EP3667092B1 - Pump assembly - Google Patents
Pump assembly Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- EP3667092B1 EP3667092B1 EP18212325.7A EP18212325A EP3667092B1 EP 3667092 B1 EP3667092 B1 EP 3667092B1 EP 18212325 A EP18212325 A EP 18212325A EP 3667092 B1 EP3667092 B1 EP 3667092B1
- Authority
- EP
- European Patent Office
- Prior art keywords
- rotor
- radial
- impeller
- reference surface
- annular
- 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.)
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Links
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Images
Classifications
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F04—POSITIVE - DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS
- F04D—NON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT PUMPS
- F04D13/00—Pumping installations or systems
- F04D13/02—Units comprising pumps and their driving means
- F04D13/06—Units comprising pumps and their driving means the pump being electrically driven
- F04D13/0606—Canned motor pumps
-
- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F04—POSITIVE - DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS
- F04D—NON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT PUMPS
- F04D13/00—Pumping installations or systems
- F04D13/02—Units comprising pumps and their driving means
- F04D13/06—Units comprising pumps and their driving means the pump being electrically driven
- F04D13/0606—Canned motor pumps
- F04D13/0626—Details of the can
-
- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F04—POSITIVE - DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS
- F04D—NON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT PUMPS
- F04D13/00—Pumping installations or systems
- F04D13/02—Units comprising pumps and their driving means
- F04D13/06—Units comprising pumps and their driving means the pump being electrically driven
- F04D13/0606—Canned motor pumps
- F04D13/0633—Details of the bearings
-
- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F04—POSITIVE - DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS
- F04D—NON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT PUMPS
- F04D13/00—Pumping installations or systems
- F04D13/02—Units comprising pumps and their driving means
- F04D13/06—Units comprising pumps and their driving means the pump being electrically driven
- F04D13/0606—Canned motor pumps
- F04D13/064—Details of the magnetic circuit
-
- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F04—POSITIVE - DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS
- F04D—NON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT PUMPS
- F04D25/00—Pumping installations or systems
- F04D25/02—Units comprising pumps and their driving means
- F04D25/06—Units comprising pumps and their driving means the pump being electrically driven
-
- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F04—POSITIVE - DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS
- F04D—NON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT PUMPS
- F04D29/00—Details, component parts, or accessories
- F04D29/04—Shafts or bearings, or assemblies thereof
- F04D29/043—Shafts
-
- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F04—POSITIVE - DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS
- F04D—NON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT PUMPS
- F04D29/00—Details, component parts, or accessories
- F04D29/04—Shafts or bearings, or assemblies thereof
- F04D29/046—Bearings
-
- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F04—POSITIVE - DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS
- F04D—NON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT PUMPS
- F04D29/00—Details, component parts, or accessories
- F04D29/04—Shafts or bearings, or assemblies thereof
- F04D29/046—Bearings
- F04D29/0462—Bearing cartridges
-
- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F04—POSITIVE - DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS
- F04D—NON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT PUMPS
- F04D29/00—Details, component parts, or accessories
- F04D29/40—Casings; Connections of working fluid
- F04D29/42—Casings; Connections of working fluid for radial or helico-centrifugal pumps
- F04D29/426—Casings; Connections of working fluid for radial or helico-centrifugal pumps especially adapted for liquid pumps
-
- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F04—POSITIVE - DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS
- F04D—NON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT PUMPS
- F04D29/00—Details, component parts, or accessories
- F04D29/60—Mounting; Assembling; Disassembling
- F04D29/62—Mounting; Assembling; Disassembling of radial or helico-centrifugal pumps
- F04D29/628—Mounting; Assembling; Disassembling of radial or helico-centrifugal pumps especially adapted for liquid pumps
Definitions
- the rotor can flange may comprise a annular stop surface facing away from the impeller. This stop surface may define an exact positioning of the rotor can in axial direction.
- the rotor can is axially not limited by the pump housing directly.
- the rotor can may thus be more resilient to withstand pressure shocks.
- the annular stop surface may be conical, wherein the radially outward end of the annular stop surface is located further away from the impeller than the radially inward end of the annular stop surface.
- the rotor can flange may thus deform resiliently for an axial movement to resiliently withstand pressure shocks.
- the bearing retainer may be placed into the pump housing to rest of the axial stop surface of the pump housing.
- the rotor can may be pressed downwards with its lower annular contact surface onto the upper annular biasing surface of the bearing retainer to resiliently deform the conical bearing retainer flange section.
- the locking ring is placed into the groove to secure the rotor can axially while the rotor can is pressed down against the bearing retainer.
- the bearing retainer is resiliently preloaded to bias the rotor can upward against the locking ring.
- a neck ring may be fixed to the pump housing, wherein the impeller is located axially between the bearing retainer and the neck ring, wherein the neck ring comprises a cylindrical section at least partially extending into the impeller.
- the impeller may at least partially extend into the cylindrical section of the neck ring.
- the cylindrical section may comprise a radial outer or inner gap surface and the impeller may comprise a radial inner or outer gap surface, wherein the radial outer or inner gap surface of the cylindrical section and the radial inner or outer gap surface of the impeller have a radial distance defining a gap.
- Fig. 19c indicates by dashes in the second material 141 that the second material 141 is not fully homogeneous, but has an inner structure defining a certain spatial orientation of the second material 141.
- the spatial orientation of the inner structure of the second material 141 basically follows a flow path that the second material 141 took during the overmoulding of the inner side of the cap 21. Therefore, the second material 141 comprises at least one first area 145, where the spatial orientation is predominantly parallel to the rotor axis (R), and at least one second area 147, where the spatial orientation is predominantly perpendicular to the rotor axis (R).
- the first area(s) 145 mark the area(s) at or around injection point(s) of the second material 141 during overmoulding.
- the lateral location of the injection point(s) of the second material 141 during overmoulding may thus be wisely chosen to define the first area(s) 145, where the hottest electronic components are located on the PCB 15. This facilitates the heat dissipation from the components on the PCB 15 into the second material 141, which spreads the heat laterally via the second area(s) 147.
- the first material 139 may act as a heat sink that is cooled by an ambient convection air stream along the front face 19 and/or the radially outer wall 143 of the cap 21.
Landscapes
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
- General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Structures Of Non-Positive Displacement Pumps (AREA)
Description
- The present disclosure relates generally to pump assemblies, in particular to speed controlled wet rotor pumps. Such pumps in the power range of 5W to 3kW are typically used as circulation pumps of house heating systems.
- Wet rotor pumps usually comprise a rotor can separating a permanent magnet rotor from a stator. The rotor drives an impeller located in a pump housing. Typically, a motor housing is fastened to the pump housing, wherein the rotor can and the stator are attached to the pump housing by the fastener of the motor housing.
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EP 2 072 828 A1DE 43 04 149 C1 describes a motor pump assembly with a compact design.US 8,083,500 B1 describes an improved motor pump that enables the serviceability thereof as well as improved clearance between components.US 2014/0377103 A1 describes a pump assembly with a stator housing, in whose inside a wet-running electric motor with a can is arranged. - For an even more compact design with a smaller rotor can flange, other solutions for an exact coaxial alignment of the rotor axis with the respect to the pump housing are needed.
- In contrast to such known pumps, the present invention provides a pump assembly with a more compact design.
- In accordance with the present disclosure, a pump assembly according to
claim 1 is provided. Among other features, such a pump assembly comprises: - a rotor axle extending along a rotor axis,
- an impeller fixed to the rotor axle,
- a pump housing accommodating the impeller, wherein the pump housing defines a first radial inner reference surface,
- a drive motor comprising a stator and a rotor, wherein the rotor is fixed to the rotor axle for driving the impeller,
- a rotor can accommodating the rotor, wherein the rotor can comprises a rotor can flange,
- a stator housing accommodating the stator,
- a first radial bearing ring being in sliding contact with the rotor axle, and
- a bearing retainer embracing the first radial bearing ring and centring the first radial bearing ring with respect to the first radial inner reference surface of the pump housing.
