11/361,329 US36132906A US2007201995A1 US 20070201995 A1 US20070201995 A1 US 20070201995A1 US 36132906 A US36132906 A US 36132906A US 2007201995 A1 US2007201995 A1 US 2007201995A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
shaft
housing
bearing
compressor
brush
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
Application number
US11/361,329
Inventor
Michael Harstad
Joel Duga
Gregory Fiegen
Brian Sullivan
James Kwiatkowski
Peter Kotlarek
Richard Heiden
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.)
Trane International Inc
Original Assignee
American Standard International Inc
Priority date (The priority date 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 date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by American Standard International Inc filed Critical American Standard International Inc
Priority to US11/361,329 priority Critical patent/US20070201995A1/en
Assigned to AMERICAN STANDARD INTERNATIONAL INC. reassignment AMERICAN STANDARD INTERNATIONAL INC. ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: DUGA, JOEL S., FIEGEN, GREGORY T., HARSTAD, MICHAEL R., KWIATKOWSKI, JAMES A., SULLIVAN, BRIAN T.
Publication of US20070201995A1 publication Critical patent/US20070201995A1/en
Assigned to TRANE INTERNATIONAL INC. reassignment TRANE INTERNATIONAL INC. CHANGE OF NAME (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: AMERICAN STANDARD INTERNATIONAL INC.
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F04POSITIVE - DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS
    • F04DNON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT PUMPS
    • F04D29/00Details, component parts, or accessories
    • F04D29/05Shafts or bearings, or assemblies thereof, specially adapted for elastic fluid pumps
    • F04D29/056Bearings
    • F04D29/0566Ceramic bearing designs
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F04POSITIVE - DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS
    • F04DNON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT PUMPS
    • F04D29/00Details, component parts, or accessories
    • F04D29/02Selection of particular materials
    • F04D29/023Selection of particular materials especially adapted for elastic fluid pumps
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F04POSITIVE - DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS
    • F04DNON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT PUMPS
    • F04D29/00Details, component parts, or accessories
    • F04D29/05Shafts or bearings, or assemblies thereof, specially adapted for elastic fluid pumps
    • F04D29/056Bearings
    • F04D29/059Roller bearings
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F05INDEXING SCHEMES RELATING TO ENGINES OR PUMPS IN VARIOUS SUBCLASSES OF CLASSES F01-F04
    • F05DINDEXING SCHEME FOR ASPECTS RELATING TO NON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT MACHINES OR ENGINES, GAS-TURBINES OR JET-PROPULSION PLANTS
    • F05D2300/00Materials; Properties thereof
    • F05D2300/20Oxide or non-oxide ceramics
    • F05D2300/21Oxide ceramics
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F05INDEXING SCHEMES RELATING TO ENGINES OR PUMPS IN VARIOUS SUBCLASSES OF CLASSES F01-F04
    • F05DINDEXING SCHEME FOR ASPECTS RELATING TO NON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT MACHINES OR ENGINES, GAS-TURBINES OR JET-PROPULSION PLANTS
    • F05D2300/00Materials; Properties thereof
    • F05D2300/20Oxide or non-oxide ceramics
    • F05D2300/21Oxide ceramics
    • F05D2300/2112Aluminium oxides
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F05INDEXING SCHEMES RELATING TO ENGINES OR PUMPS IN VARIOUS SUBCLASSES OF CLASSES F01-F04
    • F05DINDEXING SCHEME FOR ASPECTS RELATING TO NON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT MACHINES OR ENGINES, GAS-TURBINES OR JET-PROPULSION PLANTS
    • F05D2300/00Materials; Properties thereof
    • F05D2300/50Intrinsic material properties or characteristics
    • F05D2300/506Hardness
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F05INDEXING SCHEMES RELATING TO ENGINES OR PUMPS IN VARIOUS SUBCLASSES OF CLASSES F01-F04
    • F05DINDEXING SCHEME FOR ASPECTS RELATING TO NON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT MACHINES OR ENGINES, GAS-TURBINES OR JET-PROPULSION PLANTS
    • F05D2300/00Materials; Properties thereof
    • F05D2300/60Properties or characteristics given to material by treatment or manufacturing
    • F05D2300/611Coating
    • 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
    • F16C19/00Bearings with rolling contact, for exclusively rotary movement
    • F16C19/52Bearings with rolling contact, for exclusively rotary movement with devices affected by abnormal or undesired conditions

