GB1566576A

GB1566576A – Piston rings and vacuum pumps
– Google Patents

GB1566576A – Piston rings and vacuum pumps
– Google Patents
Piston rings and vacuum pumps

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Publication number
GB1566576A

GB1566576A
GB13988/78A
GB1398878A
GB1566576A
GB 1566576 A
GB1566576 A
GB 1566576A
GB 13988/78 A
GB13988/78 A
GB 13988/78A
GB 1398878 A
GB1398878 A
GB 1398878A
GB 1566576 A
GB1566576 A
GB 1566576A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
piston
ring
cylinder
groove
gas
Prior art date
1975-12-24
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.)

Expired

Application number
GB13988/78A
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization CSIRO

Original Assignee
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization CSIRO
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
1975-12-24
Filing date
1976-12-21
Publication date
1980-05-08

1976-12-21
Application filed by Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization CSIRO
filed
Critical
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization CSIRO

1980-05-08
Publication of GB1566576A
publication
Critical
patent/GB1566576A/en

Status
Expired
legal-status
Critical
Current

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Classifications

F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING

F04—POSITIVE – DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS

F04B—POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS

F04B25/00—Multi-stage pumps

F04B25/02—Multi-stage pumps of stepped piston type

F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING

F04—POSITIVE – DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS

F04B—POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS

F04B27/00—Multi-cylinder pumps specially adapted for elastic fluids and characterised by number or arrangement of cylinders

F04B27/02—Multi-cylinder pumps specially adapted for elastic fluids and characterised by number or arrangement of cylinders having cylinders arranged oppositely relative to main shaft

F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING

F04—POSITIVE – DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS

F04B—POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS

F04B39/00—Component parts, details, or accessories, of pumps or pumping systems specially adapted for elastic fluids, not otherwise provided for in, or of interest apart from, groups F04B25/00 – F04B37/00

F04B39/04—Measures to avoid lubricant contaminating the pumped fluid

F04B39/041—Measures to avoid lubricant contaminating the pumped fluid sealing for a reciprocating rod

F04B39/042—Measures to avoid lubricant contaminating the pumped fluid sealing for a reciprocating rod sealing being provided on the piston

F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING

F16—ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL

F16J—PISTONS; CYLINDERS; SEALINGS

F16J15/00—Sealings

F16J15/16—Sealings between relatively-moving surfaces

F16J15/32—Sealings between relatively-moving surfaces with elastic sealings, e.g. O-rings

F16J15/3204—Sealings between relatively-moving surfaces with elastic sealings, e.g. O-rings with at least one lip

F16J15/3208—Sealings between relatively-moving surfaces with elastic sealings, e.g. O-rings with at least one lip provided with tension elements, e.g. elastic rings

F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING

F16—ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL

F16J—PISTONS; CYLINDERS; SEALINGS

F16J15/00—Sealings

F16J15/16—Sealings between relatively-moving surfaces

F16J15/32—Sealings between relatively-moving surfaces with elastic sealings, e.g. O-rings

F16J15/3284—Sealings between relatively-moving surfaces with elastic sealings, e.g. O-rings characterised by their structure; Selection of materials

F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING

F16—ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL

F16J—PISTONS; CYLINDERS; SEALINGS

F16J9/00—Piston-rings, e.g. non-metallic piston-rings, seats therefor; Ring sealings of similar construction

F16J9/06—Piston-rings, e.g. non-metallic piston-rings, seats therefor; Ring sealings of similar construction using separate springs or elastic elements expanding the rings; Springs therefor ; Expansion by wedging

F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING

F16—ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL

F16J—PISTONS; CYLINDERS; SEALINGS

F16J9/00—Piston-rings, e.g. non-metallic piston-rings, seats therefor; Ring sealings of similar construction

F16J9/28—Piston-rings, e.g. non-metallic piston-rings, seats therefor; Ring sealings of similar construction of non-metals

F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING

F05—INDEXING SCHEMES RELATING TO ENGINES OR PUMPS IN VARIOUS SUBCLASSES OF CLASSES F01-F04

F05C—INDEXING SCHEME RELATING TO MATERIALS, MATERIAL PROPERTIES OR MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS FOR MACHINES, ENGINES OR PUMPS OTHER THAN NON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT MACHINES OR ENGINES

F05C2225/00—Synthetic polymers, e.g. plastics; Rubber

F05C2225/04—PTFE [PolyTetraFluorEthylene]

