[0001] The present invention relates to a fluid operated linear actuator comprising a cylinder
and a reciprocable piston within said cylinder, and in particular is directed to a
pneumatic or hydraulic actuator comprising a centrifugally actuated control means
by which a extremely precise control of the stroke and positioning of the piston is
possible.
[0002] The use of linear actuators, be they pneumatically or hydraulically operated ones,
is widespread in many sectors on account of the undoubted advantages which they offer
compared to electromechanical or other types of actuators, in particular on account
of the high level of power or high working speeds, as well as the flexibility in use
which is generally possible with such actuators.
[0003] However, in automated or robot-controlled manufacturing systems, which require the
use of sophisticated machines or equipment and suitable programming of the working
cycles, linear actuators are used to little advantage and are unsuited owing to their
insufficient working flexibility and limited positioning stability. For example, the
high working speed of a pneumatic linear actuator is offset by a limited degree of
precision or low resolution as regards positioning and the difficulty of programming
operational cycles, while maintaining close control of the operational parameters,
in particular the obtained position.
[0004] Therefore, fluid pressure operated actuators of the type referred above have included
various types of braking systems for positioning and preventing relative movement
between the piston and the cylinder; some examples of said actuators are disclosed
in many patents or published patent applications such as: DE-A- 2034826, GB-A- 683633,
GB-A- 2154282, US-A- 2804053 and US-A-2801615. In particular, from GB-A- 683633 and
GB-A- 2154282 fluid pressure operated actuators are known in which a reciprocable
piston member is slidably movable within a cylinder and is threadably, engaged with
a screw shaft axially extending through said piston and said cylinder which screw
shaft is connected to a pressure operated braking device to held the piston at any
desired position along the length of its stroke; in addition in the actuator of GB-A-
2154282, a signal generator is provided within the cylinder and is connected to the
screw shaft to provide a required degree of linear accurancy in positioning the piston
within the cylinder. All braking or locking systems provided in said known actuator
devices make use of rigid friction members which are to be kept sufficiently spaced
apart to allow rotational movement of the screw shaft causing a retarded braking action
and consequently an inaccurate positioning of the piston in the cylinder.
[0005] It has also been proposed to use an electromagnetic braking device with a cylinder,
by operativally connecting it to a hollow piston by a ball nut-screw and a screw shaft
which actuates an encoder controlled by a microprocessor. This solution, although
it allows flexibility of use and control of the speed and position of the piston,
nevertheless has considerable limitations and drawbacks resulting from the constructional
features of the cylinder and the braking system. In particular the use of a ball screw
in combination with an electromagnetic brake does not allow a high degree of positional
control owing to the poor resolution which can be achieved. The braking system is,
moreover, extremely expensive, when compared to the cost of the cylinder, and does
not allow any miniaturization or any substantial reduction in the dimensions of the
overall device without adversely affecting the positional control of the piston.
[0006] An object of the present invention is to provide a fluid operated linear actuator
of the kind mentioned above, provided with a braking system which can be strictly
controlled and which allows an extremely high degree of positioning accuracy, with
a resolution of the order of hundreths, not possible with other known systems; this
allows to more appropriately use the intrinsic features of fluid operated actuators.
[0007] A further object of the present invention is to provide a pneumatic or hydraulic
cylinder provided with a centrifugally controlled braking device, which enables the
overall dimensions to be considerably reduced while maintaining a compact structure
and a high degree of stability of the actuator as regards positioning and control
of the stroke, at comparatively low cost.
[0008] A further object of the present invention is to provide a linear actuator which can
be programmed and controlled by an electronic processing unit and designed to allow
operation at different speeds and stopping in short time, so as to considerably reduce
the downtime and the duration of the working cycle, while maintaining a high degree
of reliability.
[0009] A further object of the present invention is to provide a pneumatic or hydraulic
linear actuator as referred to above, by means of which it is possible to obtain a
very high working thrust, while at the same time requiring a relatively small braking
and stopping torque which ensure positional stability even when the actuator is under
loaded conditions in a slanted or vertical plane.