Definitions

  • the subject invention generally pertains to a hermetically sealed compressor with an inverter-driven motor and more specifically to a means for protecting the motor's bearings against certain induced voltages and currents.
  • shaft induced current driven by shaft induced voltage
  • the energy generated by shaft induced current causes deterioration of the lubricant, which can ultimately damage the bearings. If the induced voltage is sufficiently high, electrical arching across the bearing can erode the bearing's surfaces directly.
  • Shaft induced voltage can come from different sources. It can be electrostatically generated within the motor, or the voltage can arise from imbalanced ampere-turns in the stator, or from stator or rotor asymmetries.
  • the induced voltage is known as common mode voltage, which can be caused by the switching frequency of the inverter's SCRs (silicone controlled rectifiers), BJTs (bipolar junction transistors), GTOs (gate turn off tyristors), or, more recently, IGBTs (insulate gate bipolar transistors). Additional background on shaft induced voltage and related information can be found in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,313,129; 5,914,547; 6,030,128; 5,735,615; 5,139,425; 5,059,041; 4,109,978; 4,378,138; 4,220,879 and 6,555,943.
  • Another object of some embodiments is support a motor/compressor shaft with two different style bearings, a rolling element bearing and a journal bearing, where only the rolling element bearing needs a shaft-grounding device, which is generally accessible for servicing.
  • Another object of some embodiments is to use both shaft-grounding and electrical insulation to protect a bearing against induced common mode voltage originating from an inverter's IGBTs.
  • Another object of some embodiments is to provide a way of servicing a shaft-grounding device without adversely affecting the refrigerant charge of a hermetically sealed compressor system.
  • Another object of some embodiments is to contact the end of a shaft with a shaft-grounding device that applies an ideal magnitude of contact force.
  • Another object of some embodiments is to electrically insulate a bearing from an adjacent supporting member by coating the member with a ceramic layer that is harder than the outer periphery of the bearing and harder than the material of the supporting member, wherein the hardness of the coating is by virtue of the ceramic layer having certain proportions of titanium dioxide and aluminum oxide.
  • Another object of some embodiments is to provide an outboard with an adjacent labyrinth seal that inhibits excessive gas flow when the shaft-grounding device is momentarily removed.
  • Another object of some embodiments is to screw a shaft-grounding device into a threaded hole that is sufficiently small to minimize any gas exchange between the compressor and the atmosphere when the shaft-grounding device is temporarily removed.
  • Another object of some embodiments is to ground the end of a shaft using a stranded copper wire brush rather than using a carbon block, as the wire brush is more effective at conducting induced common mode current.
  • Another object of some embodiments is to align a shaft-grounding device with a rotational axis of a shaft to minimize wear between the shaft and the shaft-grounding device.
  • Another object of some embodiments is to provide the brush of a shaft-grounding device with some axial movement to ensure contact between the brush and the end of the shaft even after the brush experiences some wear.
  • Another object of some embodiments is to restrict relative rotation between a brush and an outer housing of a shaft-grounding device to prevent the shaft from rotating the brush and creating wear within the shaft-grounding device.
  • Another object of some embodiments is to use a stranded grounding wire to effectively convey high frequency common mode current from a shaft.
  • a compressor system that employs both a serviceable shaft-grounding device and a ceramic coating to protect a rolling element bearing that could otherwise be damaged by high frequency induced common mode voltage and current originating from an inverter that includes a plurality of IGBTs.
  • the present invention provides a compressor system powered by an AC voltage supply for compressing a refrigerant.
  • the system includes a compressor housing defining a suction inlet and a discharge outlet; a motor housing extending from the compressor housing; a bearing bracket extending from the motor housing; a bearing having an outer periphery supported by the bearing bracket; and a shaft supported by the bearing and being rotatable about a rotational axis.
  • the shaft includes an outboard end and an inboard end.
  • the bearing is closer to the outboard end than to the inboard end.
  • the system also includes a compressor element driven by the shaft and rotatable relative to the compressor housing to force the refrigerant from the suction inlet to the discharge outlet.
  • the compressor element is closer to the inboard end than to the outboard end.
  • the system includes a minimally conductive coating disposed on the bearing bracket. The coating is between the bearing bracket and the bearing to provide electrical resistance therebetween, and the coating is harder than the bearing bracket and the outer periphery
  • the present invention also provides a compressor system powered by an AC voltage supply for compressing a refrigerant.
  • the system includes a compressor housing defining a suction inlet and a discharge outlet; a motor housing attached to the compressor housing; a bearing bracket attached to the motor housing; a bearing supported by the bearing bracket; a shaft supported by the bearing and being rotatable about a rotational axis.
  • the shaft includes an outboard end and an inboard end.
  • the bearing is closer to the outboard end than to the inboard end.
  • the system also includes a compressor element driven by the shaft and being rotatable to force the refrigerant from the suction inlet to the discharge outlet.
  • the compressor element is closer to the inboard end than to the outboard end.
  • the system further includes an endplate spaced apart from the shaft, spaced apart from the bearing, and electrically coupled to the compressor housing, a ceramic coating disposed on the bearing bracket and a shaft grounding device.
  • the ceramic coating is between the bearing bracket and the bearing.
  • the shaft-grounding device includes a wire brush, a brush housing, and a spring.
  • the brush housing is attached to the endplate.
  • the wire brush is movable along a longitudinal centerline of the brush housing.
  • the spring urges the wire brush toward the outboard end of the shaft to create electrical continuity between the wire brush and the outboard end of the shaft.
  • the wire brush is electrically coupled to the brush housing.
  • the brush housing is electrically coupled to the endplate, thereby establishing electrical continuity between the compressor housing and the outboard end of the shaft while the ceramic coating provides electrical resistance directly between the bearing and the bearing bracket.
  • the present invention further provides a compressor system powered by an AC voltage supply for compressing a refrigerant.
  • the system includes a compressor housing defining a suction inlet and a discharge outlet; a motor housing adjacent to the compressor housing; a bearing supported within the motor housing; and a shaft supported by the bearing and being rotatable about a rotational axis.
  • the shaft includes an outboard end and an inboard end.
  • the bearing is closer to the outboard end than to the inboard end.
  • the system also includes a compressor element driven by the shaft and being rotatable to force the refrigerant from the suction inlet to the discharge outlet and a shaft-grounding device.
  • the compressor element is closer to the inboard end than to the outboard end.
  • the shaft grounding device includes a wire brush, a brush housing, a spring, and a grounding wire.
  • the brush housing is electrically coupled to the motor housing.
  • the grounding wire electrically couples the wire brush to the brush housing.
  • the wire brush is movable along a substantially linear path.
  • the spring is contained within the brush housing and urges the wire brush toward the outboard end of the shaft to create electrical continuity between the wire brush and the outboard end of the shaft.
  • the present invention additionally provides a compressor system.
  • the system includes a motor housing having an interior containing a refrigerant and an exterior exposed to a surrounding atmosphere; a compressor housing hermetically sealed to the motor housing; an endplate extending from the motor housing; a refrigerant disposed within the compressor housing and the motor housing; a rolling element bearing inside the motor housing; a journal bearing inside at least one of the motor housing and the compressor housing; and a shaft having an inboard end, an outboard end, and an intermediate section therebetween.
  • the rolling element bearing supports the outboard end, and the journal bearing supports the intermediate section.
  • the system also includes a compressor element mounted to the inboard end of the shaft and being rotatable for compressing the refrigerant; and a shaft-grounding device extending into the opening of the endplate such that the shaft-grounding device is in electrical contact with the outboard end of the shaft and is exposed to the refrigerant and the surrounding atmosphere.
  • the present invention yet further provides a method of servicing a hermetically sealed compressor system that includes a motor housing exposed to a surrounding atmosphere, a shaft rotatable within the motor housing, a refrigerant disposed within the motor housing, and a shaft-grounding device that when properly installed is exposed to the refrigerant and the surrounding atmosphere and completes an electrical path between the shaft and the motor housing.
  • the method includes the steps of adjusting the temperature of the refrigerant until the refrigerant in the motor housing is at a pressure substantially equal to that of the surrounding atmosphere; and removing the shaft-grounding device from within the motor housing while the pressure of the refrigerant is substantially equal to that of the surrounding atmosphere, thereby providing an opportunity to inspect the shaft-grounding device without having to evacuate the refrigerant from within the motor housing.
  • FIG. 1 is a cross-sectional view of a compressor system connected to a schematically illustrated refrigerant circuit and inverter.
  • FIG. 2 is cross-sectional view of the compressor system of FIG. 1 showing one end of the compressor's motor.
  • FIG. 3 is a cross-sectional view of a shaft-grounding device attached to an endplate and engaging a shaft.
  • FIG. 4 is a cross-sectional view similar to FIG. 3 but showing the shaft-grounding device separated from the endplate and the shaft.
  • FIG. 5 is a cross-sectional view similar to FIG. 1 but showing how the shaft-grounding device can be temporarily removed for servicing.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates a hermetically sealed compressor system 10 comprising a compressor 12 and a motor 14 .