- In contrast to solutions known from the prior art, the rotor can is not centred by the pump housing directly. Instead, the rotor can flange has a radial distance to the pump housing and thus some lateral wiggle room for coaxial alignment of the rotor can with respect to the pump housing by means of the bearing retainer. The bearing retainer embracing the first radial bearing ring being in sliding contact with the rotor axle defines the centric position of the rotor axis with respect to the pump housing. The exact centric alignment of the rotor axis with respect to the pump housing is important to minimise a gap between the impeller and a neck ring of the pump housing, wherein the neck ring separates a low-pressure chamber (fluid input) of the pump housing from a high-pressure chamber (fluid output) of the pump housing. The gap between the impeller and the neck ring must be large enough for low-friction rotation of the impeller, wherein the gap must account for any eccentricity of the rotor axis with respect to the neck ring of the pump housing due to manufacturing tolerances. However, the larger the gap between the impeller and the neck ring is, the more fluid escapes from the high-pressure chamber directly back through the gap to the low-pressure chamber, which costs pumping efficiency.
- The pump assembly disclosed herein provides a smaller gap and thus a higher pump efficiency, because manufacturing tolerances between the rotor can and the bearing retainer, which are typically independently manufactured in separate manufacturing steps, do not lead to an eccentricity of the rotor axis with respect to the neck ring of the pump housing. A radial inner centring surface of the rotor can is centred by radially abutting against a radial outer centring surface of the bearing retainer defining the central position of the rotor axis with respect to the pump housing.
- Optionally, the radial inner centring surface of the rotor can and/or the radial outer centring surface of the bearing retainer may have at least three, preferably four, radial projections. The radial projections facilitate an exact concentric alignment between the rotor can and the bearing retainer.
- Optionally, the bearing retainer may comprise a radial outer bearing retainer surface having at least three radial projections radially abutting against the first radial inner reference surface of the pump housing and centring the bearing retainer with respect to the first radial inner reference surface of the pump housing. These radial projections facilitate an exact concentric alignment of the bearing retainer with respect to the pump housing. The first radial inner reference surface of the pump housing may be defined in the same manufacturing step of the pump housing when the neck ring position is defined to minimise manufacturing tolerances.
- Optionally, the rotor can flange may form a circumferential U-shaped groove with a radial inner section and a radial outer section, wherein the radial inner section forms the radial inner centring surface of the rotor can. Thereby, the rotor can flange is stiffened and stabilised. It should be noted that the rotor can may not even be in direct contact with the pump housing.
- Optionally, the rotor can flange may comprise a annular stop surface facing away from the impeller. This stop surface may define an exact positioning of the rotor can in axial direction. In contrast to wet rotor centrifugal pumps known in the prior art, the rotor can is axially not limited by the pump housing directly. The rotor can may thus be more resilient to withstand pressure shocks. The annular stop surface may be conical, wherein the radially outward end of the annular stop surface is located further away from the impeller than the radially inward end of the annular stop surface. The rotor can flange may thus deform resiliently for an axial movement to resiliently withstand pressure shocks.
- Optionally, a locking ring may be secured in a circumferential groove of the pump housing, wherein the annular stop surface axially abuts against the locking ring. When the pump assembly is assembled, the locking ring may be placed into the groove after the rotor can flange has been placed into position within the pump housing. If the end of the rotor axle to which the impeller is fixed is denoted as the "lower" end and the rotor axle extends "upward" from the impeller into the rotor can, the rotor can is secured against an "upward" movement. This is fundamentally different to the pumps known in the prior art, wherein the rotor can is fixed "downwardly" to the pump housing by screws. Thus, the pump assembly disclosed herein allows for a much more compact design.
- According to the present invention, the rotor can flange comprises an annular contact surface facing towards the impeller and the bearing retainer flange comprises an annular biasing surface facing away from the impeller, wherein the bearing retainer is resiliently preloaded for biasing the annular biasing surface of the bearing retainer flange against the annular contact surface of the rotor can flange. The bearing retainer is thus not only used for centring the rotor can, but also for axial positioning of the rotor can with respect to the pump housing. The bearing retainer may comprise a conical bearing retainer flange section, wherein the radially outward end of the bearing retainer flange section is located closer to the impeller than the radially inward end of the bearing retainer flange section. The radially outward end of the bearing retainer flange section may rest on an axial stop surface of the pump housing. The annular biasing surface may be formed by a radially inward portion of the conical bearing retainer flange section. The annular contact surface of the rotor can flange and/or the annular biasing surface of the bearing retainer flange comprises at least three axial projections.
- During assembly of the pump assembly, the bearing retainer may be placed into the pump housing to rest of the axial stop surface of the pump housing. The rotor can may be pressed downwards with its lower annular contact surface onto the upper annular biasing surface of the bearing retainer to resiliently deform the conical bearing retainer flange section. The locking ring is placed into the groove to secure the rotor can axially while the rotor can is pressed down against the bearing retainer. Thus, the bearing retainer is resiliently preloaded to bias the rotor can upward against the locking ring. The impeller, the rotor axle, the rotor, the bearings, the bearing retainer and the rotor can may be placed into the pump housing as a pre-assembled unit being secured downwards by the locking ring, wherein the bearing retainer acts as an upwardly biasing spring.
- Optionally, a neck ring may be fixed to the pump housing, wherein the impeller is located axially between the bearing retainer and the neck ring, wherein the neck ring comprises a cylindrical section at least partially extending into the impeller. Alternatively, the impeller may at least partially extend into the cylindrical section of the neck ring. Optionally, the cylindrical section may comprise a radial outer or inner gap surface and the impeller may comprise a radial inner or outer gap surface, wherein the radial outer or inner gap surface of the cylindrical section and the radial inner or outer gap surface of the impeller have a radial distance defining a gap. Such a radial gap distance can be minimised by the pump assembly described herein, which provides for a better pumping efficiency.
- Optionally, the pump housing may define a first annular reference surface facing away from the impeller and the stator housing defines a second annular reference surface facing towards the impeller, wherein the second annular reference surface is biased against the first annular reference surface. Preferably, the first annular reference surface of the pump housing is defined in the same machining step as the first radial inner reference surface, preferably with the same drilling head, to minimise manufacturing tolerances. The first annular reference surface may thus extend in a plane exactly orthogonal to the centre axis of the first radial inner reference surface. Therefore, the first annular reference surface may allow for an exact angular alignment of the stator housing with respect to the pump housing.
- Optionally, the stator may define a second radial inner reference surface and the rotor can may comprise a radial outer alignment surface being aligned perpendicular to the first annular reference surface of the pump housing by radially abutting against the second radial inner reference surface of the stator. Thereby, the rotor can may be angularly aligned with respect to the pump housing by means of the stator housing. For instance, the stator may comprise a plurality of stator teeth around each of which a stator coil in form of windings is spooled, wherein the second radial inner reference surface is defined by the radial inner surface of the plurality of stator teeth.
- Optionally, the first annular reference surface may be located radially more outward than the first radial inner reference surface and/or the first annular reference surface is located axially further away from the impeller than the first radial inner reference surface. Thereby, the pump housing provides a good leverage for the stator housing to angularly align the rotor can with respect to the pump housing.
- Optionally, the second radial inner reference surface is located radially more inward than the second annular reference surface and/or the second radial inner reference surface is located axially further away from the impeller than the second annular reference surface. Thereby, the stator housing has a good leverage to angularly align the rotor can with respect to the pump housing.
- Optionally, the second annular reference surface may extend in a plane essentially orthogonal to the centre axis of the second radial inner reference surface. Therefore, the second annular reference surface may allow for an exact angular alignment of the rotor can with respect to the pump housing.