[0010] These and further objects of the invention can be achieved by means of a pressure
fluid operated linear actuator comprising the characteristic features of claim 1.
[0011] The possibility of connecting an encoder to the screw shaft of the brake or of using,
by way of an alternative, magnetically actuated limit switches or proximity switches,
enables the cylinder to be associated with electronic or electric control circuits
which can also be housed in the same actuator.
[0012] The actuator can be realized equally well with a normally active brake or with a
passive brake, whilst maintaining all the characteristic features and fundamental
principle of the invention; it is important, for the purposes of operational homogeneity,
to actuate the brake using the same fluid operating the piston.
[0013] Some embodiments of linear actuators according to the invention will be described
hereinbelow, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
Fig. 1 is a longitudinal sectional view of a first embodiment of a linear actuator
provided with a passive brake;
Fig. 2 is an enlarged cross-sectional view along the line 2-2 of figure 1;
Fig. 3 is an enlarged detail of Fig. 1;
Fig. 4 is a longitudinal sectional view through an actuator according to a second
embodiment of the invention, provided with an active brake;
Fig. 5 shows a first variation of the braking device;
Fig. 6 shows a second variation of the braking device;
Fig. 7 shows the device in figure 1, with a self-aligning nut screw.
[0014] With reference to figures 1 to 3, we shall describe a first embodiment of the linear
actuator according to the invention.
[0015] As shown in figure 1, the linear actuator comprises a cylinder 10 provided with a
braking device 11 provided in a rear extension 28 of the cylinder, which braking device
is operationally connected by means of a worm-screw system to a piston 17 reciprocable
within the cylinder 10.
[0016] The cylinder 10 comprises a barrel 12 closed by a front head-piece 13 and by an intermediate
head-piece 14. 15 and 16 in figure 1 denote, respectively, the inlet and/or outlet
ports for a pressurized fluid, for example compressed air, through the two head-pieces
of the cylinder.
[0017] Inside the cylinder 10 slides, a piston member 17 having a hollow piston rod 18 axially
extending within the cylinder, which rod 18 is guided and protrudes outwardly from
the front head-piece 13 of the cylinder. The piston 17 is prevented from rotating,
providing means to prevent rotation during sliding movement of the piston 17, for
example by giving the said piston 17 and the barrel 12 of the cylinder a polygonal
cross-section, or by providing rods or guiding means for the piston inside or outside
the cylinder.
[0018] The piston 17 and the piston rod 18 are axially hollow so as to allow the passage
of a screw shaft 19 which is threadly engaged by a nut screw 20 fixed inside the piston
17.
[0019] The screw shaft 19 is connected or forms part of a control shaft 21 which extends
through the intermediate head piece 14 of the cylinder, said control shaft 21 being
connected to the braking device 11 described below.
[0020] The screw shaft 19 and the control shaft 21 for entraining the brake in rotation
are rotatably supported, by means a ball bearing 22 in the intermediate head-piece
14 of the cylinder and, respectively, by means of a bush 23 at the front end of the
screw shaft 19; the bush 23, in addition to support the screw shaft 19, also serves
to guide the rod 18 of the cylinder during its axial movement.
[0021] According to a characteristic feature of the invention, the mounting of the screw
shaft 19 into the nut screw 20 is of the direct type, that is with a long-pitch thread
so as to allow high speed of travel for the piston and high actuating power. The choice
of the screw pitch and its diameter may vary in each case; in general they must be
such as to allow a high reduction in the torque exerted on the braking device 11,
whilst ensuring a high degree of stoppage stability for the piston 17 and a brake
with considerably reduced dimensions.
[0022] Optionally, the piston 17 may comprise permanent magnets 24 which, during the reciprocating
movement, actuate switch devices or magnetic sensors 25, the position of which along
the cylinder 10 can be suitably adjusted; these sensors supply signals indicating
the position of the piston 17 to an electric or electronic control circuit, not shown.