  • Compressor system 10 also includes a novel shaft-grounding device 16 for electrically grounding a shaft 18 and an electrically insulating material, such as a minimally conductive coating 20 ( FIG. 2 ), for electrically isolating a conductive bearing 22 that supports shaft 18 .
  • An inverter 24 controls the speed of motor 12 , which in turn drives compressor 14 .
  • hermetically sealed refers to a non-sliding, substantially airtight transition 26 between a motor housing 28 of motor 12 and a compressor housing 30 of compressor 14 such that transition 26 does not provide a significant leak path for gas or refrigerant within system 10 to escape to an atmosphere 32 surrounding housings 28 and 30 .
  • Hermetic sealing of system 10 can be accomplished by a solid, airtight joint between housings 28 and 30 , as shown, or by making housings 28 and 30 as a unitary piece.
  • compressor system 10 contains a refrigerant that compressor 14 forces from a suction inlet 34 to a discharge outlet 36 , both of which are defined by compressor housing 30 .
  • Compressor system 10 can be used for powering a refrigerant circuit 38 comprising the basic components of a condenser 40 , an expansion device 42 , and an evaporator 44 .
  • condenser 40 is water-cooled and evaporator 44 absorbs heat from a circulating water system 46 .
  • Pumps 48 and 50 can be used for controlling the flow rate of the water through condenser 40 and evaporator 44 .
  • the structure and function of refrigerant circuit 38 and its many variations are well known to those of ordinary skill in the art.
  • compressor element 54 refers to any component that can be driven to compress a gas.
  • compressor element 54 include, but are not limited to, a centrifugal impeller, an axial impeller, a multi-lobed screw compressor rotor, an involute scroll compressor rotor, a reciprocating piston, and the like.
  • a single shaft 18 is shown supporting both rotor 52 and impeller 54 , it is well within the scope of the invention to have rotor 52 and impeller 54 supported by two separate shafts that are coupled to each other by way of gears or some other appropriate coupling.
  • bearing 22 supports an outboard end 56 of shaft 18 , and another bearing 58 closer to an inboard end 60 supports shaft 18 at an intermediate section 62 of shaft 18 such that shaft 18 supports compressor element 54 in a cantilevered manner.
  • Bearing 22 is a rolling element duplex bearing for providing shaft 18 with both axial and radial support, and bearing 58 is preferably a journal bearing for pure radial support of the shaft intermediate section 62 .
  • Bearings 22 , 58 are lubricated with a thin film of refrigerant/lubricant mixture.
  • Rotor 52 is situated between bearings 22 and 58 , and a stator 64 supported by motor housing 28 encircles the rotor.
  • motor housing 28 is shown supporting bearing 22 by way of a bearing bracket 66 , a seal ring 68 and a clamp ring 70 .
  • Bearing bracket 66 is bolted to a cylindrical shell 72 of housing 28 , and an inner bore of bracket 66 provides bearing 22 with radial support.
  • the outer races of bearing 22 are captured between clamp ring 70 and seal ring 68 , which are both bolted to bearing bracket 66 .
  • a shoulder 74 and an internally threaded ring 76 axially clamp the inner races of bearing 22 to shaft 18 .
  • seal ring 68 includes a labyrinth seal 78 that is spaced just a slight radial distance away from shaft 18 .
  • inverter 24 To drive compressor system 10 at various speeds, electrical cables 80 connect inverter 24 to the windings of stator 64 (stator 64 includes its windings and its core).
  • stator 64 includes its windings and its core.
  • inverter 24 is a “LiquiFlo 2.0 AC Drive” manufactured by Reliance Electric, which is part of Rockwell Automation of Milwaukee, Wis. with further headquarters in Greenville, S.C.
  • Inverter 24 includes a converter section 82 with a plurality of insulate gate bipolar transistors 84 for converting an incoming 3-phase AC supply voltage 86 to a DC voltage 88 , and an inverter section 90 electrically coupled to converter section 82 and comprising a plurality of insulate gate bipolar transistors 92 for converting DC voltage 88 to a variable frequency 3-phase output voltage 94 that cables 80 feed to stator 64 .
  • the plurality of insulate gate bipolar transistors 84 and 92 induce a potentially detrimental common mode current in shaft 18 .
  • the common mode current can exceed one megahertz (e.g., 2-3 MHz range) and has been observed to have a frequency as high as 10 MHz.
  • a non-conductive or minimally conductive coating 20 is disposed on several bearing-contact surfaces including a surface 98 of clamp ring 70 , a surface 100 of seal ring 68 , and the inner bore of bearing bracket 66 .
  • Coating 20 is preferably harder and less electrically conductive than the base material to which it is applied and harder and less conductive than an outer periphery 102 of bearing 22 .
  • coating 20 is a ceramic coating but other insulative coatings are contemplated such as silicon oxides or metal oxides.
  • a minimally conductive coating conducts at less than the dielectric strength of the elastohydrodynamic thickness of the film on the bearing. This will vary depending on the refrigerants and lubricants being used in a particular system.
  • coating 20 is a METCO 130 Alumima-Titania Composite Powder (METCO is a registered trademark of Sulzer Metco of Winterthur, Switzerland).
  • the METCO coating is comprised of about 13% titanium dioxide and about 87% aluminum oxide.
  • Coating 20 can be sprayed on selected surfaces of parts 66 , 68 and 70 and subsequently machined or ground to size with a final layer thickness ranging from a few thousandth of an inch to 0.020-inches.
  • the thickness of ceramic coating 20 has been exaggerated in the drawing figures so that the coating is clearly visible. With a hardness of 60 Rc, coating 20 is not readily scratched by bearing 22 or the other components of compressor system 10 during assembly.
  • shaft-grounding device 16 is used for grounding shaft 18 .
  • shaft 18 may include a bolt head 18 ′ or some other suitably conductive member that can be engaged by shaft-grounding device 16 .
  • shaft-grounding device 16 should have a stranded wire brush 104 made of copper and a stranded high-frequency grounding wire 106 that can effectively draw the current away from brush 104 .
  • a spring 108 is needed to urge brush 104 against shaft 18 with an axial force 110 that is neither too great (to avoid excessive wear) or too light (to ensure continuous electrical contact).
  • Force 110 should be 4-20 ounces and preferably 8-14 ounces.
  • shaft-grounding device 16 comprises a brush housing 112 within which a spring-loaded plunger 114 can slide along a generally linear path 116 .
  • Housing 112 can be an electrically conductive tubular body having a longitudinal centerline 118 .
  • Plunger 114 includes a copper tube 120 with one end 122 that crimps the copper strands of brush 104 to grounding wire 106 .
  • a pin 124 fastens tube 120 to a brass sleeve 126 to complete the assembly of plunger 114 .
  • Another pin 128 fixed to housing 112 protrudes into a slot 130 in sleeve 126 to provide an anti-rotation element that not only restricts the rotation of plunger 114 (inhibits shaft 18 from spinning brush 104 ) but also limits the axial extension of plunger 114 relative to housing 112 .
  • a nut 132 with an internal shoulder 134 screws onto to housing 112 to clamp an electrically conductive plug 136 between shoulder 134 and one end 138 of housing 112 .
  • An electrical terminal 140 connects grounding wire 106 to plug 136 .
  • spring 108 When brush housing 112 is screwed into a threaded hole 142 in endplate 144 of motor housing 28 , spring 108 is compressed a certain degree between sleeve 126 and plug 136 . The characteristics of spring 108 and the amount it is compressed determines the force that brush 104 exerts against bolt head 18 ′ or against some other axial surface of shaft 18 . To minimize rubbing between shaft 18 and brush 104 , a rotational axis 146 of shaft 18 , the longitudinal centerline 118 of housing 112 , and the linear path 116 along which brush 104 and plunger 114 can move are generally collinear with each other.
  • shaft-grounding device 16 When properly installed, shaft-grounding device 16 completes an electrical path between shaft 18 and motor housing 28 . More specifically, induced common mode current in shaft 18 can travel in series through shaft 18 , wire brush 104 , grounding wire 106 , terminal 140 , plug 136 , brush housing 112 , endplate 144 , bearing bracket 66 , shell 72 of motor housing 28 , and ground 96 . Other electrical paths are also possible such as, for example, series flow through shaft 18 , brush 104 , tube 120 , sleeve 126 , brush housing 112 , endplate 144 , bearing bracket 66 , compressor shell 72 , and ground 96 .
  • an O-ring 148 between housing 112 and endplate 144 plus another O-ring 150 between plug 136 and housing 112 helps maintain the hermetic integrity of compressor system 10 .
  • the refrigerant in system 10 is R123, which begins boiling at atmospheric pressure (14.7 psig) when its temperature is about 81.7° F. So, if the temperature of the refrigerant in motor housing ooo is adjusted to about 81.7° F., or slightly less, the refrigerant pressure within motor housing 28 will be about the same as the surrounding atmospheric pressure. Under these conditions, shaft-grounding device 16 can be momentarily unscrewed from within hole 142 and inspected without an excessive exchange of gas between system 10 and the surround atmosphere 32 , provided opening 142 is not too large. Preferably, opening 142 should have a cross-sectional area that is less than 4 in 2 .
  • the refrigerant pressure within system 10 can be adjusted to atmospheric pressure by adjusting the temperature of the refrigerant, which can be done in various ways.
  • the water flow rate through evaporator 40 could be adjusted while compressor system 10 is de-energized. It is also conceivable to heat or cool the refrigerant by adjusting the temperature and flow rate of the water flowing through condenser 40 .
  • FIG. 5 illustrates the steps of adjusting the temperature of the refrigerant until the refrigerant in motor housing 28 is at a pressure substantially equal to that of the surrounding atmosphere 32 , and removing shaft-grounding device 16 from within motor housing 28 while the pressure of the refrigerant is substantially equal to that of the surrounding atmosphere, thereby providing an opportunity to inspect shaft-grounding device 16 without having to evacuate the refrigerant from within motor housing 28 .
  • compressor system 10 has only one duplex rolling element bearing 22 that needs protection from induced common mode voltage.
  • the shaft's other bearing 58 which is installed at a less accessible location deep within compressor system 10 , is a journal bearing which is much more tolerant of induced common mode voltage, thus bearing 58 does not need the same protection as bearing 22 .
  • motor housing 28 can be considered to comprise cylindrical shell 72 , bearing bracket 66 and endplate 144 .
  • shaft 18 can be considered to include bolt head 18 ′ and/or other items extending from or attached to shaft 18 .
  • refrigerant circuit 38 is shown comprising a water-cooled condenser and an evaporator providing chilled water, condenser 40 could be air-cooled and the cooling effect of evaporator 4 could be used for absorbing heat from something other than water. Therefore, the scope of the invention is to be determined by reference to the following claims.