- Optionally, the pump assembly may comprise a bayonet ring for securing the stator housing to the pump housing, wherein the bayonet ring is resiliently preloaded for axially biasing the stator housing against the pump housing towards the impeller. The second annular reference surface of the stator housing is thus pressed downwards onto the first annular reference surface of the pump housing by means of the bayonet ring. The bayonet ring allows for securing the stator housing to the pump housing in a very compact way. Furthermore, the bayonet ring secures the stator housing against rotation around the rotor axis in well-defined angular position. The bayonet ring may be a metal wire with circular cross-section. The bayonet ring may comprise circumferential first sections with a first radius und circumferential second sections with a second radius, wherein the second radius is smaller than the first radius. The second sections may be formed as radially inward projections cooperating with bayonet grooves in a radially outer surface of the stator housing. The first sections of the bayonet ring may be secured in a circumferential groove of the pump housing. The bayonet grooves in the stator housing may comprise a first "vertical" section through which the second sections of the bayonet ring pass when the stator housing is placed downwards onto the first annular reference surface of the pump housing. The bayonet grooves in the stator housing may comprise a second "upwardly sloped" circumferential section with a first end at the first "vertical" section and a second end circumferentially distanced from the first end, wherein the first end of the second section is located closer to the second annular reference surface of the stator housing than the second end of the second section. Upon manual rotation of the stator housing by a pre-defined angle for the second sections of the bayonet ring to be guided along the second sections of the bayonet grooves from the first end to the second end, the second sections of the bayonet ring are pushed upward by the slope while the first sections of the bayonet ring remain secured in the pump housing. Thereby, the bayonet ring resiliently twists between the first sections and the second sections. The second sections of the bayonet ring may click into a horizontal or "downwardly sloped" end section at the second end of the second section of the grooves. The resilient twist of the bayonet ring biases the second annular reference surface of the stator housing downward onto the first annular reference surface of the pump housing.
- Embodiments of the present invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the following figures of which:
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Fig. 1 shows a perspective view on an example of a pump assembly disclosed herein; -
Fig. 2 shows a top view on an example of a pump assembly disclosed herein; -
Fig. 3 shows a longitudinal cut view along cut A-A as outlined inFig. 2 on an example of a pump assembly disclosed herein; -
Fig. 4 shows a partly exploded view on an example of a pump assembly disclosed herein; -
Figs. 5a,b show perspective views on a pump housing plus bayonet ring according to an example of a pump assembly disclosed herein; -
Fig. 6 shows a perspective view on a pump housing plus bayonet ring and rotor can according to an example of a pump assembly disclosed herein; -
Fig. 7 shows a top view on a pump housing with an inserted bayonet ring, rotor can and locking ring according to an example of a pump assembly disclosed herein; -
Figs. 8a,b show longitudinal cut views along cut A-A as outlined inFig. 7 on an example of a pump assembly disclosed herein; -
Fig. 9 shows a partly exploded view on a pump housing plus a bayonet ring, a rotor can and a locking ring according to an example of a pump assembly disclosed herein; -
Fig. 10 shows a top view on an example of a pump assembly disclosed herein; -
Fig. 11 shows a longitudinal cut view and a detailed view along cut A-A as outlined inFig. 10 on an example of a pump assembly disclosed herein; -
Fig. 12 shows a perspective view on a pump housing plus bayonet ring and stator housing according to an example of a pump assembly disclosed herein; -
Fig. 13 shows a longitudinal cut view and a detailed view on a pump housing with an installed bearing retainer and, prior to their installation, a rotor can and a locking ring according to an example of a pump assembly disclosed herein; -
Fig. 14 shows a longitudinal cut view and a detailed view on a pump housing with an installed bearing retainer and, after their installation, a rotor can and a locking ring according to an example of a pump assembly disclosed herein; -
Fig. 15 shows a longitudinal cut view, a top view and a detailed top view on a bearing retainer and a rotor can according to an example of a pump assembly disclosed herein; -
Figs. 16a shows a cut view and a detailed cut view on a pump housing with an installed neck ring before being machined according to an example of a pump assembly disclosed herein; -
Figs. 16b shows a top view on a neck ring before being machined according to an example of a pump assembly disclosed herein; -
Fig. 17a shows a cut view and a detailed cut view on a pump housing with an installed neck ring after being machined according to an example of a pump assembly disclosed herein; -
Figs. 17b shows a top view on a neck ring after being asymmetrically machined according to an example of a pump assembly disclosed herein; -
Figs. 18a,b show perspective views on a stator housing and a stator former as part of the stator housing according to an example of a pump assembly disclosed herein; and -
Figs. 19a,b,c show a bottom view, a view along cut K-K as outlined inFig. 19a and a detailed view O-O, respectively, on a cap of a stator housing according to an example of a pump assembly disclosed herein. -
Figs. 1 to 19 show embodiments of apump assembly 1 with acentrifugal pump unit 2, aninput port 3 and anoutput port 5, wherein theinput port 3 and anoutput port 5 are coaxially arranged on a pipe axis F on opposing sides of thepump unit 2. Theinput port 3 and theoutput port 5comprise connector flanges pump unit 2 comprises a rotor axis R essentially perpendicular to the pipe axis F. It should be noted that the terms "radial", "circumferential", "angular" and "axial" throughout this disclosure are to be understood with reference to the rotor axis R.A pump housing 11 of thepump unit 2 is arranged between theinput port 3 and theoutput port 5. Thepump housing 11 comprises an impeller 12 (seeFigs. 3 ,4 and8a,b ) for rotating counter-clockwise around the rotor axis R and pumping fluid from theinput port 3 to theoutput port 5. Theimpeller 12 is driven counter-clockwise by a three-phase synchronous permanent magnet drive motor having astator 17 located in astator housing 13 around the rotor axis R. The electronics are also accommodated by thestator housing 13, so that thestator housing 13 may be denoted aselectronics housing 13. Thestator housing 13 is mounted to thepump housing 11 by means of a bayonet-like mount (seeFigs. 4 and12 ). - The
stator housing 13 comprises motor control electronics on a printed circuit board (PCB) 15 extending in a plane essentially perpendicular to the rotor axis R below afront face 19 of acap 21 of thestator housing 13. Thestator housing 13 is not rotationally symmetric, but provides more room at one lateral side for electronics controlling the motor (seeFig. 2 ). The motor and motor electronics are power supplied via a low DC voltage connector (not shown). Thepump assembly 1 may comprise an external power supply module (not shown) for connection with the low DC voltage connector. The external power supply module may transform an AC line voltage of 110-240V to a low DC voltage of 30-60V. The external power supply may comprise a line filter against electromagnetic interference (EMI) and a voltage converter, which is located on the motor electronics PCB. Thus, themotor electronics PCB 15 and thestator housing 13 may have a more compact design. Thefront face 19 of thecap 21 of thestator housing 13 may comprise a user interface, such as a button, a light-emitting diode (LED) and/or a display (not shown). A button may for instance be an on/off-button. One or more LEDs and/or a display may signal an operating parameter or status, e.g. for indicating a normal operation, a failure mode, a motor speed, a successful/unsuccessful wireless connection, a power consumption, a flow, a head and/or a pressure. - The top view of
Fig. 2 shows the cut A-A, the view of which is shown inFig. 3 . The non-rotationally-symmetric shape of thestator housing 13 is clearly visible inFig. 2 . The cut view ofFig. 3 displays the very compact pump design achieved by the pump assembly disclosed herein. Theinlet port 3 curls from the pipe axis F in a fluid-mechanically efficient way to lead from below coaxially with the rotor axis R into animpeller chamber 23 of thepump housing 11. Theimpeller chamber 23 has aconcentric bottom entry 25 in fluidic connection with theinlet port 3 and atangential exit 27 in fluidic connection with theoutlet port 5. Aneck ring 29 fixed to thepump housing 11 comprises acircumferential wall section 30 extending partially into theimpeller 12 and thereby separating theimpeller chamber 23 into a low-pressure chamber including the bottom entry 25 (fluid input) from a high-pressure chamber including the tangential exit 27 (fluid output). There is a gap G between theimpeller 12 and thecircumferential wall section 30 of theneck ring 29 that must be large enough for low-friction rotation of theimpeller 12, wherein the gap G must account for any eccentricity of the rotor axis R with respect to theneck ring 29 due to manufacturing tolerances. However, the gap G should be minimal to minimise the amount of fluid escaping from the high-pressure chamber directly back through the gap G to the low-pressure chamber, which costs pumping efficiency. Theimpeller 12 comprisesinner spiral vanes 31 and at its bottom side animpeller plate 33 for forming fluid-mechanically efficient impeller channels for accelerating fluid radially outward and tangentially in counter-clockwise direction by a centrifugal force when theimpeller 12 rotates. Such a radially outward and tangentially flow creates a central suction of fluid from theinlet port 3. - The
