METHOD AND APPARATUS TO ATTENUATE VIBRATIONS FROM AN AIR MOVER ASSEMBLY
A reduced-vibration air mover assembly comprises a first blade housing to support a first motor housing and a first motor through a first set of struts, the first motor rotatably coupled to a first blade, and a second blade housing to support a second motor housing and a second motor through a second set of struts, the second motor rotatably coupled to a second blade, and a layer of damping material having a first surface adhered to at least one of the first motor housing, the first set of struts and the first blade housing, and a second surface adhered to at least one of the second motor housing, the second set of struts and the second blade housing. A method of reducing vibration transfer to a computer chassis comprises adhesively securing a layer of damping material intermediate a first air mover and a second air mover.
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1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a reduced-vibration air mover assembly for use in cooling a computer, and a method of reducing vibrations transferred from an air mover to a computer chassis.
2. Background of the Related Art
Computers are becoming lighter and smaller as consumers demand portability and compactness and as processor technology enables greater data processing capacity using fewer and smaller processors. As a computer chassis becomes smaller in size, a vibration producing component, such as an air mover, is necessarily positioned closer to a vibration-sensitive component such as a hard disk drive (HDD). HDDs are particularly sensitive to vibrations, and the performance of an HDD may be halved when exposed to vibrations.
Computers comprise processors that consume electrical power and produce heat. Air movers, such as axial rotary fans, are used to draw cooling air into the computer chassis and to move cooling air through the chassis to remove heat generated by processors and other components within the chassis. Moving a sufficient volume of cool air through the chassis will maintain the processors and other components within a favorable operating temperature range for optimal component performance and life. The use of adjacent and counter-rotating fans, arranged axially and in series one with the other, enables substantially increased air flow through a computer chassis to meet heightened heat removal demand. In counter-rotating fans, the rotation of the air moved from the blade of the first fan reacts on the blade of the second, counter-rotating fan to further contribute to head or pressure to move the air forward from the second fan. The first fan and the second, counter-rotating fan may be coupled one to the other in an air mover assembly that is installed in the computer chassis. Some air movers for computers provide a high-speed mode to further meet heat removal demand.
There are drawbacks to the use of air mover assemblies having counter-rotating fans and high-speed modes. As the number of fans increase, the vibrations produced by the fans are increased. As the rotational velocity of a given fan blade increases, the amplitude of vibrations transferred to the surrounding computer chassis generally increase exponentially with the increases in rotational velocity. Further, counter-rotating fans may exacerbate the magnitude of vibrations due to coincident imbalance and/or coincident harmonic vibration.
Fluid dynamics are an important consideration in designing a cooling system for a computer chassis. Cooling air flow is maximized by providing unobstructed air flow pathways both upstream and downstream of a rotating fan blade. For a compact computer chassis, unobstructed air flow pathways upstream and downstream of the fans require that the axis of the rotating fan blade be oriented within the chassis so that the direction of air flow from the rotating fan blade generally coincides with the direction of the length or the direction of the width of the chassis.
Most of the air moved through a chassis by a rotary fan blade is moved by the radially distal portion of the blade, and the rate of air moved by a rotary fan blade increases dramatically with increased blade diameter. However, increased blade diameter, like increased angular velocity, dramatically increases vibrations. Maximizing the blade diameter and maximizing the rotational speed of the fan blade are critical to maximizing air flow and to efficiently meeting heat removal demands, but the dramatically increased vibrations that result from the large diameter and the high rotational speed of a rotary fan blade are likely to impair the performance of a HDD positioned within the same computer chassis.
Vibration isolating systems may be used to prevent or reduce the magnitude of vibrations that are transferred to and within the computer chassis. The need for a vibration isolating system is, however, frustrated by the need to maximize heat removal capacity and the need to maximize rotary fan blade diameter.
BRIEF SUMMARYOne embodiment of the present invention provides an air mover assembly, comprising a first and second air movers with vibration damping material disposed there between. The first air mover has a first motor in a first motor housing to rotate a first blade in a first direction within a first blade housing that supports the first motor through a first plurality of struts, and the second air mover has a second motor in a second motor housing to rotate a second blade in a second direction opposite the first within a second blade housing that supports the second motor through a plurality of second struts. The first air mover and the second air mover are secured in axial alignment. The vibration damping material has a first surface secured to at least one of the first motor housing, the first blade housing and the first set of struts, and a second surface secured to at least one of the second motor housing, the second blade housing and the second set of struts.
An embodiment of the invention provides an air mover having a first fan comprising a first fan housing to support a first fan motor and a first fan blade through a first set of struts, a second fan comprising a second fan housing to support a second fan motor and a second fan blade through a second set of struts, and a layer of vibration dampening material having a first side adhesively coupled to the first set of struts and a second side adhesively coupled to the second set of struts.
In one embodiment of the invention, the vibration damping layer has a first surface that is adhesively secured to the face of the first fan, and a second surface that is adhesively secured to a face of the second fan, using an acrylic-based adhesive with high damping performance over a wide temperature range and a wide frequency range. One example of such an adhesive is an adhesive sold by Roush Industries as model RA960 damped viscoelastic adhesive.