Abstract

A refrigerant motor/compressor employs both a serviceable shaft-grounding device and a ceramic coating to protect a rolling element bearing that could otherwise be damaged by high frequency induced common mode voltage and current originating from an inverter that includes a plurality of IGBTs (insulate gate bipolar transistors). The shaft-grounding device includes a stranded copper wire brush that rides against an axial end of the shaft and a high frequency stranded grounding wire that conducts the induced current away from the shaft. The shaft-grounding device is sized and positioned so that it can be momentarily removed for inspection without having to evacuate the refrigerant. The ceramic coating provides an electrical insulating surface on a bearing bracket and other parts that support the bearing. The coating comprises titanium dioxide and aluminum oxide to provide a surface that is sufficiently hard and tough to resist damage during assembly, thereby maintaining the coating's integrity.

Description

    BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • 1. Field of the Invention
  • The subject invention generally pertains to a hermetically sealed compressor with an inverter-driven motor and more specifically to a means for protecting the motor's bearings against certain induced voltages and currents.
  • 2. Description of Related Art
  • For years, it has been known that shaft induced current, driven by shaft induced voltage, can damage motor bearings. In some cases, the energy generated by shaft induced current causes deterioration of the lubricant, which can ultimately damage the bearings. If the induced voltage is sufficiently high, electrical arching across the bearing can erode the bearing's surfaces directly.
  • Shaft induced voltage can come from different sources. It can be electrostatically generated within the motor, or the voltage can arise from imbalanced ampere-turns in the stator, or from stator or rotor asymmetries. In cases where the motor is driven by an inverter or variable speed drive, the induced voltage is known as common mode voltage, which can be caused by the switching frequency of the inverter's SCRs (silicone controlled rectifiers), BJTs (bipolar junction transistors), GTOs (gate turn off tyristors), or, more recently, IGBTs (insulate gate bipolar transistors). Additional background on shaft induced voltage and related information can be found in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,313,129; 5,914,547; 6,030,128; 5,735,615; 5,139,425; 5,059,041; 4,109,978; 4,378,138; 4,220,879 and 6,555,943.
  • Although electrically grounding the shaft or electrically isolating the bearing can reduce the effects of shaft induced voltage, such measures are usually not necessary due to improvements in the design and manufacture of modem day motors and their variable speed drives. More recently, however, the SCRs, BJTs and GTOs of inverters have been replaced by much faster IGBTs. While SCR's, BJTs and GTOs operate at relatively low frequencies, IGBTs operate at switching frequencies of 2-4 kHz and higher. At these higher switching frequencies, IGBT's appear to generate common mode current in the range of 2 to 10 MHz, which can be very difficult to limit to a conductive path that bypasses the bearing.
  • The increasing popularity of IGBTs for variable speed drives has not only resurrected the problem of induced common mode voltage, it has raised the problem to a new level where conventional methods of correction no longer work. Consequently, a need exists for a way to protect the bearings of a motor driven by an inverter with IGBTs. A better method is particularly needed for hermetically sealed motors whose bearings are relatively inaccessible for repair.
  • SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • It is an object of the invention to help prevent certain induced currents from damaging a rolling element bearing of a refrigerant compressor system driven by an inverter.
  • Another object of some embodiments is support a motor/compressor shaft with two different style bearings, a rolling element bearing and a journal bearing, where only the rolling element bearing needs a shaft-grounding device, which is generally accessible for servicing.
  • Another object of some embodiments is to use both shaft-grounding and electrical insulation to protect a bearing against induced common mode voltage originating from an inverter's IGBTs.
  • Another object of some embodiments is to provide a way of servicing a shaft-grounding device without adversely affecting the refrigerant charge of a hermetically sealed compressor system.
  • Another object of some embodiments is to contact the end of a shaft with a shaft-grounding device that applies an ideal magnitude of contact force.
  • Another object of some embodiments is to electrically insulate a bearing from an adjacent supporting member by coating the member with a ceramic layer that is harder than the outer periphery of the bearing and harder than the material of the supporting member, wherein the hardness of the coating is by virtue of the ceramic layer having certain proportions of titanium dioxide and aluminum oxide.
  • Another object of some embodiments is to provide an outboard with an adjacent labyrinth seal that inhibits excessive gas flow when the shaft-grounding device is momentarily removed.
  • Another object of some embodiments is to screw a shaft-grounding device into a threaded hole that is sufficiently small to minimize any gas exchange between the compressor and the atmosphere when the shaft-grounding device is temporarily removed.
  • Another object of some embodiments is to ground the end of a shaft using a stranded copper wire brush rather than using a carbon block, as the wire brush is more effective at conducting induced common mode current.
  • Another object of some embodiments is to align a shaft-grounding device with a rotational axis of a shaft to minimize wear between the shaft and the shaft-grounding device.
  • Another object of some embodiments is to provide the brush of a shaft-grounding device with some axial movement to ensure contact between the brush and the end of the shaft even after the brush experiences some wear.
  • Another object of some embodiments is to restrict relative rotation between a brush and an outer housing of a shaft-grounding device to prevent the shaft from rotating the brush and creating wear within the shaft-grounding device.
  • Another object of some embodiments is to use a stranded grounding wire to effectively convey high frequency common mode current from a shaft.
  • One or more of these and/or other objects of the invention are provided by a compressor system that employs both a serviceable shaft-grounding device and a ceramic coating to protect a rolling element bearing that could otherwise be damaged by high frequency induced common mode voltage and current originating from an inverter that includes a plurality of IGBTs.
  • The present invention provides a compressor system powered by an AC voltage supply for compressing a refrigerant. The system includes a compressor housing defining a suction inlet and a discharge outlet; a motor housing extending from the compressor housing; a bearing bracket extending from the motor housing; a bearing having an outer periphery supported by the bearing bracket; and a shaft supported by the bearing and being rotatable about a rotational axis. The shaft includes an outboard end and an inboard end. The bearing is closer to the outboard end than to the inboard end. The system also includes a compressor element driven by the shaft and rotatable relative to the compressor housing to force the refrigerant from the suction inlet to the discharge outlet. The compressor element is closer to the inboard end than to the outboard end. The system includes a minimally conductive coating disposed on the bearing bracket. The coating is between the bearing bracket and the bearing to provide electrical resistance therebetween, and the coating is harder than the bearing bracket and the outer periphery of the bearing.
  • The present invention also provides a compressor system powered by an AC voltage supply for compressing a refrigerant. The system includes a compressor housing defining a suction inlet and a discharge outlet; a motor housing attached to the compressor housing; a bearing bracket attached to the motor housing; a bearing supported by the bearing bracket; a shaft supported by the bearing and being rotatable about a rotational axis. The shaft includes an outboard end and an inboard end. The bearing is closer to the outboard end than to the inboard end. The system also includes a compressor element driven by the shaft and being rotatable to force the refrigerant from the suction inlet to the discharge outlet. The compressor element is closer to the inboard end than to the outboard end. The system further includes an endplate spaced apart from the shaft, spaced apart from the bearing, and electrically coupled to the compressor housing, a ceramic coating disposed on the bearing bracket and a shaft grounding device. The ceramic coating is between the bearing bracket and the bearing. The shaft-grounding device includes a wire brush, a brush housing, and a spring. The brush housing is attached to the endplate. The wire brush is movable along a longitudinal centerline of the brush housing. The spring urges the wire brush toward the outboard end of the shaft to create electrical continuity between the wire brush and the outboard end of the shaft. The wire brush is electrically coupled to the brush housing. The brush housing is electrically coupled to the endplate, thereby establishing electrical continuity between the compressor housing and the outboard end of the shaft while the ceramic coating provides electrical resistance directly between the bearing and the bearing bracket.
  • The present invention further provides a compressor system powered by an AC voltage supply for compressing a refrigerant. The system includes a compressor housing defining a suction inlet and a discharge outlet; a motor housing adjacent to the compressor housing; a bearing supported within the motor housing; and a shaft supported by the bearing and being rotatable about a rotational axis. The shaft includes an outboard end and an inboard end. The bearing is closer to the outboard end than to the inboard end. The system also includes a compressor element driven by the shaft and being rotatable to force the refrigerant from the suction inlet to the discharge outlet and a shaft-grounding device. The compressor element is closer to the inboard end than to the outboard end. The shaft grounding device includes a wire brush, a brush housing, a spring, and a grounding wire. The brush housing is electrically coupled to the motor housing. The grounding wire electrically couples the wire brush to the brush housing. The wire brush is movable along a substantially linear path. The spring is contained within the brush housing and urges the wire brush toward the outboard end of the shaft to create electrical continuity between the wire brush and the outboard end of the shaft.
  • The present invention additionally provides a compressor system. The system includes a motor housing having an interior containing a refrigerant and an exterior exposed to a surrounding atmosphere; a compressor housing hermetically sealed to the motor housing; an endplate extending from the motor housing; a refrigerant disposed within the compressor housing and the motor housing; a rolling element bearing inside the motor housing; a journal bearing inside at least one of the motor housing and the compressor housing; and a shaft having an inboard end, an outboard end, and an intermediate section therebetween. The rolling element bearing supports the outboard end, and the journal bearing supports the intermediate section. The system also includes a compressor element mounted to the inboard end of the shaft and being rotatable for compressing the refrigerant; and a shaft-grounding device extending into the opening of the endplate such that the shaft-grounding device is in electrical contact with the outboard end of the shaft and is exposed to the refrigerant and the surrounding atmosphere.
  • The present invention yet further provides a method of servicing a hermetically sealed compressor system that includes a motor housing exposed to a surrounding atmosphere, a shaft rotatable within the motor housing, a refrigerant disposed within the motor housing, and a shaft-grounding device that when properly installed is exposed to the refrigerant and the surrounding atmosphere and completes an electrical path between the shaft and the motor housing. The method includes the steps of adjusting the temperature of the refrigerant until the refrigerant in the motor housing is at a pressure substantially equal to that of the surrounding atmosphere; and removing the shaft-grounding device from within the motor housing while the pressure of the refrigerant is substantially equal to that of the surrounding atmosphere, thereby providing an opportunity to inspect the shaft-grounding device without having to evacuate the refrigerant from within the motor housing.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • FIG. 1 is a cross-sectional view of a compressor system connected to a schematically illustrated refrigerant circuit and inverter.
  • FIG. 2 is cross-sectional view of the compressor system of FIG. 1 showing one end of the compressor's motor.