Description

(54) PISTON RINGS AND VACUUM PUMPS
(71) We, COMMONWEALTH
SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL
RESEARCH ORGANIZATION, a Body
Corporate established under the Science and Industry Research Act 1949, of
Limestone Avenue, Campbell, Australian
Capital Territory, Commonwealth of
Australia do hereby declare the invention for which we pray that a patent may be granted to us and the method by which it is to be performed, to be particularly described in and by the following statement:- This invention relates to reciprocatory piston and cylinder vacuum pumps and to piston rings for such pumps. It is applicable for example to vacuum pumps of the piston and cylinder type which can operate without use of a lubricating or sealing liquid and which can be used as backing pumps for electron microscopes.
This invention is divided out of our copending British Patent Application 53342/76 (Serial No 1566575).
At present almost all electron microscopes are equipped with pumping systems based on oil diffusion pumps backed by oil-filled rotary mechanical pumps of the vane type. Consequently, a considerable part of the residual gas in the columns of these microscopes is contributed by molecules of oil and fragments of oil molecules, so a contaminating layer of carbonaceous material is deposited on the specimen and on all surfaces irradiated by the electron beam. The contamination of the specimen can be substantially reduced by surrounding it with a liquid nitrogen cooled trap and this practice is widely adopted.
The problem of contamination in electron microscopes could best be avoided by the use of oil-free pumps. Most previous attempts to produce oil-free pumps have involved modifications of the rotary type pumps and have been unsuccessful but
Australian Patent Specification No. 481,072 does disclose a pump of the reciprocating piston and cylinder type which is capable of producing high vacuum conditions without the use of lubricating and sealing oil.
However, the vacuum which can be achieved with a piston and cylinder type of pump operating under oil-free conditions is limited by difficulties in sealing against gas leakage into the working spaces of the pump and, in conventional constructions, by the need to have valves which need to be subjected to gas pressure to open. The vacuum that can be produced in the high vacuum stage of a multi-stage pump can then be determined by the pressure required to open an exhaust valve in that stage of the pump.
Further, in any reciprocatory piston and cylinder machine which is to operate without cylinder lubrication a major problem arises in the provision of sliding seals for the piston/cylinder interface. The invention further provides novel types of seals which have proved most reliable in service and have allowed most effective sealing to be maintained over extended periods of operation.
According to the present invention there is provided a piston ring for a reciprocatory piston and cylinder machine and formed as a circumferentially continuous ring having a generally cylindrical outer peripheral surface and adjacent that outer surface an annular groove in one side of the ring to divide the ring into an inner portion and an outer peripheral skirt portion of substantially constant thickness and thinner in cross-section than the inner portion, the skirt portion being integrally connected to the inner portion at the root of the groove and being capable of flexure laterally of the groove.
The invention also relates according to another of its aspects to a vacuum pump comprising:
a cylinder having a first portion closed at one end and a second portion contiguous with, but of smaller diameter than, a first portion;
a piston having a head portion slidable in the first cylinder portion and a second piston portion of smaller diameter than the head portion and slidable in the second cylinder portion, said piston head portion having a front face facing the closed cylinder end and an annular back face; the piston being fitted with a plurality of piston rings slidable in the cylinder at least one of said piston rings being formed as a circumferentially continuous ring having a generally cylindrical outer peripheral surface and, adjacent that outer surface, an annular groove in one side of the ring to divide the ring into an inner portion and an outer peripheral skirt portion of substantially constant thickness and thinner in crosssection than the inner portion, the skirt portion being integrally connected to the inner portion at the root of the groove and is capable of flexure laterally of the groove to promote circumferentially continuous contact with the cylinder;
a gas inlet for inlet of gas to the interior of the first cylinder portion between the front face of the piston head portion and the closed cylinder end on reciprocation of the piston;;
a first exhaust duct for exhaustion of gas from the interior of the first cylinder portion ahead of the piston head portion by pumping action of the front face of the piston head portion;
a one way valve in said first exhaust duct to permit exhaustion of gas from the interior of the first cylinder portion ahead of the piston head portion but closable against reverse gas flow; and
an exhaust means for exhaustion of gas from the interior of the first cylinder portion behind the piston head portion by pumping action of the backface.
In order that the invention may be more fully explained, one particular machine and various piston ring constructions will be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Figure 1 is a partly sectioned elevation of a multi-stage vacuum pump constructed in accordance with our copending British patent application 53342/76; (Serial No 1566575).
Figure 2 is a cross-section of a modified pump piston fitted with piston rings in accordance with this invention;
Figure 3 is a cross-section through part of
one of the piston rings shown in Figure 2;
Figure 4 is a partly sectioned scrap view
illustrating a further piston ring
arrangement; and
Figure 5 is a cross-section through part of
a still further type of piston ring.
The vacuum pump illustrated in Figure 1
comprises a pair of pump units 11, 12
mounted one at either side of a central
crankcase 13 supported on a pedestal 14.
Pumping units 11, 12 are of similar
construction, unit 12 providing two high
vacuum stages and unit 11 providing two
backing stages Each unit comprises a
piston, denoted as 16 in pumping unit 12,
which reciprocates within a cylinder 17 and,
in each case, cylinder 17 has a peripheral
wall 18, a cylinder end 19 and external
cooling fins 21.
The two pistons of pumping units 11, 12
are connected by means of crank arms 22 to a common crankshaft 23 which extends through crankcase 13 and is connected to an
electric drive motor (not shown).
Crankshaft 23 has two cranks of mutually
opposite eccentricities so that the pistons of the two pump units are reciprocated in opposition to one another.
Details of the construction of pumping unit 12 can be seen in the right-hand side of
Figure 1. As shown, piston 16 and cylinder
17 are both of stepped configuration. More particularly, piston 16, which is hollow has a relatively large diameter head portion 24 and a smaller diameter rear skirt portion 26 so that an annular piston face 27 is defined at the rear of the head portion directed oppositely to the main piston face 28.