pump housing 11 has an uppercircular opening 35 through which theimpeller 12 can be placed into theimpeller chamber 23 during manufacturing of thepump unit 2. In order to achieve a most compact pump design, thecircular opening 35 may have a just slightly larger diameter than theimpeller 12. The end of thecircular opening 35 is formed by a radiallyinward projection 37. The radiallyinward projection 37 forms an axialannular surface 39 on which a bearingretainer 41 resides with a radial outer section of a bearingretainer flange 43. Arotor axle 45 extends along the rotor axis R through the bearingretainer 41 and is rotationally fixed with a lower end portion to theimpeller 12. The bearingretainer 41 centres a firstradial bearing ring 47 with a radially inner ceramic surface being in radial sliding contact with an outer ceramic surface of therotor axle 45. Therotor axle 45 and the firstradial bearing ring 47 may comprise ceramic low friction radial contact surfaces. A very thin lubricating film of the pumped fluid in the range of microns may establish between therotor axle 45 and the firstradial bearing ring 47 when therotor axle 45 rotates relative to the fixed firstradial bearing ring 47. Anaxial bearing plate 49 is placed on top of the firstradial bearing ring 47 to provide a low friction annular bottom carbon surface. There is a thin lubricating film of the pumped fluid between the low friction annular bottom carbon surface and an annular top ceramic face of the firstradial bearing ring 47 for a low-friction axial sliding contact. Apermanent magnet rotor 51 embraces therotor axle 45 and is rotationally fixed to it. A secondradial bearing ring 53 is in low-friction radial sliding contact with an upper end of therotor axle 45. The secondradial bearing ring 47 is centred by a bearingbushing 55 with radial extensions and axial channels for allowing an axial fluid flow. As theimpeller 12 sucks itself together with therotor axle 45 and thepermanent magnet rotor 51 downwards during rotation, only oneaxial bearing plate 49 is necessary. - The
neck ring 29, theimpeller 12, therotor axle 45, the firstradial bearing ring 47, theaxial bearing plate 49, thepermanent magnet rotor 51, the secondradial bearing ring 53 and the bearingbushing 55 are so-called "wet parts" which are all immersed in the fluid to be pumped. The rotating ones of the wet parts, i.e. theimpeller 12, therotor axle 45 and thepermanent magnet rotor 51 are so-called "wet-running" using the fluid to be pumped for providing lubricant films for reducing friction at two radial surfaces and one axial contact surface. The fluid to be pumped is preferably water. - The wet parts are enclosed by a pot-shaped rotor can 57 such that fluid can flow between the
impeller chamber 23 and the inner volume of the rotor can 57. The rotor can 57 comprises a lower first axial end, i.e. the axial end facing theimpeller 12, and an upper second axial end, i.e. the axial end facing away from theimpeller 12. The first axial end is open and defines a rotor can flange 63. The second axial end is closed. The second axial end of the rotor can 57 may comprise a pot-shaped coaxial appendix with a smaller radius than the main body of the rotor can 57 as shown in the embodiment according toFigs. 1 to 9 . Alternatively, the second axial end of the rotor can 57 may be an essentially flat end of main body of the rotor can 57 as shown in the embodiment according toFigs. 10 to 19 . - In order to achieve a compact design of the
pump unit 2, the rotor can flange 63 is relatively small compared to the prior art, i. e. not much larger in diameter than theimpeller 12 and fitting into thecircular opening 35 of thepump housing 11. However, such a compact design comes with a challenge to precisely coaxially align the rotor axis with respect to theneck ring 29 of thepump housing 11. The coaxial alignment may be needed radially, axially and/or angularly. Preferred embodiments of the pump assembly disclosed herein provide for a radial, an axial and/or angular alignment of the rotor axis R, i.e. centring the rotor axis R with respect to theneck ring 29 of thepump housing 11. - In order to centre the rotor axis R with respect to the
neck ring 29 of thepump housing 11, the rotor can flange 63 has a radial distance to thepump housing 11. A radial gap H around the rotor can flange 63 provides for some radial wiggle room to coaxially align the rotor can 57 with respect to thepump housing 11. The rotor can 57 is centred by means of the bearingretainer 41 instead of thepump housing 11. Therefore, the rotor can 57 comprises a radialinner centring surface 65 being centred by radially abutting against a radialouter centring surface 67 of the bearingretainer 41. The bearingretainer 41 itself is centred by the bearingretainer flange 43 comprising a radial outer bearingretainer surface 69 radially abutting against a first radialinner reference surface 71 of thepump housing 11. - The radial outer bearing
retainer surface 69 comprises at least threeradial projections 70 radially abutting against the first radialinner reference surface 71 of thepump housing 11 and centring the bearingretainer 41 with respect to the first radialinner reference surface 71 of thepump housing 11. Similarly, the radialinner centring surface 65 of the rotor can 57 and/or the radialouter centring surface 67 of the bearingretainer 41 may have at least threeradial projections 72 for centring the rotor can 57 with respect to the bearingretainer 41. In the example shown (best visible inFig. 15 ), the radialouter centring surface 67 of the bearingretainer 41 comprises theradial projections 72, which project radially outward to contact the radialinner centring surface 65 of the rotor can 57. In case of radial projections at the radialinner centring surface 65 of the rotor can 57, the radial projections would project radially inward to contact the radialouter centring surface 67 of the bearingretainer 41. - As can be seen in
Figs. 3 ,11 ,13 and14 , the rotor can flange 63 forms a circumferentialU-shaped groove 73 with a radialinner section 75 and a radialouter section 77, wherein the radialinner section 75 forms the radialinner centring surface 65 of the rotor can 57. Thereby, the rotor can flange 63 is stiffened and stabilised. The rotor can flange 63 further comprises anannular stop surface 79 facing away from theimpeller 12. Thisannular stop surface 79 defines an exact positioning of the rotor can 57 in axial direction. Theannular stop surface 79 may be slightly conical, wherein the radiallyoutward end 81 of theannular stop surface 79 is located further away from theimpeller 12 than the radiallyinward end 83 of theannular stop surface 79. The rotor can flange 63 may thus deform resiliently for an axial movement to resiliently withstand pressure shocks. A sealing ring 84 (only visible in the embodiment shown inFigs. 11 ,13 and14 ), here in form of an O-ring with essentially circular cross-section, is arranged between the bearingretainer flange 43 and the rotor can flange 63. It seals a radial distance between the radialouter section 77 of the rotor can flange 63 and the first radialinner reference surface 71 of thepump housing 11. - As can be seen best in
Fig. 14 , theannular stop surface 79 abuts axially from below against a lockingring 85 being secured in acircumferential groove 87 of thepump housing 11. When the pump assembly is being assembled (seeFig. 13 ), the lockingring 85 may be placed into thegroove 87 after the rotor can flange 63 has been placed into position within thepump housing 11. The rotor can 57 is thus secured against an upward movement out of thepump housing 11. The rotor can flange 63 comprises anannular contact surface 89 facing towards theimpeller 12 and the bearingretainer flange 43 comprises anannular biasing surface 91 facing away from theimpeller 12, wherein the bearingretainer 41 is resiliently spring-loaded for biasing theannular biasing surface 91 of the bearingretainer flange 43 against theannular contact surface 89 of the rotor can flange 63. The rotor can 57 is thus pressed upward against the lockingring 85 by means of the bearingretainer 41. - The bearing
retainer flange 43 comprises a conical bearingretainer flange section 93, wherein a radially outward end of the bearingretainer flange section 93, i.e. the radial outer bearingretainer surface 69, is located axially closer to theimpeller 12 than a radiallyinward end 95 of the bearingretainer flange section 93. The radially most outward section of the bearingretainer flange section 93 rests on the axialannular stop surface 39 of thepump housing 11. Theannular biasing surface 91 is formed by an upper radially inward portion of the conical bearingretainer flange section 93. Theannular biasing surface 91 comprises n ≥ 3axial projections 94 towards the rotor can flange 63, wherein theaxial projections 94 may be circumferentially distributed in an n-fold symmetry on the upper radially inward portion of the conical bearingretainer flange section 93. Preferably, theannular biasing surface 91 comprises n = 4 dot-shapedprojections 94. Theprojections 94 serve as well-defined points of axial contact between the rotor can flange 63 and the bearingretainer flange 43. -