  • FIG. 3 is a cross-sectional view of a shaft-grounding device attached to an endplate and engaging a shaft.
  • FIG. 4 is a cross-sectional view similar to FIG. 3 but showing the shaft-grounding device separated from the endplate and the shaft.
  • FIG. 5 is a cross-sectional view similar to FIG. 1 but showing how the shaft-grounding device can be temporarily removed for servicing.
  • DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
  • FIG. 1 illustrates a hermetically sealed compressor system 10 comprising a compressor 12 and a motor 14. Compressor system 10 also includes a novel shaft-grounding device 16 for electrically grounding a shaft 18 and an electrically insulating material, such as a minimally conductive coating 20 (FIG. 2), for electrically isolating a conductive bearing 22 that supports shaft 18. An inverter 24 controls the speed of motor 12, which in turn drives compressor 14. The term, “hermetically sealed” refers to a non-sliding, substantially airtight transition 26 between a motor housing 28 of motor 12 and a compressor housing 30 of compressor 14 such that transition 26 does not provide a significant leak path for gas or refrigerant within system 10 to escape to an atmosphere 32 surrounding housings 28 and 30. Hermetic sealing of system 10 can be accomplished by a solid, airtight joint between housings 28 and 30, as shown, or by making housings 28 and 30 as a unitary piece.
  • In a currently preferred embodiment, compressor system 10 contains a refrigerant that compressor 14 forces from a suction inlet 34 to a discharge outlet 36, both of which are defined by compressor housing 30. Compressor system 10 can be used for powering a refrigerant circuit 38 comprising the basic components of a condenser 40, an expansion device 42, and an evaporator 44. In some embodiments of the invention, condenser 40 is water-cooled and evaporator 44 absorbs heat from a circulating water system 46. Pumps 48 and 50 can be used for controlling the flow rate of the water through condenser 40 and evaporator 44. The structure and function of refrigerant circuit 38 and its many variations are well known to those of ordinary skill in the art.
  • Although the actual structure of compressor system 10 may vary, the illustrated embodiment has shaft 18 supporting both a rotor 52 of motor 12 and at least one compressor element 54. The term, “compressor element” refers to any component that can be driven to compress a gas. Examples of compressor element 54 include, but are not limited to, a centrifugal impeller, an axial impeller, a multi-lobed screw compressor rotor, an involute scroll compressor rotor, a reciprocating piston, and the like. Although a single shaft 18 is shown supporting both rotor 52 and impeller 54, it is well within the scope of the invention to have rotor 52 and impeller 54 supported by two separate shafts that are coupled to each other by way of gears or some other appropriate coupling.
  • For this direct drive example, bearing 22 supports an outboard end 56 of shaft 18, and another bearing 58 closer to an inboard end 60 supports shaft 18 at an intermediate section 62 of shaft 18 such that shaft 18 supports compressor element 54 in a cantilevered manner. Bearing 22 is a rolling element duplex bearing for providing shaft 18 with both axial and radial support, and bearing 58 is preferably a journal bearing for pure radial support of the shaft intermediate section 62. Bearings 22, 58 are lubricated with a thin film of refrigerant/lubricant mixture. Rotor 52 is situated between bearings 22 and 58, and a stator 64 supported by motor housing 28 encircles the rotor.
  • Referring further to FIG. 2, motor housing 28 is shown supporting bearing 22 by way of a bearing bracket 66, a seal ring 68 and a clamp ring 70. Bearing bracket 66 is bolted to a cylindrical shell 72 of housing 28, and an inner bore of bracket 66 provides bearing 22 with radial support. In an axial direction, parallel to shaft 18, the outer races of bearing 22 are captured between clamp ring 70 and seal ring 68, which are both bolted to bearing bracket 66. A shoulder 74 and an internally threaded ring 76 axially clamp the inner races of bearing 22 to shaft 18.
  • To help prevent the lubricant for bearing 22 from freely draining into the main chamber of motor housing 28 and eventually becoming lost within refrigerant circuit 38, seal ring 68 includes a labyrinth seal 78 that is spaced just a slight radial distance away from shaft 18.
  • To drive compressor system 10 at various speeds, electrical cables 80 connect inverter 24 to the windings of stator 64 (stator 64 includes its windings and its core). One example of inverter 24 is a “LiquiFlo 2.0 AC Drive” manufactured by Reliance Electric, which is part of Rockwell Automation of Milwaukee, Wis. with further headquarters in Greenville, S.C. Inverter 24 includes a converter section 82 with a plurality of insulate gate bipolar transistors 84 for converting an incoming 3-phase AC supply voltage 86 to a DC voltage 88, and an inverter section 90 electrically coupled to converter section 82 and comprising a plurality of insulate gate bipolar transistors 92 for converting DC voltage 88 to a variable frequency 3-phase output voltage 94 that cables 80 feed to stator 64. In addition to their intended purpose, the plurality of insulate gate bipolar transistors 84 and 92 induce a potentially detrimental common mode current in shaft 18. The common mode current can exceed one megahertz (e.g., 2-3 MHz range) and has been observed to have a frequency as high as 10 MHz.
  • To inhibit bearing 22 from conveying the common mode current to an electrical ground 96, a non-conductive or minimally conductive coating 20 is disposed on several bearing-contact surfaces including a surface 98 of clamp ring 70, a surface 100 of seal ring 68, and the inner bore of bearing bracket 66. Coating 20 is preferably harder and less electrically conductive than the base material to which it is applied and harder and less conductive than an outer periphery 102 of bearing 22. Preferably, coating 20 is a ceramic coating but other insulative coatings are contemplated such as silicon oxides or metal oxides. For purposes of this application, a minimally conductive coating conducts at less than the dielectric strength of the elastohydrodynamic thickness of the film on the bearing. This will vary depending on the refrigerants and lubricants being used in a particular system.
  • In a currently preferred embodiment, coating 20 is a METCO 130 Alumima-Titania Composite Powder (METCO is a registered trademark of Sulzer Metco of Winterthur, Switzerland). The METCO coating is comprised of about 13% titanium dioxide and about 87% aluminum oxide. Coating 20 can be sprayed on selected surfaces of parts 66, 68 and 70 and subsequently machined or ground to size with a final layer thickness ranging from a few thousandth of an inch to 0.020-inches. The thickness of ceramic coating 20 has been exaggerated in the drawing figures so that the coating is clearly visible. With a hardness of 60 Rc, coating 20 is not readily scratched by bearing 22 or the other components of compressor system 10 during assembly.
  • Since coating 20 alone does not adequately solve the problem of induced common mode voltage, shaft-grounding device 16 is used for grounding shaft 18. In some cases, shaft 18 may include a bolt head 18′ or some other suitably conductive member that can be engaged by shaft-grounding device 16.
  • Referring further to FIG. 3, to successfully ground common mode voltage whose frequency is above 2-MHz, it has been found that shaft-grounding device 16 should have a stranded wire brush 104 made of copper and a stranded high-frequency grounding wire 106 that can effectively draw the current away from brush 104. Moreover, a spring 108 is needed to urge brush 104 against shaft 18 with an axial force 110 that is neither too great (to avoid excessive wear) or too light (to ensure continuous electrical contact). Force 110 should be 4-20 ounces and preferably 8-14 ounces.
  • In some embodiments, shaft-grounding device 16 comprises a brush housing 112 within which a spring-loaded plunger 114 can slide along a generally linear path 116. Housing 112 can be an electrically conductive tubular body having a longitudinal centerline 118. Plunger 114 includes a copper tube 120 with one end 122 that crimps the copper strands of brush 104 to grounding wire 106. A pin 124 fastens tube 120 to a brass sleeve 126 to complete the assembly of plunger 114. Another pin 128 fixed to housing 112 protrudes into a slot 130 in sleeve 126 to provide an anti-rotation element that not only restricts the rotation of plunger 114 (inhibits shaft 18 from spinning brush 104) but also limits the axial extension of plunger 114 relative to housing 112. A nut 132 with an internal shoulder 134 screws onto to housing 112 to clamp an electrically conductive plug 136 between shoulder 134 and one end 138 of housing 112. An electrical terminal 140 connects grounding wire 106 to plug 136.
  • When brush housing 112 is screwed into a threaded hole 142 in endplate 144 of motor housing 28, spring 108 is compressed a certain degree between sleeve 126 and plug 136. The characteristics of spring 108 and the amount it is compressed determines the force that brush 104 exerts against bolt head 18′ or against some other axial surface of shaft 18. To minimize rubbing between shaft 18 and brush 104, a rotational axis 146 of shaft 18, the longitudinal centerline 118 of housing 112, and the linear path 116 along which brush 104 and plunger 114 can move are generally collinear with each other.
  • When properly installed, shaft-grounding device 16 completes an electrical path between shaft 18 and motor housing 28. More specifically, induced common mode current in shaft 18 can travel in series through shaft 18, wire brush 104, grounding wire 106, terminal 140, plug 136, brush housing 112, endplate 144, bearing bracket 66, shell 72 of motor housing 28, and ground 96. Other electrical paths are also possible such as, for example, series flow through shaft 18, brush 104, tube 120, sleeve 126, brush housing 112, endplate 144, bearing bracket 66, compressor shell 72, and ground 96.
  • During normal operation, an O-ring 148 between housing 112 and endplate 144 plus another O-ring 150 between plug 136 and housing 112 helps maintain the hermetic integrity of compressor system 10. With certain refrigerants and temperature conditions, however, it may still be possible to inspect, replace, repair or otherwise service shaft-grounding device 16 without losing a significant amount of refrigerant charge or introducing non-condensable air into compressor system 10.
  • In some embodiments, for example, the refrigerant in system 10 is R123, which begins boiling at atmospheric pressure (14.7 psig) when its temperature is about 81.7° F. So, if the temperature of the refrigerant in motor housing ooo is adjusted to about 81.7° F., or slightly less, the refrigerant pressure within motor housing 28 will be about the same as the surrounding atmospheric pressure. Under these conditions, shaft-grounding device 16 can be momentarily unscrewed from within hole 142 and inspected without an excessive exchange of gas between system 10 and the surround atmosphere 32, provided opening 142 is not too large. Preferably, opening 142 should have a cross-sectional area that is less than 4 in2.
  • The refrigerant pressure within system 10 can be adjusted to atmospheric pressure by adjusting the temperature of the refrigerant, which can be done in various ways. The water flow rate through evaporator 40, for instance, could be adjusted while compressor system 10 is de-energized. It is also conceivable to heat or cool the refrigerant by adjusting the temperature and flow rate of the water flowing through condenser 40.
  • FIG. 5 illustrates the steps of adjusting the temperature of the refrigerant until the refrigerant in motor housing 28 is at a pressure substantially equal to that of the surrounding atmosphere 32, and removing shaft-grounding device 16 from within motor housing 28 while the pressure of the refrigerant is substantially equal to that of the surrounding atmosphere, thereby providing an opportunity to inspect shaft-grounding device 16 without having to evacuate the refrigerant from within motor housing 28. This is possible because compressor system 10 has only one duplex rolling element bearing 22 that needs protection from induced common mode voltage. The shaft's other bearing 58, which is installed at a less accessible location deep within compressor system 10, is a journal bearing which is much more tolerant of induced common mode voltage, thus bearing 58 does not need the same protection as bearing 22.
  • Although the invention is described with respect to a preferred embodiment, modifications thereto will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art. In some embodiments, for instance, motor housing 28 can be considered to comprise cylindrical shell 72, bearing bracket 66 and endplate 144. And in some embodiments, shaft 18 can be considered to include bolt head 18′ and/or other items extending from or attached to shaft 18. Although refrigerant circuit 38 is shown comprising a water-cooled condenser and an evaporator providing chilled water, condenser 40 could be air-cooled and the cooling effect of evaporator 4 could be used for absorbing heat from something other than water. Therefore, the scope of the invention is to be determined by reference to the following claims.