Cylinder 17 has a relatively large diameter portion 29 within which the head portion of the piston slides and a smaller diameter portion 31 to receive the skirt portion 26 of the piston. An annular shoulder 32 is defined in the cylinder between cylinder portions 29, 31 in opposition to the annular piston face 27. Thus, a differential piston arrangement is provided whereby the cylinder has a front cylindrical working space 33 and a rear annular working space 34.
Each cylinder 17 has a tubular inlet 36 which provides communication with the interior of the cylinder through a set of inlet ports 37 extending through the peripheral wall of the cylinder at a location such that they are exposed only when the piston is near bottom dead centre but are covered by the piston during the greater part of the movement of the piston.
Each pumping unit 11, 12 has a gas outlet 30 fitted to its cylinder end closure 19.
However, as will be explained below, this outlet acts only as a pressure relieving bypass when the pump is required to handle large volumes of gas, as during initial pumping down toward high vacuum conditions or in the vent of a surge of excess gas thereafter. The pump is capable of reaching high vacuum conditions in which gas outlets 30 become inoperative and gas is instead expelled from working space 33 of each unit via a gas transfer passage which extends longitudinally within the cylinder wall of that unit.
The gas transfer passage of unit 12 is seen in the righthand side of Figure 1 and is indicated by the numeral 81. One end of this passage 81 communicates with working space 33 via a port 82 and it extends at its other end to a set of ports 83 which open into the interior of the cylinder at such a position that they are uncovered to communicate with working space 34 as piston 16 approaches the top dead centre position. In the formation of port 83 a hole 84 must be drilled in cylinder portion 29 and subsequently closed off with a plug 85 and sealing «O»-ring 86. Port 82 may penetrate the inner face 52 of cylinder closure 19 to ensure that it is not blocked by the piston when the piston approaches the top dead centre position.
Differential piston face 27 acts to exhaust
air from working space 34 via an exhaust duct 67 extended through cylinder wall portion 31 to the working space 34. Exhaust duct 67 may be fitted with a one-way valve 66 comprised of a valve plug 68 at the inner end of duct 67 and a valve biasing spring 69.
However, as will be explained below exhaust duct 67 is connected to the air inlet of pumping unit 11 and by appropriate phasing of the two pistons of the pumping units 11, 12 it is possible to eliminate valve 66.
As mentioned above, cylinder end outlet 30 serves as a pressure relief by-pass only. It is connected together with exhaust duct 67 from working space 34 to the air inlet of pumping unit 11 and it comprises a member 38 fitted across the mouth of an opening 39 which extends through cylinder end closure
19. Opening 39 forms the inlet end of a gas transfer duct 40 extending out through member 38 and the interface between closure
19 and member 38 is sealed by an «O»-ring 41. A one-way valve 42 is disposed within the inlet end of the duct 40. This valve is comprised of an elastomeric valve plate or disc 48 biased by a helical valve spring 49 against a thin annular flange 51 formed in cylinder end closure 19 to project inwardly of passage 40 at the inner face 52 of cylinder closure 19. Spring 49 acts directly between member 38 and valve disc 48.The face of disc 48 which is presented to flange 51 has a central projecting boss portion to project within and to fill the space within the rim of flange 51 when valve 42 is closed.
Each pumping unit 11, 12 is provided with two sets of sealing rings which provide sliding seals between the respective piston and cylinder. The first set is constituted by five piston rings 53 fitted to the head portion 24 of the piston to slide in cylinder portion 29 and the second set is constituted by three further piston rings 54 fitted to the skirt portion 26 of the piston to slide within the cylinder portion 31.
The construction of piston rings 53 and the manner in which they are fitted to the piston is described in detail in our copending British application No. 53342/76.
(Serial No 1566575)
Pumping unit 11 is identical to unit 12 and it provides two backing stages for the unit 12 which provides two high vacuum stages. To achieve this the outlet 30 and exhaust duct 67 of unit 12 are connected, as indicated by broken lines in Figure 1, to the intake 36′ of unit 11 and the cylinder end outlet 30′ and exhaust duct 67′ of unit 12 are opened to atmosphere.
It will be appreciated that a certain gas pressure must be generated within working space 33 in order to open valve 42, this pressure being determined by the biasing force provided by the valve spring 49 and the vacuum condition in exhaust duct 40 created by the backing stage unit 11. The valve therefore constitutes a restriction to exhaustion of gas through exhaust passage 40. On the other hand, transfer passage 81, although relatively small compared with exhaust duct 40 is permanently unrestricted and, during the short part of the piston stroke during which port 83 is opened, it provides a preferential path for displacement of gas from working space 33 to working space 34.
When the pump is required to handle a large gas flow, as when initially pumping down to high vacuum conditions, the gas which enters the cylindrical working space 33 through the intake ports 37 is compressed to a pressure sufficient to cause valve 42 to open before piston 16 approaches the end of its forward stroke to open port 83. During such operation, the bulk of the gas is expelled via valve 42 and exhaust duct 30 into the fore-vacuum created by the backing stage pump unit 11. When the piston approaches the end of its forward stroke to open port 83 some of the residual gas will be displaced through passage 81 into working space 34. This can occur at a pressure lower than that required to open valve 41 and the latter valve may then close.As pumping proceeds, a stage is reached at which the amount of gas taken into working space 33 through intake ports 37 is so small that it cannot be compressed to a pressure sufficient to open valve 42 before the piston has reached the position at which port 83 is opened. At this stage of operation valve 42 remains closed and the only transfer of gas from working space 33 is via transfer duct 81 at pressure lower than would be necessary for exhaustion through outlet duct 30. In this way it is possible to generate a higher vacuum condition than could be achieved by exhaustion of gas through the valve.In arrangements where gas can be exhausted only through a valve the vacuum which can be achieved will be limited by the extent to which the valve can operate reliable at extremely light spring pressures whereas the arrangement described above eliminates this limitation and valve spring 49 can be strong enough to provide reliable valve operation.