[0023] In place of or in combination with the magnetic switch devices 25, the pneumatic
actuator may comprise a signal generator such as an encoder 26 designed to emit control
signals for controlling the position of the piston, within the cylinder, which signals
are sent to an electronic control unit, not shown. In particular, the encoder 26 is
connected, by means of a coupling 27, to the control shaft 21 and screw shaft 19 which
operate the braking device 11 so as to provide a direct relationship between the position
of the piston 17 within the cylinder and the control signals emitted by the encoder
26.
[0024] The braking device 11 according to the present invention is a braking device which
is controlled centrifugally and actuated by the same pressurized fluid which causes
travel of the piston; the braking device 11 may be equally well of the active type
or passive type, as described below.
[0025] The braking device 11 is provided inside an extension 28 of the barrel 12 of the
cylinder, suitably fixed at the opposite end of the intermediate head-piece 14 or
integral with said barrel 12; a third head-piece 29 defining the housing 30 for the
encoder 26 closes the brake housing at the rear.
[0026] The braking device 11, in the form shown in Fig. 1, essentially comprises a first
fixed braking disc 31, connected to the intermediate head-piece 14 of the cylinder,
as well as a second rotating braking disc 32 connected so as to rotate with the control
shaft 21 of the screw shaft 19.
[0027] This second braking disc 32, as shown in greater detail in Fig. 3, is made of elastically
yieldable material , for example elastomeric material or the like, and is provided
with a laterally protruding annular braking rim 33 facing towards the fixed braking
disc 31. The annular rim 33 may be formed or provided with a suitable layer of frictional
material having a high coefficient of friction, designed to cooperate with the fixed
disc 31 so as to brake the sliding movement of the piston 17 and to retain the same
steady in any desired position of its stroke.
[0028] The use of elastically flexible or yieldable material and the special shape of the
rotating braking disc 32, owing to the presence of the peripheral braking rim 33 which
locally displaces the centre of gravity to one side, towards the fixed braking disc
31, make it possible to use positively the centrifugal forces which are generated
on rotation of the braking disc 32 so as to move away the braking rim 33 and keep
it disengaged from the fixed disc 31 during actuation of the cylinder at the normal
speed of travel of the piston, whilst maintaining a very close arrangement of the
rim 33 with respect to the disc 31, so as to allow instantaneous operation of the
brake without idle time, so that the piston 17 is rapidly locked in position; in this
way it is possible to achieve a high factor of resolution for positioning of the piston,
which, as previously mentioned, may be within the order of a few hundreths of a mm.
This mode of operation is schematically shown in Fig. 3, where continuous lines and
phantom lines denote, respectively, the two positions of engagement and disengagement
between the annular rim 33 of the rotating disc 32 and the fixed braking disc 31,
owing to the lateral flexion of the disc 32 caused by the moment generated by the
centrifugal force as a result of the lateral disposition of the centre of gravity
of the abovementioned braking rim, with respect to the plane of symmetry of the disc
itself.
[0029] The centrifugal force on the rotating braking disc 32, which as a result of the displacement
of the centre of gravity of the rim 33 gives rise to a torque tending to move this
rim away from the fixed disc, therefore has the function of controlling the respective
engaged or disengaged positions of the brake; the actual braking action or force,
in the case of figure 1, however, is provided by a set of cup springs 34 or other
equivalent elastic means, located between a thrust member 35 which acts against the
braking disc 32 and counteracting elements 36 inside the sleeve 28.
[0030] In the example of figure 1, when the cylinder is at a standstill, the brake is normally
activated in that the springs 34 act on the thrust member 35 so as to move it forwards
and cause it to strongly press the rotating braking disc 32 against the fixed braking
disc 31.
[0031] Deactivation of the brake occurs in a manner which is controlled and coordinated
with the movement of the piston 17 of the actuator 10, using the same control fluid.