Fig. 13 shows a situation during assembly of thepump assembly 1 before the rotor can 57 is secured in position by means of the lockingring 85.Fig. 14 shows a situation after the rotor can 57 is secured in position by means of the lockingring 85. During assembly of thepump assembly 1, the bearingretainer 41 is placed into thepump housing 11 to rest on the axialannular stop surface 39 of thepump housing 11. The rotor can 57 is then pressed downwards with its lowerannular contact surface 89 onto theaxial protrusions 94 of the upperannular biasing surface 91 of the bearingretainer flange 43 to resiliently deform the conical bearingretainer flange section 93. The lockingring 85 is placed into thegroove 87 to secure the rotor can 57 axially while the rotor can 57 is held pressed down against the bearingretainer flange 43. Thus, the bearingretainer 41 is resiliently spring-loaded to bias the rotor can 57 upward against the lockingring 85. Theimpeller 12, therotor axle 45, therotor 51, thebearings retainer 41 and the rotor can 57 are placed into thepump housing 11 as a first pre-assembled unit 99 (see.Fig. 4 ) being secured downwards by the lockingring 85, wherein the bearingretainer 41 acts as an upwardly biasing spring. It should be noted inFig. 13 that the bearingretainer flange 43 has initially some lateral wiggle room between the radial outer bearingretainer surface 69 and the first radialinner reference surface 71 of thepump housing 11. This facilitates the insertion of the bearingretainer 41 into thepump housing 11 during assembly. As shown inFig. 14 , the axial pressure exerted by the rotor can flange 63 onto the bearingretainer flange 43 slightly flattens the conical bearingretainer flange section 93, whereby the lateral wiggle room between the radial outer bearingretainer surface 69 and the first radialinner reference surface 71 of thepump housing 11 is closed. The radial outer bearingretainer surface 69 is radially pressed outward against the first radialinner reference surface 71 of thepump housing 11. The flattening of the bearingretainer flange 43 between a first relaxed state shown inFig. 13 and a second spring-loaded state shown inFig. 14 can be seen by comparing the angle β inFigs. 13 and14 . The angle β may be denoted as a base angle of the conical bearingretainer flange section 93 with an apex angle α = 180° - 2β. The apex angle α is not explicitly shown inFigs. 13 and14 , but it can be inferred that the apex angle α is larger in the second spring-loaded state shown inFig. 14 than in the first relaxed state shown inFig. 13 . - As shown in
Fig. 15 , the radial outer bearingretainer surface 69 may comprise at least three, preferably four,radial projections 70 radially abutting against the first radialinner reference surface 71 of thepump housing 11 and centring the bearingretainer 41 with respect to the first radialinner reference surface 71 of thepump housing 11. It should be noted inFig. 14 that a radial gap H remains between the rotor can flange 63 and thepump housing 11, so that the rotor can 57 can effectively be centred by the contact between the radialinner centring surface 65 of the rotor can 57 and the radialouter centring surface 67 of the bearingretainer 41. - The
neck ring 29, as shown inFigs. 16a,b and17a,b , is coupled to thepump housing 11 by a several tons strong press-fit so that theneck ring 29 and thepump housing 11 constitute a secondpre-assembled unit 101 as opposed to the firstpreassembled unit 99 as shown inFig. 4 . When thepump assembly 1 is fully assembled, theimpeller 12 is located axially between the bearingretainer 41 and theneck ring 29, wherein theneck ring 29 comprises thecircumferential wall section 30 at least partially extending into theimpeller 12. Thecircumferential wall section 30 comprises a radialouter surface 105 and theimpeller 12 comprises a radialinner surface 107, wherein the radialouter surface 105 of thecircumferential wall section 30 and the radialinner surface 107 of theimpeller 12 have a radial distance defining the gap G (seeFig. 4 ). The indirect centring of the rotor can 57 by means of the bearingretainer 41 rather than thepump housing 11 directly reduces manufacturing tolerances and thus allows for a smaller gap G, which increases the pumping efficiency. - The gap G is minimised by an asymmetrically
machined neck ring 29 as shown inFig. 17a ,b. When theneck ring 29 is coupled to thepump housing 11 by press-fitting, theneck ring 29 may be initially rotationally symmetric as shown inFig. 16b . However, the lateral position and/or the axial alignment of theneck ring 29 may not be exact and comprises some tolerances. If theneck ring 29 is not asymmetrically machinedneck ring 29 as shown inFig. 16b after being press-fitted into thepump housing 11, the gap G must be large enough to accommodate such tolerances. As shown inFig. 17b , theneck ring 29 is asymmetrically machined with the same tool and in the same machining processing which generates, at thepump housing 11, the first radialinner reference surface 71 and the firstannular reference surface 109. As a result, as shown inFigs. 17a,b , thecircumferential wall section 30 of theneck ring 29 may get a machined cylindrical radialouter surface 105 that is exactly coaxially aligned with the first radialinner reference surface 71 and a firstannular reference surface 109, and thus with the rotor axis R. After machining, the radialouter surface 105 of thecircumferential wall section 30 of theneck ring 29 is eccentric with respect to a radialinner surface 110 of thecircumferential wall section 30. In the detail view ofFig. 17a , amilling edge 112 extending along at least a portion of the circumference of thecircumferential wall section 30 of theneck ring 29 is visible on the left-hand side, where more material was milled away from thecircumferential wall section 30 of theneck ring 29 than on the right-hand side. Thereby, the radialouter surface 105 is better aligned with the rotor axis (R) so that the gap G can be designed smaller, which increases the pumping efficiency. It should be noted that the machined asymmetry of thecircumferential wall section 30 of theneck ring 29 may be in the range of tens of microns or even less. In an alternative embodiment, theimpeller 12 may at least partially extend into thecircumferential wall section 30 of theneck ring 29, so that it is the radialinner surface 110 of thecircumferential wall section 30 which is preferably eccentrically machined with respect to the radialouter surface 105 of thecircumferential wall section 30 in order to reduce the gap G. - The
stator housing 13 may be used to angularly align the rotor axis R with respect to thepump housing 11 as shown inFig. 11 . In order to achieve this, thepump housing 11 has a machined firstannular reference surface 109 facing away from theimpeller 12 and thestator housing 13 has a secondannular reference surface 111 facing towards theimpeller 12, wherein the secondannular reference surface 111 rests on the firstannular reference surface 109, biased downwards my means of abayonet ring 113. Thus, the angular orientation of thestator housing 13 with respect to thepump housing 11 is well-defined. As explained above, the firstannular reference surface 109 is machined with the same tool and in the same machining processing which generates the first radialinner reference surface 71 and theouter surface 105 of theneck ring 29. - The
stator 17, as shown inFigs. 18a,b , comprises windings (not shown) wound around astator core 114, for instance essentially comprised of a stack of ferrite or iron laminates, wherein thestator core 114 is formed as astator ring 118 with radially inwardly projectingstator teeth 120. For thestator housing 13 to align the rotor can 57 angularly, as shown inFig. 11 , thestator teeth 120 of thestator 17 in thestator housing 13 define a second radialinner reference surface 115 for a heat-conductive contact with the rotor can 57. Correspondingly, the rotor can 57 comprises a radialouter alignment surface 117 abutting radially against the second radialinner reference surface 115. Thereby, the rotor can 57 is angularly aligned essentially perpendicular to the firstannular reference surface 109 of thepump housing 11. It should be noted inFig. 11 that thestator housing 13 has some lateral wiggle room in thepump housing 11 so that the rotor can 57 is able to centre thestator housing 57 while thestator housing 13 keeps the rotor axis R essentially perpendicular to the firstannular reference surface 109. - The second
annular reference surface 111 of thestator housing 13 is defined by injection overmoulding a surface portion of thestator core 114, wherein an injection mandrel contacts the second radialinner reference surface 115 and holds thestator core 114 in a well-defined position during overmoulding. Thereby, the secondannular reference surface 111 of thestator housing 13 is essentially perpendicular to the second radialinner reference surface 115 with minimal manufacturing tolerances. As shown inFigs. 18a, b , thestator 17 comprises afirst material 122 as an electrically insulating layer between the stator windings and thestator core 114. Thefirst material 122 effectively covers a first surface portion of thestator core 114 that serves as a bobbin former for the stator windings to be spooled on. The layer of thefirst material 122 is preferably as thin as possible to allow for good heat-dissipation between the stator windings and thestator core 114 and thick enough to be sufficiently electrically insulating. As high thermal conductivity is mostly accompanied by low dielectric strength, the heat dissipation is effectively maximised by overmoulding the first surface portion of thestator core 114 with a thin layer of thefirst material 122 having a high dielectric strength and/or a high comparative tracking index (CTI), for instance above 175. Irrespective of whether thepump assembly 1 is used as a medical equipment or not, thefirst material 122 may belong to the material group IIIa according to the International Electronic Commission Standard IEC 60601-1:2005 with a CTI in the range of 175 to 400. Thefirst material 122 may be a mouldable plastic such as a polyamide (PA), a polyethylene terephthalate (PET), or a liquid crystal polymer (LCP). Thefirst material 122 may further formbobbin webs 130 projecting axially from both axial ends of thestator core 114 to keep the windings laterally in place (seeFigs. 18a, b ). - It should be noted that the overmoulding of the first surface portion of the