With this arrangement the limitations on the vacuum which can be achieved are determined mainly by the extent to which gas can be caused to pass rapidly from transfer duct 81 into working space 34 at the end of the forward stroke of the piston and without flowing backwardly before port 83 is re-closed at the start of the back stroke of the piston. This demands that the total volume of transfer passage 81 be very small compared with the piston swept volume of working space 33 in order to achieve a high compression ratio, since transfer passage 81 constitutes an unswept «dead space» in permanent communication with working space 33. In order to achieve vacuums significantly lower than could be achieved with exhaustion through spring loaded valves, the volume of transfer passage 81 should be not more than 5% of the piston swept volume of working space 33.In order to avoid significant back flow of gas into transfer passage 81 port 83 must remain open only during a very short part of the stroke of the piston. More specifically it should remain closed except for back and forth movements of the piston through less than 5% of the stroke of the piston at the end of the piston forward stroke. Moreover, port 83 is not at any stage completely uncovered. It provides the required degree of communication with working space 34 when the trailing edge of the rearmost piston ring 53 passes across it at which stage compressed gas in transfer passage 81 escapes into working space 34 via the small clearance space between the piston and the cylinder immediately behind that ring. The rear part of the piston behind the rearmost ring continues to cover port 83 even when the piston reaches the top dead centre position.This rearpart of the piston may be slightly relieved to allow adequate gas flow.
The operation of the backing stage unit 11 is similar to that of unit 12. Outlet 30′ of the backing stage is operative only when that stage is required to handle large gas flows.
At other times gas is expelled from the cylindrical working space of unit 11 solely via the cylinder wall transfer passage to the annular working space whence it is pumped by the differential piston face to atmosphere via the respective exhaust duct 67′. Because the pistons of the two pumping units are reciprocated in opposite phase the air intake ports of unit 11 will be open only during the pumping stroke of the differential piston face of unit 12 and the oneway valve 66 in exhaust duct 67 of unit 12 may be omitted but the exhaust duct of unit 11 must, of course, be fitted with such a valve.
Typically, a pump as illustrated in Figure 1 may be constructed in accordance with the following:
Diameters of cylindricall 10.0 cm working spaces indrical} J 5.5cm 5.5cm Piston stroke 2.7cm Swept volumes of cylindrical 1212 c working spaces 1148 cc Diameter of transfer passages
81 0.2 cm
Volume of transfer passages
81 0.14cue Part of piston stroke during
which port 83 is opened 4%
It has been found that a pump of the above dimensions run at a speed of about 400 strokes per minute can be operated quite satisfactorily without the need for any piston lubrication and will maintain a pressure of less than 0.030 Torr of permanent gases.
Figure 2 illustrates an alternative form of piston 104 which may be fitted to a pump otherwise constructed generally in accordance with Figure 1. This piston is provided with a sealing ring arrangement in accordance with the present invention.
Piston 104 is of stepped configuration.
More particularly, it has a relatively large diameter head portion 105 and a smaller diameter portion 106 so that an annular piston face 107 is defined at the rear of the head portion directed oppositely to the main piston face 108. The piston is hollow, being comprised of a stepped tubular shell closed at one end by a plate 109 defining the front piston face 108 of the piston head. The other end of the piston shell is fitted with a tongue 111 drilled with a hole 112 for connection to the respective connecting rod of the pump.
Piston head 105 is fitted with three piston rings 113, 114, 115 and piston portion 106 is fitted with a pair of rings 110. All of these rings may be constructed of a polyimide resin filled with polytetrafluoroethylene or other suitable material or polytetrafluoroethylene rings filled with graphite powder, other carbonaceous material, molybdenum disulphide, bronze powder, glass fibre, polyimide resin or mixtures of these or similar materials. These materials can provide the correct balance of a low coefficient of friction, a not unduly high coefficient of expansion, low wear and reasonable thermal conductivity. The polyimide resin is preferred since it can withstand higher temperatures. The construction of piston rings is shown in
Figure 3.Each is formed as a circumferentially continuous ring having an inner cylindrical periphery 116 and an outer generally cylindrical peripheral surface 117.
Adjacent outer peripheral surface 117 and annular groove 119 is formed in one side of the ring to divide the ring into an inner portion 120 and an outer peripheral skirt portion 121 which is of substantially
constant thickness and is thinner than
portion 120 and is integrally connected to
the inner portion in the region of the root
122 of groove 119. The thickness of skirt 121
in the vicinity of its integral connection with
the inner ring portion 116 is small enough to
permit skirt to flex laterally of groove 119,
i.e. to move in and out radially of the ring.
Although outer peripheral surface 117 of
the ring is generally cylindrical it does have
a slight taper from one side of the ring to the
other. Specifically, the ring has a maximum
outer diameter at one side and a minimum
outside diameter at the other side and the
outer peripheral surface 117 tapers
conically between these two diameters. The
diameter of the smaller end of the ring is
chosen to be slightly smaller than the
diameter of the cooperating cylinder and
the diameter of the larger end is slightly
greater than the cylinder diameter so that
the skirt portion 121 of the piston ring must
flex radially of the ring to permit the piston
to enter the cylinder. This radial flexure
ensures that there is continuous
circumferential contact between the
cylinder and the piston ring.
The outer peripheral wall 124 of groove
119 is aligned with the tapered outer
peripheral surface 117 of the ring so that
skirt portion 121 is substantially of constant
thickness. More particularly the peripheral
walls of the groove converge toward the
root 122 so that in cross-section the groove
is generally V-shaped but with a rounded
root. The groove is filled with a body of
elastomeric material 126. This material is
retained in the groove in a compressed
condition and it therefore biases the skirt
portion 121 radially outwardly of the ring.
Because in a vacuum pump there is no gas
pressure to expand the piston rings as in the
case of an internal combustion engine, it is
desirable to provide such a mechanical
biasing means to bias the skirt outwardly against the cylinder wall and completely filling the groove with an elastomeric material is preferred since this reduces the vblume which needs to be evacuated.
However, other biasing means such as a simple expansion spring could be used. It would also be possible to have a composite biasing means formed by a biasing spring embedded within a plug or ring of elastomeric material. The elastomeric material must be capable of withstanding high temperatures of operation and it is found that silicone rubber is particularly suitable.
