Patent ID: 8887593
Filing Date: 2014-11-18
Classification: F01C,F16H,Y10T

Abstract:
1. A device of a pair of claw rotors having same profiles, comprising a defined rotor and a conjugate rotor both intermeshing with and conjugating to each other; wherein the defined rotor and the conjugate rotor each has a same rotor radius and a same pitch circle radius, the rotor radius being larger than the pitch circle radius, the defined rotor and the conjugate rotor each comprising a same even number of claws with same cross-section profiles; wherein the defined rotor comprises a first claw having a cross-section profile consisting of an epicycloid, a first arc, a second arc, a third arc, and a fourth arc all connected together in sequence in a counterclockwise direction from the epicycloid to the first, second, third, and fourth arcs, wherein the first, second, third, and fourth arcs jointly form an angle of 360° divided by number of claws with respect to a center of the defined rotor, the first arc and the fourth arc each having a center being designated as same as the center of the defined rotor, and each of the first and fourth arcs having a same arc angle, the first arc having a radius same as the rotor radius of the defined rotor, the fourth arc having a radius which is the rotor radius subtracted from two times the pitch circle radius, wherein the first, second, third, and fourth arcs have slope continuity at points where the first, second, third, and fourth arcs connect with each other, whereby locations of centers, values of radiuses, and arc angles of the second and third arcs are capable of being defined in accordance with the slope continuity and geometric relations between the first and fourth arcs; wherein the conjugate rotor comprises a first claw having a cross-section profile consisting of a first curve, a second curve, a third curve, a fourth curve, and an epicycloid all connected together in sequence in a clockwise direction from the first, second, third, and fourth curves to the epicycloid, wherein the first, second, third, and fourth curves are defined as a conjugate curve corresponding to the first, second, third, and fourth arcs of the defined rotor, and jointly form an angle of 360° divided by number of claws with respect to a center of the conjugate rotor, the epicycloid of the conjugate rotor being formed by imaging the epicycloid of the first claw of the defined rotor and rotating around a center of the conjugate rotor to be located in place; the defined rotor comprising a second claw having a cross-section profile generated by imaging the cross-section profile of the first claw of the conjugate rotor and then rotating around the center of the defined rotor to be located in place such that the cross-section profile of the second claw consists of an epicycloid, a fourth curve, a third curve, a second curve, and a first curve all connected together in sequence in a counterclockwise direction; the conjugate rotor comprising a second claw having a cross-section profile generated by imaging the cross-section profile of the first claw of the defined rotor and then rotating around the center of the conjugate rotor to be located in place such that the cross-section profile of the second claw consists of a fourth arc, a third arc, a second arc, a first arc, and an epicycloid all connected together in sequence in a clockwise direction; the defined rotor further comprising multiple claws formed in pairs by imaging the cross-section profiles of the first and second claws together then rotating around the center of the defined rotor to be located in place; and the conjugate rotor further comprising multiple claws formed in pairs by imaging the cross-section profiles of the first and second claws then rotating around the center of the conjugate rotor.