stator core 114 with thefirst material 122 is performed in a first overmoulding step, at a relatively high temperature of thestator core 114 for decreasing the viscosity of thefirst material 122 and thereby achieving a comprehensive thin insulating coating layer. After that first overmoulding step, at a lower temperature of thestator core 114, a second surface portion of thestator core 114 is overmoulded in a separate second overmoulding step with asecond material 124 for forming walls of thestator housing 13. Thereby, the risk of cracking of thesecond material 124 is reduced, because the thermal expansion/contraction of thestator core 114 during and after overmoulding can be better controlled. The secondannular reference surface 111 of thestator housing 13 is defined in the second overmoulding step, wherein an injection mandrel contacts the second radialinner reference surface 115 defined by thestator teeth 120 and holds thestator core 114 in a well-defined position during injection overmoulding. Thesecond material 124 fulfils different requirements than thefirst material 122 and may have different physical and/or chemical properties. For instance, thesecond material 124 may have particularly low flammability, which is less of an issue for thefirst material 122, which may thus have a higher flammability than thesecond material 124. Thesecond material 124 may be classified with the highest flame-retarding rating 5VA according to theUL 94 Standard for Safety of Flammability of Plastic Materials. Thesecond material 124 may be a mouldable plastic such as a polyamide (PA), a polyphenylene sulphide (PPS), or a polyether ether ketone (PEEK). Thesecond material 124 may comprise a certain glass fibre content, forinstance 10% to 50%, preferably about 30%, depending on the requirements. - A radially
inner surface 126 of thestator ring 118 forms part of the first surface portion of thestator core 114 that is coated with thefirst material 122 having a first thickness d1. A radiallyouter surface 128 of thestator ring 118 forms part of the second surface portion of thestator core 114 that is coated with thesecond material 124 having a second thickness d2. In order to achieve a thin insulation coating made of thefirst material 122 and stable integrity of the walls of thestator housing 13 made of thesecond material 124, the first thickness d1 is lower than the second thickness d2. The different thicknesses d1, d2 may be best seen inFig. 11 . In case the thicknesses vary, e.g. in axial direction as shown for the second thickness d2 inFig. 11 , the minimal second thickness d2 is higher than the minimal first thickness d1. Preferably, the second thickness d2 is at least 2 mm. - For providing a good leverage to the
stator housing 13 to align the rotor can 57 angularly, thepump housing 11 is designed such that the firstannular reference surface 109 is located radially more outward than the first radialinner reference surface 71 and/or the firstannular reference surface 109 is located axially further away from theimpeller 12 than the first radialinner reference surface 71. - Likewise, for having a good leverage to align the rotor can 57 angularly, the
stator housing 13 is designed such that the second radialinner reference surface 115 is located radially more inward than the secondannular reference surface 111 and/or the second radialinner reference surface 115 is located axially further away from theimpeller 12 than the secondannular reference surface 111. - The embodiments of the
pump assembly 1 shown inFigs. 1 to 19 have a very compact bayonet-like mount of thestator housing 13 to the pump housing 11 (see in particularFigs. 4 and12 ). As part of the bayonet-like mount, thebayonet ring 113 secures thestator housing 13 to thepump housing 11, wherein thebayonet ring 113 is resiliently spring-loaded for axially biasing thestator housing 13 downwards against thepump housing 11 towards theimpeller 12. The secondannular reference surface 111 of thestator housing 13 is thus pressed downwards onto the firstannular reference surface 109 of thepump housing 11 by means of thebayonet ring 113. The bayonet ring secures 113 the stator housing against rotation around the rotor axis R in a well-defined angular position. Thebayonet ring 113 is a metal wire with circular cross-section. Thebayonet ring 113 comprises circumferentialfirst sections 119 with a first radius Ra and circumferentialsecond sections 121 with a second radius Ri, wherein the second radius Ri, is smaller than the first radius Ra, i.e. Ri < Ra. Thesecond sections 121 may be formed as radially inward projections cooperating withbayonet grooves 123 in a radiallyouter surface 125 of thestator housing 13. Thefirst sections 119 of thebayonet ring 113 are secured in acircumferential groove 127 of thepump housing 11. Thebayonet grooves 123 in thestator housing 13 may comprise a first "vertical"section 129 through which thesecond sections 121 of thebayonet ring 113 pass when thestator housing 13 is placed downwards onto the firstannular reference surface 109 of thepump housing 11. Thebayonet grooves 123 in thestator housing 13 may comprise a second "upwardly sloped"circumferential section 131 with afirst end 133 at the first "vertical"section 129 and asecond end 135 circumferentially distanced from thefirst end 133, wherein thefirst end 133 of thesecond section 131 is located closer to the secondannular reference surface 111 of thestator housing 13 than thesecond end 135 of thesecond section 131. Upon manual rotation of thestator housing 13 by a pre-defined angle for thesecond sections 121 of thebayonet ring 113 to be guided along thesecond sections 131 of thebayonet grooves 123 from thefirst end 133 to thesecond end 135, thesecond sections 121 of thebayonet ring 113 are pushed upward by the slope while thefirst sections 119 of thebayonet ring 113 remain secured in thepump housing 11. Thereby, thebayonet ring 113 resiliently twists between thefirst sections 119 and thesecond sections 121. Thesecond sections 121 of thebayonet ring 113 may click into a horizontal or "downwardly sloped"end section 137 at thesecond end 135 of thesecond section 131 of thegrooves 123. The resilient twist of thebayonet ring 113 biases the secondannular reference surface 111 of thestator housing 13 downward onto the firstannular reference surface 109 of thepump housing 11. -
Figs. 19a-c show the lid or cap 21 of thestator housing 13 in different views. Thecap 21 comprises two materials, a first electrically insulatingmaterial 139 at the outer side of thecap 21 and a heat-conductivesecond material 141 at the inner side of thecap 21. Thefirst material 139 of thecap 21 may be the same as thesecond material 124 of thestator 17. The heat-conductive material 141 may comprise a metal or a plastic with heat-conductive additives such as graphite carbon fibers and/or ceramics like boron nitride. As the heat-conductive material 141 is usually less suitable for electric insulation, the first heat-conductive material 141 is only at the inside of thecap 21 and not at the outside. The inner side of thefirst material 139 may be at least partially overmoulded with the heat-conductive material 141. The heat-conductive material 141 is useful to dissipate heat from thePCB 15 which extends in a plane essentially perpendicular to the rotor axis R close to the inner side of thecap 21. It is particularly advantageous that thecap 21 comprises afront face 19 that extends essentially parallel to thePCB 15, i.e. essentially perpendicular to the rotor axis R, and a radiallyouter wall 143 extending essentially parallel to the rotor axis R. Thereby, the heat-conductive material 141 can not only extend essentially parallel to thefront face 19 at the inner side of thecap 21, but also essentially parallel to the radiallyouter wall 143 at the inner side of thecap 21. This has the advantage that the heat from thePCB 15 is effectively dissipated when thepump assembly 1 is installed in a horizontal as well as in a vertical rotor axis orientation. This is, because the heat-conductive material 141 is most efficient when a convection hot air stream is able to flow along the outer side of thefirst material 139 to cool down. As the convection hot air stream is mainly vertical, it is advantageous to have the heat-conductive material 141 close to thePCB 15 extending in a vertical direction irrespective of the installation orientation of the rotor axis R of thepump assembly 1. The surface of the heat-conductive material 141 that is facing thePCB 15 is terraced corresponding to the layout of the PCB, so that a direct contact or only a minimal gap between the electronic components on thePCB 15 and the heat-conductive material 141 is achieved over most of the area of thePCB 15 to facilitate a most efficient heat transfer from the components of thePCB 15 to the heat-conductive material 141, preferably indirectly conveyed by a heat-conductive paste arranged between the heat-conductive material 141 and the electronic components on thePCB 15. -