When the temperature of the ring increases during service, the ring will expand appreciably since the bronze loaded
Teflon (registered Trade Mark), of which the ring is made, has a high coefficient of thermal expansion. However this simply compresses the elastomer which is free to bulge outwardly at the mouth of the groove and the loading of skirt 121 on the cylinder wall will remain substantially constant for all operating conditions of the pump.
Piston rings 110 are separated by a spacer ring 131 and held by a clamping ring 132 which is internally screw threaded and screwed on to an external screw thread at the end of piston portion 106. One of the rings is sandwiched between spacer ring 131 and clamp ring 132 and the other is sandwiched between the spacer ring 131 and a radial shoulder face 133 on piston portion
106. A groove 134 in piston shoulder face
133 receives a resilient O-ring 135 and similar grooves 136, 137 in the ends of spacer ring 131 receive O-rings 139, 139. 0rings 135, 136, 137 are compressed against the respective side faces of piston rings 110 to provide seals against leakage of gas behind the piston rings.
Piston rings 113, 114, 115 are constructed in identical manner to piston rings 110 except that they are of larger diameter to suit the diameter of piston head 105 and the inner portions of rings 113, 114 are rebated to register with components which clamp them to the piston. Specifically, piston ring
113 is rebated at 141 to register with the outer margin of piston head plate 109 which is clamped to the hollow shell of the piston by clamping screws 142 to hold piston ring
113 in position against an annular shoulder face of the piston. A resilient O-ring 144 is fitted within an annular groove 145 in piston face 143 so as to be compressed between the piston and piston ring 113 and so seal against leakage of gas behind the piston ring.Piston rings 114 and 115 are separated by a spacer ring 140 which is rebated to receive sealing O-rings 150 which are compressed against the two piston rings and the piston. A sealing O-ring 146 is mounted in a groove 147 in the end face of the piston shell so as to be compressed between the piston shell and head plate 109.
Piston ring 114 is rebated at 148 to register with the outer margin of a clamping ring 149 which fastened to the piston shell by fastening screws 151 so as to clamp piston ring 114, spacer ring 140 and piston ring 115 in position and to compress sealing rings 150.
Figure 4 illustrates a further type of piston ring fitted with a modified means for expanding that ring outwardly against the cylinder. The piston ring is denoted as 200 and it is generally similar to the previous rings 113, 114, 115 in that it is formed as a circumferentially continuous ring having an inner cylindrical periphery 201, a generally cylindrical, but slightly tapered, outer peripheral surface 202 and an annular groove 203 formed in one side of the ring to divide the ring into an inner portion 204 and an outer peripheral skirt portion 205 which is integrally connected to the inner portion in the region of the root 206 of the groove.
In this case, however, the skirt portion 205 of the ring is biased outwardly against the cylinder by a resilient expander ring 207 which is transversely split at 208 in the same manner as a conventional automobile piston ring. Expander ring 207 is backed by an inner ring 209 of elastomeric packing material.
Figure 5 illustrates a further type of ring 211 which operates in a similar fashion to the ring of Figure 3 but it has an elastomerfilled circumferential groove in each of its side faces so as to have two oppositely directed, flexible outer skirt portions which are biased outwardly against the cylinder wall. It has an outer peripheral groove 212 mid-way between its side faces to enhance the flexibility of the two skirt portions.
The illustrated pump provides four successive pump stages in a most compact and effective arrangement. Specifically, each cylinder provides two stages and pumping through these stages is achieved by a single moving piston. This permits the gas transfer passage to be formed directly in the cylinder wall and accurate phasing of the opening and closing of the gas transfer port to the lower vacuum stage relative to the movement of the piston face in the higher vacuum stage. Moreover, the differential piston arrangement, in creating a vacuum behind the piston rings, minimizes leakage of gas into the higher vacuum stage and with the provision of piston rings of the illustrated type such leakage can be successfully reduced to insignificant levels while maintaining oil-free operation of the pump.
Another aspect of the disclosure of this
Specification is disclosed and claimed in our co-pending Application No. (Serial No
1566577) 8213/79 which is also divided out
of Application No. 53342/76. (Serial No
1566575).
WHAT WE CLAIM IS:
1. A piston ring for a reciprocatory piston
and cylinder machine and formed as a
circumferentially continuous ring having a
generally cylindrical outer peripheral
surface and adjacent that outer surface an
annular groove in one side of the ring to
divide the ring into an inner portion and an
outer peripheral skirt portion of
substantially constant thickness and thinner
in cross-section than the inner portion, the
skirt portion being integrally connected to
the inner portion at the root of the groove
and being capable of flexure laterally of the
groove.
2. A piston ring as claimed in claim 1,
wherin the outer peripheral surface of the
ring, although generally cylindrical, tapers
inwardly in the direction from said one side
of the ring to the other side of the ring.
3. A piston ring as claimed in claim 1 or
claim 2, wherein the groove contains biasing
means acting on the skirt portion to bias it radially outwardly of the ring.
4. A piston ring as claimed in claim 3, wherein said biasing means comprises a body of an elastomeric material substantially filling the groove and retained therein in a state of compression.
5. A piston ring as claimed in claim 3, wherein said biasing means comprises a
spring element disposed within the groove and acting radially outwardly on said skirt portion.
6. A piston ring according to any one of the preceding claims wherein the said piston ring is formed of any one of the following materials: (a) polyimide resin filled with polytetrafluoroethylene, or,
(b) polytetrafluoroethylene filled with
(i) graphite powder or
(ii) molybdenum disulphide, or
(iii) bronze powder, or
(iv) glass fibre, or
(v) polyimide resin, or
(vi) mixtures of these materials.
7. A rediprocatory piston and cylinder oil free vacuum pump comprising a cylinder, a piston slidable back and forth within the cylinder and at least one piston ring of self lubricating material extending circumferentially about the piston and providing a sliding seal between the piston and the cylinder, wherein the piston ring is in accordance with any one of claims 1 to 6.
8. A reciprocatory piston and cylinder oil free vacuum pump according to claim 7, wherein one part of the outer peripheral skirt portion abuts the cylinder wall and another part of the outer peripheral skirt portion is spaced from the cylinder wall.
**WARNING** end of DESC field may overlap start of CLMS **.