In fact, the thrust member 35 is connected to a hollow stem 37, coaxial with the shaft
21, which extends through the block 36 and is connected to the piston 38 of a single-acting
cylinder 39 forming part of the braking device 11. The cylinder 39 is supplied with
pressurized fluid through an inlet 40 so as to move the piston 38 and allow the backward
movement of the thrust member 35 against the action of the counter springs 34, when
the brake must be deactivated.
[0032] Operation of the actuator described, in brief, is as follows: let us assume that
the piston 17 is at a standstill in the position shown in Fig. 1 and that the solenoid
valves of the circuit supplying and controlling the actuator, not shown, cut off circulation
of the pressurized fluid; in these conditions, the brake control cylinder 39 will
be deactivated and the thrust member 35, owing to the action of the springs 34, will
act on the braking disc 32 so as to push it against the fixed braking disc, thereby
keeping the piston 17 in a stable position. The stable position of the piston 17 is
also ensured in the case where a high axial force acts on the stem 18 of the cylinder,
since this force is reduced considerably by means of the direct connection between
screw shaft 19 and nut screw 20 as a result of the long pitch of the thread and the
relatively small lever arm of the couple exerted by the nut screw, compared to the
mean lever arm exerted by the braking device. This makes it possible to operate with
comparatively small braking and locking forces and hence realize a braking device
11 of limited dimensions, such that it can be easily accommodated in the extension
of the barrel of the cylinder 10. In this way it is possible to realize an actuator
with extremely small overall dimensions, suitable even for cylinders of small diameter,
which have not been possible in operating and braking systems known hitherto.
[0033] If, at this point, pressurized fluid is supplied to the inlet 16 of the cylinder
and to the inlet 40 of the braking device, the cylinder 39 operating the brake will
allow the backward movement of the thrust member 35 which will release its pressure
and move away from the braking disc 32; at the same time, the piston 17 of the actuator
will be made to move forward.
[0034] With the forward movement of the piston 17, the screw shaft 19 and its control shaft
21 will be made to rotate, entraining the braking disc 32 in rotation. As soon as
the braking disc 32 starts to rotate rapidly, owing to the effect of the centrifugal
force it will tend to straighten or to flex elastically on the rear side, moving the
braking rim 33 away from the fixed braking disc 31. In this way the braking device,
after being deactivated, is centrifugally controlled and kept in the disengaged position,
allowing the piston 17 to travel freely in one direction since the rim 33 of the braking
disc 32 is arranged slightly removed, a short distance away from the disc 31, as shown
schematically in broken lines in Figure 3.
[0035] When the piston 17 approaches its stoppage position, at a predetermined point it
will be made to slow down by supplying a counter-pressure in the opposite chamber
of the cylinder so as to reduce rapidly the speed of travel, thereby ensuring that
the maximum amount of kinetic energy of the cylinder itself is absorbed.
[0036] Since, with slowing down of the piston 17, the speed of rotation of the braking disc
32 and hence the centrifugal effect acting on the latter will be reduced considerably,
the braking disc 32, as a result of its elastic action, will move the rim 33 towards
the braking disc 31, exerting a slight pressure on the latter. At this point, release
of the pressure in the cylinder 39 of the brake will allow the springs 34 to act on
the thruster 35, moving it forwards so as to press the braking disc 32 firmly against
the fixed braking disc 31. In this way, the piston 17 of the actuator will be stopped
in the desired position, controlled by the encoder 26. Given the reversibility of
the coupling consisting of screw shaft 19 and nut screw 20, operation of the cylinder
10 and the braking device 11 will still be in the manner illustrated above, but with
reversal of the travel of the piston 17.
[0037] Figure 4 of the accompanying drawings shows and alternative solution as regards the
braking device 10 which in this case allows an active action, opposite to that of
the braking device 10 in the preceding example.