Fig. 19c indicates by dashes in thesecond material 141 that thesecond material 141 is not fully homogeneous, but has an inner structure defining a certain spatial orientation of thesecond material 141. The spatial orientation of the inner structure of thesecond material 141 basically follows a flow path that thesecond material 141 took during the overmoulding of the inner side of thecap 21. Therefore, thesecond material 141 comprises at least onefirst area 145, where the spatial orientation is predominantly parallel to the rotor axis (R), and at least onesecond area 147, where the spatial orientation is predominantly perpendicular to the rotor axis (R). The first area(s) 145 mark the area(s) at or around injection point(s) of thesecond material 141 during overmoulding. The second area(s) 147 mark the area(s) where thesecond material 141 flows along the inner side of thefront face 19. It was found that the spatial orientation of the inner structure of thesecond material 141 has a significant influence on the heat-conducting properties. Heat conduction along the spatial orientation of the inner structure of thesecond material 141 is better than perpendicular to it. Therefore, thefirst area 145 of thesecond material 141 has a first direction 149 of predominant heat-conduction perpendicular to thefront face 19, whereas thesecond area 147 of thesecond material 141 has asecond direction 151 of predominant heat-conduction parallel to thefront face 19 or the radiallyouter wall 143 of thecap 21. The lateral location of the injection point(s) of thesecond material 141 during overmoulding may thus be wisely chosen to define the first area(s) 145, where the hottest electronic components are located on thePCB 15. This facilitates the heat dissipation from the components on thePCB 15 into thesecond material 141, which spreads the heat laterally via the second area(s) 147. Thefirst material 139 may act as a heat sink that is cooled by an ambient convection air stream along thefront face 19 and/or the radiallyouter wall 143 of thecap 21. - Where, in the foregoing description, integers or elements are mentioned which have known, obvious or foreseeable equivalents, then such equivalents are herein incorporated as if individually set forth. Reference should be made to the claims for determining the true scope of the present invention. It will also be appreciated by the reader that integers or features of the disclosure that are described as optional, preferable, advantageous, convenient or the like are optional and do not limit the scope of the independent claim.
- The above embodiments are to be understood as illustrative examples of the invention. It is to be understood that any feature described in relation to any one embodiment may be used alone, or in combination with other features described, and may also be used in combination with one or more features of any other of the embodiments, or any combination of any other of the embodiments. While at least one exemplary embodiment has been shown and described, it should be understood that other modifications, substitutions and alternatives are apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art and may be changed without departing from the scope of the subject matter described herein, and this application is intended to cover any adaptations or variations of the specific embodiments discussed herein. The scope of protection is solely defined by the claims.
- In addition, "comprising" does not exclude other elements or steps, and "a" or "one" does not exclude a plural number. Furthermore, characteristics or steps which have been described with reference to one of the above exemplary embodiments may also be used in combination with other characteristics or steps of other exemplary embodiments described above. Method steps may be applied in any order or in parallel or may constitute a part or a more detailed version of another method step. It should be understood that there should be embodied within the scope of the patent warranted hereon all such modifications as reasonably and properly come within the scope of the contribution to the art. Such modifications, substitutions and alternatives can be made without departing from the scope of the invention, which is solely defined by the claims.
-
- 1
- pump assembly
- 2
- pump unit
- 3
- input port
- 5
- output port
- 7
- connector flange
- 9
- connector flange
- 11
- pump housing
- 12
- impeller
- 13
- stator and/or electronics housing
- 15
- printed circuit board (PCB)
- 17
- stator
- 19
- front face of the cap of the stator housing
- 21
- cap of the stator housing
- 23
- impeller chamber
- 25
- concentric bottom entry
- 27
- tangential exit
- 29
- neck ring
- 31
- inner spiral vanes
- 33
- impeller plate
- 35
- circular opening
- 37
- inward projection
- 39
- axial annular stop surface of the pump housing
- 41
- bearing retainer
- 43
- bearing retainer flange
- 45
- rotor axle
- 47
- first radial bearing ring
- 49
- axial bearing plate
- 51
- rotor
- 53
- second radial bearing ring
- 55
- bearing bushing
- 57
- rotor can
- 63
- rotor can flange
- 65
- radial inner centring surface
- 67
- radial outer centring surface
- 69
- radial outer bearing retainer surface
- 70
- radial projections of the radial outer bearing retainer surface
- 71
- first radial inner reference surface
- 72
- radial projections of the radial outer centring surface
- 73
- circumferential groove of the rotor can flange
- 75
- radial inner section of the rotor can flange
- 77
- radial outer section of the rotor can flange
- 79
- annular stop surface of the rotor can flange
- 81
- radially outward end of the annular stop surface of the rotor can flange
- 83
- radially inward end of the annular stop surface of the rotor can flange
- 84
- sealing ring
- 85
- locking ring
- 87
- circumferential groove of the pump housing
- 89
- annular contact surface of the rotor can flange
- 91
- annular biasing surface of the bearing retainer flange
- 93
- bearing retainer flange section
- 94
- axial projections
- 95
- radially inward end of the bearing retainer flange section
- 99
- first pre-assembled unit
- 101
- second pre-assembled unit
- 105
- radial outer surface
- 107
- radial inner surface
- 109
- first annular reference surface
- 110
- radial inner surface
- 111
- second annular reference surface
- 112
- milling edge
- 113
- bayonet ring
- 114
- stator core
- 115
- second radial inner reference surface
- 117
- radial outer alignment surface
- 118
- stator ring
- 119
- circumferential first sections of the bayonet ring
- 120
- stator teeth
- 121
- circumferential second sections of the bayonet ring
- 122
- first material of the stator
- 123
- bayonet grooves
- 124
- second material of the stator
- 125
- radially outer surface of the stator housing
- 126
- radially inner surface of the stator ring
- 127
- circumferential groove of the pump housing
- 128
- radially outer surface of the stator ring
- 129
- first section of a bayonet groove
- 130
- bobbin webs
- 131
- second section of a bayonet groove
- 133
- first end of the second section of a bayonet groove
- 135
- second end of the second section of a bayonet groove
- 137
- end section of a bayonet groove
- 139
- first material of the cap of the stator housing
- 141
- second material of the cap of the stator housing
- 143
- radially outer wall of the cap of the stator housing
- 145
- first area of the first material of the cap of the stator housing
- 147
- second area of the first material of the cap of the stator housing
- 149
- first direction of predominant heat dissipation
- 151
- second direction of predominant heat dissipation
- R
- rotor axis
- H
- radial gap of the rotor can
- G
- radial gap of the neck ring
- α
- apex angle of conical bearing retainer flange section
- β
-
Claims (13)
- A pump assembly (1) comprising- a rotor axle (45) extending along a rotor axis (R),- an impeller (12) fixed to the rotor axle (45),- a pump housing (11) accommodating the impeller (12), wherein the pump housing (11) defines a first radial inner reference surface (71),- a drive motor comprising a stator (17) and a rotor (51), wherein the rotor (51) is fixed to the rotor axle (45) for driving the impeller (12),- a rotor can (57) accommodating the rotor (51), wherein the rotor can (57) comprises a rotor can flange (63),- a stator housing (13) accommodating the stator (17),- a first radial bearing ring (47) being in sliding contact with the rotor axle (45), and- a bearing retainer (41) embracing the first radial bearing ring (47) and centring the first radial bearing ring (47) with respect to the first radial inner reference surface (71) of the pump housing (11), wherein the rotor can flange (63) has a radial distance (H) to the pump housing (11), and wherein the rotor can flange (63) comprises an annular contact surface (89) facing towards the impeller (12),characterised in that
the rotor can (57) comprises a radial inner centring surface (65) being centred by radially abutting against a radial outer centring surface (67) of the bearing retainer (41),
the bearing retainer (41) comprises an annular biasing surface (91) facing away from the impeller (12), wherein the bearing retainer (41) is resiliently preloaded for biasing the annular biasing surface (91) of the bearing retainer (41) against the annular contact surface (89) of the rotor can flange (63), and
wherein the annular contact surface (89) of the rotor can flange (63) and/or the annular biasing surface (91) of the bearing retainer (41) have at least three axial projections (94). - The pump assembly (1) according to claim 1, wherein the radial inner centring surface (65) of the rotor can (57) and/or the radial outer centring surface (67) of the bearing retainer (41) have at least three radial projections (72).