Claims (10)

**WARNING** start of CLMS field may overlap end of DESC **.
shell so as to be compressed between the piston shell and head plate 109.
Piston ring 114 is rebated at 148 to register with the outer margin of a clamping ring 149 which fastened to the piston shell by fastening screws 151 so as to clamp piston ring 114, spacer ring 140 and piston ring 115 in position and to compress sealing rings 150.
Figure 4 illustrates a further type of piston ring fitted with a modified means for expanding that ring outwardly against the cylinder. The piston ring is denoted as 200 and it is generally similar to the previous rings 113, 114, 115 in that it is formed as a circumferentially continuous ring having an inner cylindrical periphery 201, a generally cylindrical, but slightly tapered, outer peripheral surface 202 and an annular groove 203 formed in one side of the ring to divide the ring into an inner portion 204 and an outer peripheral skirt portion 205 which is integrally connected to the inner portion in the region of the root 206 of the groove.
In this case, however, the skirt portion 205 of the ring is biased outwardly against the cylinder by a resilient expander ring 207 which is transversely split at 208 in the same manner as a conventional automobile piston ring. Expander ring 207 is backed by an inner ring 209 of elastomeric packing material.
Figure 5 illustrates a further type of ring 211 which operates in a similar fashion to the ring of Figure 3 but it has an elastomerfilled circumferential groove in each of its side faces so as to have two oppositely directed, flexible outer skirt portions which are biased outwardly against the cylinder wall. It has an outer peripheral groove 212 mid-way between its side faces to enhance the flexibility of the two skirt portions.
The illustrated pump provides four successive pump stages in a most compact and effective arrangement. Specifically, each cylinder provides two stages and pumping through these stages is achieved by a single moving piston. This permits the gas transfer passage to be formed directly in the cylinder wall and accurate phasing of the opening and closing of the gas transfer port to the lower vacuum stage relative to the movement of the piston face in the higher vacuum stage. Moreover, the differential piston arrangement, in creating a vacuum behind the piston rings, minimizes leakage of gas into the higher vacuum stage and with the provision of piston rings of the illustrated type such leakage can be successfully reduced to insignificant levels while maintaining oil-free operation of the pump.
Another aspect of the disclosure of this
Specification is disclosed and claimed in our co-pending Application No. (Serial No
1566577) 8213/79 which is also divided out
of Application No. 53342/76. (Serial No
1566575).
WHAT WE CLAIM IS:
1. A piston ring for a reciprocatory piston
and cylinder machine and formed as a
circumferentially continuous ring having a
generally cylindrical outer peripheral
surface and adjacent that outer surface an
annular groove in one side of the ring to
divide the ring into an inner portion and an
outer peripheral skirt portion of
substantially constant thickness and thinner
in cross-section than the inner portion, the
skirt portion being integrally connected to
the inner portion at the root of the groove
and being capable of flexure laterally of the
groove.