Claims (32)

1. A compressor system powered by an AC voltage supply for compressing a refrigerant, comprising:
a compressor housing defining a suction inlet and a discharge outlet;
a motor housing extending from the compressor housing;
a bearing bracket extending from the motor housing;
a bearing having an outer periphery supported by the bearing bracket;
a shaft supported by the bearing and being rotatable about a rotational axis, the shaft includes an outboard end and an inboard end, the bearing is closer to the outboard end than to the inboard end;
a compressor element driven by the shaft and being rotatable relative to the compressor housing to force the refrigerant from the suction inlet to the discharge outlet, the compressor element is closer to the inboard end than to the outboard end; and
a minimally conductive coating disposed on the bearing bracket, the coating is between the bearing bracket and the bearing to provide electrical resistance therebetween, the coating is harder than the bearing bracket and the outer periphery of the bearing.
2. The compressor system of claim 1 wherein the minimally conductive coating is a ceramic coating including titanium dioxide and aluminum oxide.
3. The compressor system of claim 1, further comprising:
a seal ring attached to the bearing bracket, the seal ring includes a labyrinth seal in proximity to the shaft; and
a clamp ring attached to the bearing bracket, wherein the bearing is axially clamped between the seal ring and the clamp ring, and the ceramic coating is further disposed on the seal ring and the clamp ring.
4. The compressor system of claim 3, further comprising:
a rotor carried by the shaft, the rotor is closer to the outboard end than to the inboard end;
a stator disposed within the motor housing and encircling the rotor;
an inverter electrically coupled to the stator for driving the compressor element at various speeds, the inverter comprises a converter section for converting the AC voltage supply to DC voltage, and an inverter section electrically coupled to the converter section for converting the DC voltage to a variable frequency output that goes to the stator, at least one of the converter section and the inverter section includes a plurality of insulate gate bipolar transistors that can induce a common mode current in the shaft, wherein the common mode current at times exceeds one megahertz.
5. The compressor system of claim 4, further comprising:
a shaft-grounding device comprising a wire brush, a brush housing, and a spring, wherein:
a) the brush housing is coupled to the motor housing,
b) the wire brush is movable along a longitudinal centerline of the brush housing,
c) the spring urges the wire brush toward the outboard end of the shaft to create electrical continuity between the wire brush and the outboard end of the shaft,
d) the wire brush is electrically coupled to the brush housing, thereby establishing electrical continuity between the compressor housing and the outboard end of the shaft while the ceramic coating provides electrical resistance directly between the bearing and the bearing bracket.
6. The compressor system of claim 2, further comprising:
a shaft-grounding device comprising a wire brush, a brush housing, and a spring, wherein:
e) the brush housing is coupled to the motor housing,
f) the wire brush is movable along a longitudinal centerline of the brush housing,
g) the spring urges the wire brush toward the outboard end of the shaft to create electrical continuity between the wire brush and the outboard end of the shaft,
h) the wire brush is electrically coupled to the brush housing, thereby establishing electrical continuity between the compressor housing and the outboard end of the shaft while the ceramic coating provides electrical resistance directly between the bearing and the bearing bracket.
7. The compressor system of claim 6, wherein the longitudinal centerline and the rotational axis are substantially collinear.
8. The compressor system of claim 6, wherein the spring urges the wire brush to exert 4 to 20 ounces of force against the outboard end of the shaft.
9. The compressor system of claim 6, wherein the shaft-grounding device further comprises an anti-rotation element disposed within the brush housing, wherein the anti-rotation element limits relative rotational movement between the wire brush and the brush housing.
10. The compressor system of claim 6, wherein the shaft-grounding device further comprises a stranded grounding wire disposed within the brush housing for conveying the common mode current from the wire brush to the brush housing.
11. A compressor system powered by an AC voltage supply for compressing a refrigerant, comprising:
a compressor housing defining a suction inlet and a discharge outlet;
a motor housing attached to the compressor housing;
a bearing bracket attached to the motor housing;
a bearing supported by the bearing bracket;
a shaft supported by the bearing and being rotatable about a rotational axis, the shaft includes an outboard end and an inboard end, the bearing is closer to the outboard end than to the inboard end;
a compressor element driven by the shaft and being rotatable to force the refrigerant from the suction inlet to the discharge outlet, the compressor element is closer to the inboard end than to the outboard end;
an endplate spaced apart from the shaft, spaced apart from the bearing, and electrically coupled to the compressor housing;
a ceramic coating disposed on the bearing bracket, the ceramic coating is between the bearing bracket and the bearing; and
a shaft-grounding device comprising a wire brush, a brush housing, and a spring, wherein:
a) the brush housing is attached to the endplate,
b) the wire brush is movable along a longitudinal centerline of the brush housing,
c) the spring urges the wire brush toward the outboard end of the shaft to create electrical continuity between the wire brush and the outboard end of the shaft,
d) the wire brush is electrically coupled to the brush housing, and
e) the brush housing is electrically coupled to the endplate, thereby establishing electrical continuity between the compressor housing and the outboard end of the shaft while the ceramic coating provides electrical resistance directly between the bearing and the bearing bracket.
12. The compressor system of claim 11, further comprising:
a rotor carried by the shaft, the rotor is closer to the outboard end than to the inboard end;
a stator disposed within the motor housing and encircling the rotor;
an inverter electrically coupled to the stator for driving the compressor element at various speeds, the inverter comprises a converter section for converting the AC voltage supply to DC voltage, and an inverter section electrically coupled to the converter section for converting the DC voltage to a variable frequency output that goes to the stator, both the converter section and the inverter section include a plurality of insulate gate bipolar transistors that can induce a common mode current in the shaft, wherein the common mode current exceeds one megahertz.
13. The compressor system of claim 12, wherein the longitudinal centerline and the rotational axis are substantially collinear.
14. The compressor system of claim 12, wherein the spring urges the wire brush to exert 4 to 20 ounces of force against the outboard end of the shaft.
15. The compressor system of claim 12, wherein the shaft-grounding device further comprises an anti-rotation element disposed within the brush housing, wherein the anti-rotation element limits relative rotational movement between the wire brush and the brush housing.
16. The compressor system of claim 12, wherein the shaft-grounding device further comprises a grounding wire disposed within the brush housing for conveying the common mode current from the wire brush to the brush housing.
17. The compressor system of claim 12, further comprising:
a seal ring attached to the bearing bracket, the seal ring includes a labyrinth seal in proximity to the shaft; and
a clamp ring attached to the bearing bracket, wherein the bearing is axially clamped between the seal ring and the clamp ring, and the ceramic coating is further disposed on the seal ring and the clamp ring.
18. The compressor system of claim 12, wherein the ceramic coating is harder than the bearing bracket.
19. The compressor system of claim 12, wherein the ceramic coating is harder than an outer periphery of the bearing.
20. The compressor system of claim 12, wherein the ceramic coating includes titanium dioxide and aluminum oxide.
21. A compressor system powered by an AC voltage supply for compressing a refrigerant, comprising:
a compressor housing defining a suction inlet and a discharge outlet;
a motor housing adjacent to the compressor housing;
a bearing supported within the motor housing;
a shaft supported by the bearing and being rotatable about a rotational axis, the shaft includes an outboard end and an inboard end, the bearing is closer to the outboard end than to the inboard end;
a compressor element driven by the shaft and being rotatable to force the refrigerant from the suction inlet to the discharge outlet, the compressor element is closer to the inboard end than to the outboard end;
a rotor carried by the shaft, the rotor is closer to the outboard end than to the inboard end;
a stator disposed within the motor housing and encircling the rotor;
an inverter electrically coupled to the stator for driving the compressor element at various speeds, the inverter includes a plurality of insulate gate bipolar transistors that can induce a common mode current in the shaft, wherein the common mode current can exceed one megahertz; and
a shaft-grounding device comprising a wire brush, a brush housing, a spring, and a grounding wire, wherein:
a) the brush housing is electrically coupled to the motor housing,
b) the grounding wire electrically couples the wire brush to the brush housing;
c) the wire brush is movable along a substantially linear path, and
d) the spring is contained within the brush housing and urges the wire brush toward the outboard end of the shaft to create electrical continuity between the wire brush and the outboard end of the shaft.
22. The compressor system of claim 21, wherein the substantially linear path and the rotational axis are substantially collinear.
23. The compressor system of claim 21, wherein the spring urges the wire brush to exert 4 to 20 ounces of force against the outboard end of the shaft.
24. The compressor system of claim 21, wherein the shaft-grounding device further comprises an anti-rotation element disposed within the brush housing, wherein the anti-rotation element limits relative rotational movement between the wire brush and the brush housing.
25. The compressor system of claim 21 further including a bearing bracket supporting the bearing and a non-conductive coating on the bearing bracket.
26. A compressor system, comprising:
a motor housing having an interior containing a refrigerant and an exterior exposed to a surrounding atmosphere;
a compressor housing hermetically sealed to the motor housing;
an endplate extending from the motor housing;
a refrigerant disposed within the compressor housing and the motor housing;
a rolling element bearing inside the motor housing;
a journal bearing inside at least one of the motor housing and the compressor housing;
a shaft having an inboard end, an outboard end, and an intermediate section therebetween, wherein the rolling element bearing supports the outboard end, and the journal bearing supports the intermediate section;
a compressor element mounted to the inboard end of the shaft and being rotatable for compressing the refrigerant;
a shaft-grounding device extending into the opening of the endplate such that the shaft-grounding device is in electrical contact with the outboard end of the shaft and is exposed to the refrigerant and the surrounding atmosphere.
27. The compressor system of claim 26, further comprising a minimally conductive material interposed between the rolling element bearing and the motor housing.
28. The compressor system of claim 27 wherein the minimally conductive material is a ceramic coating, a metal oxide, or a silicon oxide.
29. The compressor system of claim 28, further comprising a rotor carried by the shaft between the rolling element bearing and the journal bearing, a stator encircling the rotor, an inverter powering the stator to rotate the rotor, the shaft, and the compressor element at various speeds, wherein the inverter includes a plurality of insulate gate bipolar transistors.
30. The compressor system of claim 26, wherein the endplate defines an opening whose cross-sectional area is less than 4 in2 and wherein the opening of the endplate is a threaded hole that threadingly engages the shaft-grounding device.
31. A method of servicing a hermetically sealed compressor system that includes a motor housing exposed to a surrounding atmosphere, a shaft rotatable within the motor housing, a refrigerant disposed within the motor housing, and a shaft-grounding device that when properly installed is exposed to the refrigerant and the surrounding atmosphere and completes an electrical path between the shaft and the motor housing, the method comprising:
adjusting the temperature of the refrigerant until the refrigerant in the motor housing is at a pressure substantially equal to that of the surrounding atmosphere; and
removing the shaft-grounding device from within the motor housing while the pressure of the refrigerant is substantially equal to that of the surrounding atmosphere, thereby providing an opportunity to inspect the shaft-grounding device without having to evacuate the refrigerant from within the motor housing.
32. The method of claim 31, wherein the shaft-grounding device includes a spring, and the method of servicing a hermetically sealed compressor further comprises at least partially relaxing the spring upon removing the shaft-grounding device.
US11/361,329 2006-02-24 2006-02-24 Bearing protection for inverter-driven motor Abandoned US20070201995A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US11/361,329 US20070201995A1 (en) 2006-02-24 2006-02-24 Bearing protection for inverter-driven motor