[0038] In figure 4, parts identical or equivalent to those in figure 1 have been denoted
by the same reference numbers. The example in figure 4 differs from that shown in
figure 1 in that the rotating braking disc 32 is in the form of a piston member having
an annular braking rim on one side and a peripheral lip on the opposite side, which
piston member is actuated, during activation of the brake, by the pressurized fluid
in place of the elastic means or the counter springs 34 previously mentioned. Therefore,
in the case of figure 4, the rotating braking disc 32 is directly designed as means
for activating the brake, while centrifugal control of the braking disc 32 is still
possible in the deactivated condition of the brake during travel of the piston 17
in either direction. Therefore, in the case of figure 4 also, the forward and backward
movement of the piston 17, by means of the worm nut-screw coupling 19, 20, will cause
rotation of the control shaft 21 and, therefore, when there is no pressure in the
cylinder 19, will allow the disc 32 to move away from the disc 31 as a result of the
centrifugal force exerted by rotation of the disc 32 itself. In all cases, a pneumatic
or hydraulic actuator is achieved, comprising a centrifugally controlled brake means
which is operated, during activation or deactivation, by the same pressurized fluid,
so as to ensure a precise stopping action and stable positioning of the piston 17
in any programmable position controlled by means of the encoder 26, while observing
very rigorous positioning tolerances of the order of one hundreths of a millimetre.
In this way, extreme reliability of operation and stable positioning, not possible
with the currently known linear actuators, is ensured. The actual arrangement of the
braking device, in addition to achieving the aforementioned advantages, owing to the
considerable reduction in the overall dimensions, allows the braking device to be
applied even to cylinders of considerably small dimensions. In this way a programmable
linear actuator is achieved, which is able to ensure extremely reliable operation
and a high degree of positioning accuracy, thus making it extremely flexible and utilizable
in several application fields as well as sophisticated technologies. Finally, as a
result of the homogeneous nature of the energy sources for the cylinder and the braking
device, it is possible to combine features which are difficult to reconcile together
in the same actuator, such as fast working speed, efficient braking action and high
positioning accuracy.
[0039] Figures 5 and 6 show some possible variations of the movable braking disc 32. In
the preceding examples, the braking rim 33 protrudes on the same side of the fixed
braking ring or disc 31, or equivalent braking element, so as to obtain lateral displacement
of the centre of gravity of the abovementioned ring which is directed towards the
fixed braking element, so as to exploit the centrifugal effect in order to move one
braking element away from the other. The same effect can be achieved with the solution
of figure 5 or with that of figure 6.
[0040] Both in figure 5 and in figure 6, the disc 32 along the peripheral rim 33 has a braking
ring 33a consisting of material with a high coefficient of friction; the braking rim
33 in these cases does not protrude from the plane of the disc; however, the higher
weight of the braking ring 33a is such as to cause a forward displacement of the centre
of gravity of the entire braking rim, therefore still allowing the centrifugal effect
to be used to advantage in the manner previously mentioned; this centrifugal effect
which detaches the movable disc from the fixed disc can be accentuated or improved,
for example designed so as to be slightly conical with respect to the disc 32, as
shown in figure 6.
[0041] Figure 7 of the drawings shows a further characteristic feature of the actuator according
to the present invention, which allows free orientation and displacement of the piston
17 and its hollow stem 18 with respect to the screw shaft 19 and the nut screw 20;
this solution proves to be particularly useful for pneumatic actuators where the piston
has a small degree of play with respect to the barrel of the cylinder, which, in the
event of unbalanced loads, can cause slight axial displacement between worm screw
and hollow stem of the piston.
[0042] Therefore, unlike the preceding cases where a fixed connection between hollow piston
17 and screw nut 20 was used, in the case of figure 7 the nut screw is supported by
the piston 17, in a floating and self-aligning manner, so as to allow both a different
angular orientation and a relative radial displacement, while preventing any displacement
between the two parts in the axial direction so as not to adversely affect the positioning
control of the said piston.