- The pump assembly (1) according to claim 1 or 2, wherein the bearing retainer (41) comprises a radial outer bearing retainer surface (69) having at least three radial projections (70) radially abutting against the first radial inner reference surface (71) of the pump housing (11) and centring the bearing retainer (41) with respect to the first radial inner reference surface (71) of the pump housing (11).
- The pump assembly (1) according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the rotor can flange (63) forms a circumferential U-shaped groove (73) with a radial inner section (75) and a radial outer section (77), wherein the radial inner section (75) forms the radial inner centring surface (65) of the rotor can (57).
- The pump assembly (1) according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the rotor can flange (63) comprises an annularstop surface (79) facing away from the impeller (12).
- The pump assembly (1) according to claim 5, further comprising a locking ring (85) being secured in a circumferential groove (87) of the pump housing (11), wherein the annular stop surface (79) axially abuts against the locking ring (85).
- The pump assembly (1) according to any of the preceding claims, further comprising a neck ring (29) being fixed to the pump housing (11), wherein the impeller (12) is located axially between the bearing retainer (41) and the neck ring (29), wherein the neck ring (29) comprises a cylindrical section (30) at least partially extending into the impeller (12).
- The pump assembly (1) according to claim 7, wherein the cylindrical section (30) comprises a radial outer gap surface (105) and the impeller (12) comprises a radial inner gap surface (107), wherein the radial outer gap surface (105) of the cylindrical section (30) and the radial inner gap surface (107) of the impeller (12) have a radial distance defining a gap (G).
- The pump assembly (1) according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the pump housing (11) defines a first annular reference surface (109) facing away from the impeller (12) and the stator housing (13) defines a second annular reference surface (111) facing towards the impeller (12), wherein the second annular reference surface (111) is biased against the first annular reference surface (109).
- The pump assembly (1) according to claim 9, wherein the stator (17) defines a second radial inner reference surface (115) and the rotor can (57) comprises a radial outer alignment surface (117) being aligned perpendicular to the first annular reference surface (109) of the pump housing (11) by radially abutting against the second radial inner reference surface (115) of the stator (17).
- The pump assembly (1) according to claim 9 or 10, wherein the first annular reference surface (109) is located radially more outward than the first radial inner reference surface (71) and/or the first annular reference surface (109) is located axially further away from the impeller (12) than the first radial inner reference surface (71).
- The pump assembly (1) according to claim 10 or 11, wherein the second radial inner reference surface (115) is located radially more inward than the second annular reference surface (111) and/or the second radial inner reference surface (115) is located axially further away from the impeller (12) than the second annular reference surface (111).
- The pump assembly (1) according to any of the preceding claims, further comprising a bayonet ring (113) for securing the stator housing (13) to the pump housing (11), wherein the bayonet ring (113) is resiliently preloaded for axially biasing the stator housing (13) against the pump housing (11) towards the impeller (12).
Priority Applications (3)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
EP18212325.7A EP3667092B1 (en) | 2018-12-13 | 2018-12-13 | Pump assembly |
US16/712,054 US20200191161A1 (en) | 2018-12-13 | 2019-12-12 | Pump assembly |
CN201911284108.7A CN111322248A (en) | 2018-12-13 | 2019-12-13 | Pump assembly |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
EP18212325.7A EP3667092B1 (en) | 2018-12-13 | 2018-12-13 | Pump assembly |
Publications (2)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
EP3667092A1 EP3667092A1 (en) | 2020-06-17 |
EP3667092B1 true EP3667092B1 (en) | 2021-08-18 |
Family
ID=64665329
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
EP18212325.7A Active EP3667092B1 (en) | 2018-12-13 | 2018-12-13 | Pump assembly |
Country Status (3)
Country | Link |
---|---|
US (1) | US20200191161A1 (en) |
EP (1) | EP3667092B1 (en) |
CN (1) | CN111322248A (en) |
Families Citing this family (5)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
EP3667089A1 (en) * | 2018-12-13 | 2020-06-17 | Grundfos Holding A/S | Pump assembly |
TWI704291B (en) * | 2019-08-12 | 2020-09-11 | 訊凱國際股份有限公司 | Magnetic drive pump |
JP7018081B2 (en) * | 2020-02-13 | 2022-02-09 | シナノケンシ株式会社 | Electric pump |
TWM638533U (en) * | 2022-09-28 | 2023-03-11 | 訊凱國際股份有限公司 | proportional valve |
CN116505697A (en) * | 2023-05-24 | 2023-07-28 | 上海鸣志电器股份有限公司 | Shielding tank for pump and manufacturing method thereof |
Family Cites Families (6)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
DE4304149C1 (en) * | 1993-02-12 | 1994-09-08 | Grundfos As | Self-priming motor pump unit |
DE102004058591A1 (en) * | 2004-11-26 | 2006-06-01 | Laing, Oliver | Circulation pump and method for producing a circulation pump |
EP2072828B1 (en) | 2007-12-17 | 2018-03-28 | Grundfos Management A/S | Wet-running centrifugal pump |
US8083500B1 (en) * | 2008-06-11 | 2011-12-27 | AquaMotion, Inc. | Motor pump |
PL2610497T3 (en) * | 2011-12-27 | 2017-06-30 | Grundfos Holding A/S | Pump power unit |
EP3382206B1 (en) * | 2017-03-31 | 2020-12-16 | Grundfos Holding A/S | Pump assembly |
-
2018
- 2018-12-13 EP EP18212325.7A patent/EP3667092B1/en active Active
-
2019
- 2019-12-12 US US16/712,054 patent/US20200191161A1/en not_active Abandoned
- 2019-12-13 CN CN201911284108.7A patent/CN111322248A/en active Pending
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
CN111322248A (en) | 2020-06-23 |
EP3667092A1 (en) | 2020-06-17 |
US20200191161A1 (en) | 2020-06-18 |
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