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US11/361,329 US20070201995A1 (en) 2006-02-24 2006-02-24 Bearing protection for inverter-driven motor

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20070201995A1 true US20070201995A1 (en) 2007-08-30

Family

ID=38444204

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US11/361,329 Abandoned US20070201995A1 (en) 2006-02-24 2006-02-24 Bearing protection for inverter-driven motor

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US20070201995A1 (en)

Cited By (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20110044832A1 (en) * 2008-04-29 2011-02-24 Theo Nijhuis Fluid Energy Machine
WO2011063006A1 (en) * 2009-11-17 2011-05-26 Aerovironment, Inc. Integrated motor drive and battery charging system
US20140127059A1 (en) * 2008-02-20 2014-05-08 Trane International, Inc. Centrifugal compressor assembly and method
US20150182065A1 (en) * 2014-01-02 2015-07-02 Jong Boo Kim Safety apparatus of juice extraction module for juicer
US20170241418A1 (en) * 2016-02-19 2017-08-24 Johnson Controls Technology Company Vapor compression system and method of extending service life of same
US20180274527A1 (en) * 2017-03-24 2018-09-27 Johnson Controls Technology Company Labyrinth seals for compressor
US10408268B2 (en) 2013-01-25 2019-09-10 Trane International Inc. Method of using pressure nitrided stainless steel hybrid bearing with a refrigerant lubricated compressor
DE102020102078A1 (en) * 2020-01-29 2020-12-31 Schaeffler Technologies AG & Co. KG Electric drive arrangement with a discharge device with insulated bearing device
DE102019133889A1 (en) * 2019-12-11 2021-06-17 Schaeffler Technologies AG & Co. KG Electric machine with a discharge device
DE102020106612A1 (en) 2020-03-11 2021-09-16 Schaeffler Technologies AG & Co. KG Device for transmitting torque
DE102020108834A1 (en) 2020-03-31 2021-09-30 Schaeffler Technologies AG & Co. KG Electric drive arrangement for a vehicle
CN114026345A (en) * 2019-06-26 2022-02-08 Abb瑞士股份有限公司 Wear-resistant bearing construction with insulating sleeve and modules
WO2022135715A1 (en) * 2020-12-23 2022-06-30 Schunk Carbon Technology Gmbh Collection device for collecting electrical currents, and machine comprising a collection device of this kind

Citations (21)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1896265A (en) * 1932-03-31 1933-02-07 Wagner Electric Corp Dynamo electric machine construction
US2548631A (en) * 1949-06-17 1951-04-10 Gen Electric Brush holder assembly
US4109978A (en) * 1976-10-14 1978-08-29 Electric Machinery Mfg. Co. Electrically insulated sleeve bearing and method of making same
US4220879A (en) * 1977-01-10 1980-09-02 Sony Corporation Brushless DC motor
US4378138A (en) * 1980-07-31 1983-03-29 Sohre Joachim S Shaft brush for turbomachinery
US4566744A (en) * 1983-06-28 1986-01-28 Skf Industrial Trading & Development Company B.V. Current collector for rotating shaft
US4954084A (en) * 1989-09-06 1990-09-04 Marine Hardware, Inc. Shaft-grounding stuffing box cover
US5059041A (en) * 1989-09-12 1991-10-22 Railway Technical Research Institute Electrical insulating bearing
US5139425A (en) * 1990-09-13 1992-08-18 Skf France Rolling bearing with rotating electrical contacts
US5313129A (en) * 1993-08-05 1994-05-17 Ametek Technical Motor Division Sleeve bearing ground lead for motors
US5661356A (en) * 1993-10-22 1997-08-26 Fisher; Rodney R. Motor shaft discharge device
US5735616A (en) * 1995-07-14 1998-04-07 Brother Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Printing mechanism with means for preventing contact between ink ribbon and drive IC of thermal head
US5804903A (en) * 1993-10-22 1998-09-08 Fisher; Rodney R. Motor shaft discharge device
US5914547A (en) * 1997-11-21 1999-06-22 Magnetek, Inc. Auxiliary bearing assembly for reduction of unwanted shaft voltages in an electric motor
US6030128A (en) * 1996-10-04 2000-02-29 Reliance Electric Industrial Company Insulating arrangement for electrical machine shaft bearing
US6218757B1 (en) * 1998-11-30 2001-04-17 General Electric Canada Inc Minimizing shaft currents in dynamoelectric machines
US20010017495A1 (en) * 2000-02-29 2001-08-30 Toshihiro Sato Motor having shaft-grounding arrangement
US6555943B2 (en) * 1999-12-24 2003-04-29 Valeo Auto-Electric Wischer Und Motoren Gmbh Geared motor with a connector for a brush mounting plate having a ground brush
US20030143090A1 (en) * 2002-01-30 2003-07-31 Kunio Iritani Electrical compressor
US6819018B2 (en) * 2001-09-27 2004-11-16 Reliance Electric Technologies, Llc System and method of reducing bearing voltage
US6987338B1 (en) * 2003-12-29 2006-01-17 Lavasser Leonard J Ground strap for a motor having a plastic housing