[0043] The above was obtained by providing sufficient radial play between the nut screw
20 and the hollow piston 17, supporting this screw nut by means of two opposing self-aligning
bearings arranged on the two sides of a radial flange 42. The nut screw 20 is prevented
from rotating with respect to the piston 17, for example by means of diametrically
opposite pins 43 slidably inserted in respective holes 44 in the nut screw 20 and
in an elongated hole or eyelet 45 in the piston, oriented in the axial direction of
the actuator.
[0044] Unlike conventional self-aligning bearings, which allow a different angular arrangement
of two axes, the use of self-aligning bearings in which the races of the balls consist
of an annular surfaces arranged in a radial plane, and the corresponding possibility
for the nut screw 20 to perform a translational movement parallel to itself, without
any displacement in the axial direction, advantageously also allow a skew arrangement
of the screw shaft and the associated nut screw, with respect to the piston of the
actuator.
[0045] Another possibility for angular adaptation of the hollow rod 18 of the piston also
exists by providing this rod with a head 18' delimited by a spherical surface portion
46 inside a seat provided by a sleeve 47 which extends from one side of the hollow
piston 17; a pin 48 allows small angular oscillations of the rod 18 with respect to
the piston 17, preventing it from rotating.
[0046] It can be understood, therefore, that the above explanations and illustrations in
the accompanying drawings have been given purely by way of example and that other
modifications or variations may be made both to the pneumatic cylinder of the actuator
and to the braking or control device without thereby departing from the present invention.
1. A fluid operated linear actuator, comprising a cylinder (10) ,a piston member (17)
reciprocable in said cylinder (10) and a screw shaft (19) rotatably extending in said
cylinder (10), said screw shaft (19) threadly engaging said piston member (17) for
rotation during relative axial movement between said piston member (17) and said cylinder
(10) and a braking device (11) operationally connected to said screw shaft (19), said
braking device comprising first frictional member (31) connected to said cylinder
(10) and second frictional member (32) rotatably connected to said screw shaft (19),
characterized in that said braking device is in the form of a centrifugally controlled
and fluid operated braking means (33, 38; 39), said braking means (33, 38;39) comprising
a braking annular member (33) rotatably connected to said screw shaft (19) by an elastically
flexible connecting member, the centre of gravity of said annular braking member (33)
being displaced to one side and towards said first braking member (31).
2. Actuator according to Claim 1, characterized in that said annular braking member
(33) and said connecting member are in the form of a disc element (32).
3. Actuator according to Claims 1 or 2, characterized in that said annular braking
member (33) protrudes from one side.
4. Actuator according to Claim 2, characterized in that said disc element (32) is
in the form of a flat disc.
5. Actuator according to Claim 2, characterized in that said disc element (32) is
in the form of a conical disc.
6. Actuator according to Claim 1, characterized in that said fluid operated braking
means act in the same direction of activation of the brake.
7. Actuator according to Claim 1, characterized in that said fluid operated braking
means act in the opposite direction of activation of the brake and biasing means (34)
being provided between a shoulder (36) and a fluid actuate thrust member (35).
8. Actuator according to Claim 7, characterized in that said fluid operated braking
means comprises a thrust member (35) on one side of said second braking member (32),
said thrust member (35) being connected to the piston (38) of a control cylinder (39)
acting in opposite direction to said biasing means (34).
9. Actuator according to Claim 1, characterized in that said screw shaft (19) is rotatably
and slidably supported inside a hollow rod (18) of the piston (17).
10. Actuator according to Claim 1, characterized in that said braking means are integral
with the piston member (39) of a control cylinder (11) for actuating the braking means.
11. Actuator according to Claim 1, characterized in that a signal emitter (26) for
controlling the movement of the piston member (17) is connected to the screw shaft
(19) of the braking device.
12. Actuator according to Claim 1, characterized in that said piston member (17) comprises
magnetic means (24) and in that magnetic sensing means (25) are provided along said
cylinder (10) for detecting the positions to stop said piston member (17).
13. Actuator according to Claims 1 and 11, characterized in that said braking means
(33, 38; 39) and said signal emitter (26) are provided in a rear extension of the
cylinder (10).