2. A piston ring as claimed in claim 1,
wherin the outer peripheral surface of the
ring, although generally cylindrical, tapers
inwardly in the direction from said one side
of the ring to the other side of the ring.

3. A piston ring as claimed in claim 1 or
claim 2, wherein the groove contains biasing
means acting on the skirt portion to bias it radially outwardly of the ring.

4. A piston ring as claimed in claim 3, wherein said biasing means comprises a body of an elastomeric material substantially filling the groove and retained therein in a state of compression.

5. A piston ring as claimed in claim 3, wherein said biasing means comprises a
spring element disposed within the groove and acting radially outwardly on said skirt portion.

6. A piston ring according to any one of the preceding claims wherein the said piston ring is formed of any one of the following materials: (a) polyimide resin filled with polytetrafluoroethylene, or,
(b) polytetrafluoroethylene filled with
(i) graphite powder or
(ii) molybdenum disulphide, or
(iii) bronze powder, or
(iv) glass fibre, or
(v) polyimide resin, or
(vi) mixtures of these materials.

7. A rediprocatory piston and cylinder oil free vacuum pump comprising a cylinder, a piston slidable back and forth within the cylinder and at least one piston ring of self lubricating material extending circumferentially about the piston and providing a sliding seal between the piston and the cylinder, wherein the piston ring is in accordance with any one of claims 1 to 6.

8. A reciprocatory piston and cylinder oil free vacuum pump according to claim 7, wherein one part of the outer peripheral skirt portion abuts the cylinder wall and another part of the outer peripheral skirt portion is spaced from the cylinder wall.

9. A vacuum pump comprising:
a cylinder having a first portion closed at one end and a second portion contiguous with, but of smaller diameter than, the first portion;
A piston having a head portion slidable in the first cylinder portion and a second piston portion of smaller diameter than the head portion and slidable in the second cylinder portion, said piston head portion having a front face facing the closed cylinder end and an annular back face; the piston being fitted with a plurality of piston rings slidable in the cylinder at least one of said piston rings being formed as a circumferentially continuous ring having a generally cylindrical outer peripheral surface and, adjacent that outer surface, an annular groove in one side of the ring to divide the ring into an inner portion and an outer peripheral skirt portion of substantially constant thickness and thinner in cross-section than the inner portion, the skirt portion being integrally connected to the inner portion at the root of the groove and being capable of flexure laterally of the groove to promote circumferentially continuous contact with the cylinder;
a gas inlet for inlet of gas to the interior of the first cylinder portion between the front face of the piston head portion and the closed cylinder end on reciprocation of the piston; ;
a first exhaust duct for exhaustion of gas from the interior of the first cylinder portion ahead of the piston head portion by pumping action of the front face of the piston head portion;
a one way valve in said first exhaust duct to permit exhaustion of gas from the interior of the first cylinder portion ahead of the piston head portion but closable against reverse gas flow; and
an exhaust means for exhaustion of gas from the interior of the first cylinder portion behind the piston head portion by pumping action of the backface.

10. A piston ring substantially as described herein with reference to and as illustrated in the accompanying drawings.

GB13988/78A
1975-12-24
1976-12-21
Piston rings and vacuum pumps

Expired

GB1566576A
(en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number
Priority Date
Filing Date
Title

AU20758/76A

AU516210B2
(en)

1975-12-24
1975-12-24
Vacuum pump

Publications (1)

Publication Number
Publication Date

GB1566576A
true

GB1566576A
(en)

1980-05-08

Family
ID=3710055
Family Applications (2)

Application Number
Title
Priority Date
Filing Date

GB8213/79A
Expired

GB1566577A
(en)

1975-12-24
1976-12-21
Vacuum pumps of the piston and cylinder type

GB13988/78A
Expired

GB1566576A
(en)

1975-12-24
1976-12-21
Piston rings and vacuum pumps

Family Applications Before (1)

Application Number
Title
Priority Date
Filing Date

GB8213/79A
Expired

GB1566577A
(en)

1975-12-24
1976-12-21
Vacuum pumps of the piston and cylinder type

Country Status (2)

Country
Link

AU
(1)

AU516210B2
(en)

GB
(2)

GB1566577A
(en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party

Publication number
Priority date
Publication date
Assignee
Title

WO1990003530A1
(en)

*

1988-09-29
1990-04-05
Dowty Seals Limited
A sealing assembly

WO1998031936A1
(en)

*

1997-01-17
1998-07-23
Maschinenfabrik Sulzer-Burckhardt Ag
Reciprocating compressor

EP1600634A2
(en)

*

1999-09-14
2005-11-30
Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd.
Piston compressor

Families Citing this family (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party

Publication number
Priority date
Publication date
Assignee
Title

IT1157540B
(en)

*

1982-04-29
1987-02-18
Bonomi Agostino Omal Sa

SEALING AND JUDGING UNIT FOR PISTONS IN GENERAL

AU567134B2
(en)

*

1982-12-17
1987-11-12
Commonwealth Scientific And Industrial Research Organisation
Cylinder porting arrangement

GB2132284B
(en)

*

1982-12-17
1986-04-03
Commw Scient Ind Res Org
Porting and ducting arrangement

EP0346285B1
(en)

*

1988-06-09
1992-04-29
GebràDer Sulzer Aktiengesellschaft
Valve arrangement

US4906109A
(en)

*

1988-06-20
1990-03-06
Peter J. Balsells
Spring loaded guide ring

US5482443A
(en)

*

1992-12-21
1996-01-09
Commonwealth Scientific And Industrial Research Organization
Multistage vacuum pump

1975

1975-12-24
AU
AU20758/76A
patent/AU516210B2/en
not_active
Expired

1976

1976-12-21
GB
GB8213/79A
patent/GB1566577A/en
not_active
Expired

1976-12-21
GB
GB13988/78A
patent/GB1566576A/en
not_active
Expired

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party

Publication number
Priority date
Publication date
Assignee
Title

WO1990003530A1
(en)

*

1988-09-29
1990-04-05
Dowty Seals Limited
A sealing assembly

WO1998031936A1
(en)

*

1997-01-17
1998-07-23
Maschinenfabrik Sulzer-Burckhardt Ag
Reciprocating compressor

AU727704B2
(en)

*

1997-01-17
2000-12-21
Atlas Copco (Schweiz) Ag
Reciprocating piston compressor

US6293764B1
(en)

1997-01-17
2001-09-25
Greenfield Ag
Reciprocating compressor with dry lubricating system

EP1600634A2
(en)

*

1999-09-14
2005-11-30
Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd.
Piston compressor

EP1600632A2
(en)

*

1999-09-14
2005-11-30
Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd.
Piston compressor

EP1600634A3
(en)

*

1999-09-14
2006-01-11
Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd.
Piston compressor

EP1600632A3
(en)

*

1999-09-14
2006-01-11
Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd.
Piston compressor

Also Published As

Publication number
Publication date

GB1566577A
(en)

1980-05-08

AU516210B2
(en)

1981-05-21

AU2075876A
(en)

1978-06-29

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Legal Events

Date
Code
Title
Description

1980-07-23
PS
Patent sealed

1997-01-15
PE20
Patent expired after termination of 20 years

Effective date:
19961220

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