Patent Citations (21)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1896265A (en) * 1932-03-31 1933-02-07 Wagner Electric Corp Dynamo electric machine construction
US2548631A (en) * 1949-06-17 1951-04-10 Gen Electric Brush holder assembly
US4109978A (en) * 1976-10-14 1978-08-29 Electric Machinery Mfg. Co. Electrically insulated sleeve bearing and method of making same
US4220879A (en) * 1977-01-10 1980-09-02 Sony Corporation Brushless DC motor
US4378138A (en) * 1980-07-31 1983-03-29 Sohre Joachim S Shaft brush for turbomachinery
US4566744A (en) * 1983-06-28 1986-01-28 Skf Industrial Trading & Development Company B.V. Current collector for rotating shaft
US4954084A (en) * 1989-09-06 1990-09-04 Marine Hardware, Inc. Shaft-grounding stuffing box cover
US5059041A (en) * 1989-09-12 1991-10-22 Railway Technical Research Institute Electrical insulating bearing
US5139425A (en) * 1990-09-13 1992-08-18 Skf France Rolling bearing with rotating electrical contacts
US5313129A (en) * 1993-08-05 1994-05-17 Ametek Technical Motor Division Sleeve bearing ground lead for motors
US5661356A (en) * 1993-10-22 1997-08-26 Fisher; Rodney R. Motor shaft discharge device
US5804903A (en) * 1993-10-22 1998-09-08 Fisher; Rodney R. Motor shaft discharge device
US5735616A (en) * 1995-07-14 1998-04-07 Brother Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Printing mechanism with means for preventing contact between ink ribbon and drive IC of thermal head
US6030128A (en) * 1996-10-04 2000-02-29 Reliance Electric Industrial Company Insulating arrangement for electrical machine shaft bearing
US5914547A (en) * 1997-11-21 1999-06-22 Magnetek, Inc. Auxiliary bearing assembly for reduction of unwanted shaft voltages in an electric motor
US6218757B1 (en) * 1998-11-30 2001-04-17 General Electric Canada Inc Minimizing shaft currents in dynamoelectric machines
US6555943B2 (en) * 1999-12-24 2003-04-29 Valeo Auto-Electric Wischer Und Motoren Gmbh Geared motor with a connector for a brush mounting plate having a ground brush
US20010017495A1 (en) * 2000-02-29 2001-08-30 Toshihiro Sato Motor having shaft-grounding arrangement
US6819018B2 (en) * 2001-09-27 2004-11-16 Reliance Electric Technologies, Llc System and method of reducing bearing voltage
US20030143090A1 (en) * 2002-01-30 2003-07-31 Kunio Iritani Electrical compressor
US6987338B1 (en) * 2003-12-29 2006-01-17 Lavasser Leonard J Ground strap for a motor having a plastic housing

Cited By (19)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20140127059A1 (en) * 2008-02-20 2014-05-08 Trane International, Inc. Centrifugal compressor assembly and method
US9556875B2 (en) * 2008-02-20 2017-01-31 Trane International Inc. Centrifugal compressor assembly and method
US8579608B2 (en) * 2008-04-29 2013-11-12 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Fluid energy machine
US20110044832A1 (en) * 2008-04-29 2011-02-24 Theo Nijhuis Fluid Energy Machine
CN102016322A (en) * 2008-04-29 2011-04-13 西门子公司 Fluid energy machine
WO2011063006A1 (en) * 2009-11-17 2011-05-26 Aerovironment, Inc. Integrated motor drive and battery charging system
US9018809B2 (en) * 2009-11-17 2015-04-28 Aerovironment, Inc. Integrated motor drive and battery charging system
US20130069492A1 (en) * 2009-11-17 2013-03-21 Aerovironment, Inc. Integrated motor drive and battery charging system
US10408268B2 (en) 2013-01-25 2019-09-10 Trane International Inc. Method of using pressure nitrided stainless steel hybrid bearing with a refrigerant lubricated compressor
US20150182065A1 (en) * 2014-01-02 2015-07-02 Jong Boo Kim Safety apparatus of juice extraction module for juicer
US20170241418A1 (en) * 2016-02-19 2017-08-24 Johnson Controls Technology Company Vapor compression system and method of extending service life of same
US11274705B2 (en) * 2016-02-19 2022-03-15 Johnson Controls Technology Company Vapor compression system and method of extending service life of same
US20180274527A1 (en) * 2017-03-24 2018-09-27 Johnson Controls Technology Company Labyrinth seals for compressor
CN114026345A (en) * 2019-06-26 2022-02-08 Abb瑞士股份有限公司 Wear-resistant bearing construction with insulating sleeve and modules
DE102019133889A1 (en) * 2019-12-11 2021-06-17 Schaeffler Technologies AG & Co. KG Electric machine with a discharge device
DE102020102078A1 (en) * 2020-01-29 2020-12-31 Schaeffler Technologies AG & Co. KG Electric drive arrangement with a discharge device with insulated bearing device
DE102020106612A1 (en) 2020-03-11 2021-09-16 Schaeffler Technologies AG & Co. KG Device for transmitting torque
DE102020108834A1 (en) 2020-03-31 2021-09-30 Schaeffler Technologies AG & Co. KG Electric drive arrangement for a vehicle
WO2022135715A1 (en) * 2020-12-23 2022-06-30 Schunk Carbon Technology Gmbh Collection device for collecting electrical currents, and machine comprising a collection device of this kind

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US20070201995A1 (en) Bearing protection for inverter-driven motor
US20080166246A1 (en) System for protecting bearings and seals of a refrigerant compressor
US5914547A (en) Auxiliary bearing assembly for reduction of unwanted shaft voltages in an electric motor
US7521827B2 (en) Motor ground seal
US8169766B2 (en) Shaft current control brush ring assembly
US9634547B1 (en) Motor grounding seal
US5222874A (en) Lubricant cooled electric drive motor for a compressor
AU2012357713B2 (en) Earth and/or sealing assembly for electric motors
EP2733827B1 (en) Electrical motor
US20030169953A1 (en) Rolling bearing arrangement for an electromotor
CN1133010C (en) Fluid machinery
US11053942B2 (en) Screw compressor
EP0896158A2 (en) Compressors
JP3866925B2 (en) Scroll compressor
JP2009219267A (en) Power conversion apparatus
RU2118714C1 (en) Compressor
AU2014264828B2 (en) Pump arrangement
JP2008136270A (en) Feeder system
KR20070034503A (en) Axial bearing
US20160365767A1 (en) Foil bearing supported motor with housingless stator
US5653125A (en) Compressor with isolated motor windings
US10312766B2 (en) Submersible-rated roller table motor
JPS6131685A (en) Compressor
CN109167480A (en) The electric corrosion prevention earthing or grounding means of variable frequency motor bearing
CN112366877A (en) Motor and electrical equipment comprising same

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: AMERICAN STANDARD INTERNATIONAL INC., NEW YORK

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:HARSTAD, MICHAEL R.;DUGA, JOEL S.;FIEGEN, GREGORY T.;AND OTHERS;REEL/FRAME:017646/0497

Effective date: 20060224

AS Assignment

Owner name: TRANE INTERNATIONAL INC., NEW YORK

Free format text: CHANGE OF NAME;ASSIGNOR:AMERICAN STANDARD INTERNATIONAL INC.;REEL/FRAME:020733/0970

Effective date: 20071128

Owner name: TRANE INTERNATIONAL INC.,NEW YORK

Free format text: CHANGE OF NAME;ASSIGNOR:AMERICAN STANDARD INTERNATIONAL INC.;REEL/FRAME:020733/0970

Effective date: 20071128

STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION