Purpose A conveyor device is studied with the aim to reduce the friction between the inner surface of the beam and the chain. The lower is the friction between the chain and the beam, the lower is the surface wear. The magnetic repulsion force among permanent magnets placed on the beam and on the chain is utilized to reduce friction. Design/methodology/approach The considered magnetic suspension is realized with permanent magnets in repulsive configuration; it is designed by solving a constrained optimization problem, with reference to the geometry of the 90° horizontal bend FlexLink WL322 conveyor. Flux density field and its gradient are evaluated using volume integral equation method, allowing to calculate the forces acting on the chain and the stiffness of the magnetic suspension. Findings The magnetic suspension prototype was manufactured and tested. The experimental and calculated values of the forces acting on the chain compares well. A stable horizontal equilibrium of the chain was obtained during both static and dynamical tests. Research limitations The quasi-static model used neglects the dynamical interactions among the elements of the chain, the permanent magnets and loads weight during motions and the eddy current losses in the aluminium beam. However the dynamical tests on the prototype show that the chain motion is regular up to the nominal velocity all along the conveyor with the exception of the trailing edge of the 90° curve. Practical implications The tests on the prototype show the possibility of a removal or at least a reduction of the friction force between the chain and the inner side of the beam by means of a passive magnetic suspension. As a consequence a reduction of noise and vibrations and an increase of the mean-time-to-failure is expected. Originality/value Prototype testing shows that the unavoidable vertical instability of the magnetic forces has no practical consequence since, re-ducing the allowed vertical gap, the chain is stabilized by the gravitational force.
Massimo Fabbri, Pier Luigi Ribani, Davide Zuffa (2015). Design and testing of a magnetic suspension for a 90° horizontal bend conveyor. COMPEL, 34(1), 380-396 [10.1108/COMPEL-02-2014-0049].
Design and testing of a magnetic suspension for a 90° horizontal bend conveyor
FABBRI, MASSIMO;RIBANI, PIER LUIGI;
2015
Abstract
Purpose A conveyor device is studied with the aim to reduce the friction between the inner surface of the beam and the chain. The lower is the friction between the chain and the beam, the lower is the surface wear. The magnetic repulsion force among permanent magnets placed on the beam and on the chain is utilized to reduce friction. Design/methodology/approach The considered magnetic suspension is realized with permanent magnets in repulsive configuration; it is designed by solving a constrained optimization problem, with reference to the geometry of the 90° horizontal bend FlexLink WL322 conveyor. Flux density field and its gradient are evaluated using volume integral equation method, allowing to calculate the forces acting on the chain and the stiffness of the magnetic suspension. Findings The magnetic suspension prototype was manufactured and tested. The experimental and calculated values of the forces acting on the chain compares well. A stable horizontal equilibrium of the chain was obtained during both static and dynamical tests. Research limitations The quasi-static model used neglects the dynamical interactions among the elements of the chain, the permanent magnets and loads weight during motions and the eddy current losses in the aluminium beam. However the dynamical tests on the prototype show that the chain motion is regular up to the nominal velocity all along the conveyor with the exception of the trailing edge of the 90° curve. Practical implications The tests on the prototype show the possibility of a removal or at least a reduction of the friction force between the chain and the inner side of the beam by means of a passive magnetic suspension. As a consequence a reduction of noise and vibrations and an increase of the mean-time-to-failure is expected. Originality/value Prototype testing shows that the unavoidable vertical instability of the magnetic forces has no practical consequence since, re-ducing the allowed vertical gap, the chain is stabilized by the gravitational force.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.