In one embodiment of the invention, at least one strut of the first set of struts of the first fan comprises a groove to receive electrically conductive wires to deliver current to the first fan motor disposed centrally to the first set of struts. In another embodiment of the invention, at least one strut of the second set of struts of the second counter-rotating fan comprises a groove to receive electrically conductive wires to deliver current to the second fan motor disposed centrally to the second set of struts. In another embodiment of the invention, the at least one strut of the first set of struts and the at least one strut of the second set of struts are aligned one with the other so that the struts having the groove are abutted one against the other in an assembled configuration.
The vibration damping material is preferably a unitary member, but could include a plurality of discrete members secured between the first and second air movers. The vibration damping material may be either homogeneous, but may also be heterogeneous, such as including a plurality of layers having different polymer densities.
In various embodiments, use of the vibration damping material allows the first and second air movers to be secured in a computer chassis without a vibration isolation system coupling the first and second air movers to the computer chassis. Eliminating the use of a vibration isolation system about the perimeter of the air mover housing allows the use of a larger diameter air mover with the same space. However, the two air movers can be secured to the sheet metal chassis, or a frame or carrier that in turn is secured to the chassis, using screws. The two air movers or fans may be attached to each other with a plastic snap pin that is pushed through a hole in the flange of each fan and then expands to hold itself in position.
In one embodiment of the air mover assembly 40 of
In one embodiment, the face 10A of the first air mover 10 and the face 30A of the second, counter-rotating air mover 30 may be roughened or otherwise treated to promote adhesion and/or to increase friction between the faces 10A and 30A and the first surface 20A and second, opposite surface 20B of the layer of damping material 20.
It should be noted that the overall contribution of the layer of damping material 20 to the volume and/or size of the air mover assembly is very small and is wholly attributable to an increase in the size of the assembly in a direction of the arrow 42 which is directed from an unobstructed channel upstream of the air mover assembly 40 toward an unobstructed channel downstream of the air mover assembly 40. The amount of vibration attenuation obtained by this positioning of damping material, which will be discussed below in connection with
The results obtained using the present invention illustrate the effectiveness of damping using the disclosed apparatus and method.
The terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments only and is not intended to be limiting of the invention. As used herein, the singular forms “a”, “an” and “the” are intended to include the plural forms as well, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. It will be further understood that the terms “comprises” and/or “comprising,” when used in this specification, specify the presence of stated features, integers, steps, operations, elements, components and/or groups, but do not preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, integers, steps, operations, elements, components, and/or groups thereof. The terms “preferably,” “preferred,” “prefer,” “optionally,” “may,” and similar terms are used to indicate that an item, condition or step being referred to is an optional (not required) feature of the invention.
The corresponding structures, materials, acts, and equivalents of all means or steps plus function elements in the claims below are intended to include any structure, material, or act for performing the function in combination with other claimed elements as specifically claimed. The description of the present invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description, but it is not intended to be exhaustive or limited to the invention in the form disclosed. Many modifications and variations will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention. The embodiment was chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and the practical application, and to enable others of ordinary skill in the art to understand the invention for various embodiments with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated.
Claims
1. An air mover assembly, comprising:
- a first air mover having a first motor in a first motor housing to rotate a first blade in a first direction within a first blade housing that supports the first motor through a first plurality of struts;
- a second air mover having a second motor in a second motor housing to rotate a second blade in a second direction opposite the first within a second blade housing that supports the second motor through a plurality of second struts, wherein the first air mover and the second air mover are secured in axial alignment; and
- vibration damping material disposed between the first air mover and the second air mover, the vibration damping material having a first surface secured to at least one of the first motor housing, the first blade housing and the first set of struts, and a second surface secured to at least one of the second motor housing, the second blade housing and the second set of struts.
2. The air mover assembly of claim 1, wherein the vibration damping material has a first surface secured to the first motor housing, the first blade housing and the first set of struts and a second surface secured to the second motor housing, the second blade housing and the second set of struts.
3. The air mover assembly of claim 1, wherein the vibration damping material is a unitary member.
4. The air mover assembly of claim 1, wherein the vibration damping material includes a plurality of discrete members.
5. The air mover assembly of claim 1, wherein at least one of the first set of struts comprises a groove to receive a plurality of wires to conduct an electrical current to the first motor.
6. The air mover assembly of claim 1, wherein the first set of struts is aligned with the second set of struts.
7. The air mover assembly of claim 1, wherein the vibration damping material comprises polystyrene.
8. The air mover assembly of claim 7, wherein the layer of polystyrene has a thickness within the range from 0.006 to 0.014 inches.
9. The air mover assembly of claim 1, wherein the first surface of the layer of damping material is adhesively secured to a face of the first air mover using an acrylic-based damping adhesive and the second surface of the layer of damping material is adhesively secured to a face of the second, counter-rotating air mover using the acrylic-based damping adhesive.
10. The air mover assembly of claim 9, wherein the thickness of the acrylic-based damping adhesive is within the range from 0.001 to 0.004 inches.
11. The air mover assembly of claim 1, wherein the first set of struts are adhesively secured to a first surface of the vibration damping material and the second set of struts are adhesively secured to the second surface of the vibration damping material.
12. The air mover assembly of claim 2, wherein the vibration damping material is a unitary member.
13. The air mover assembly of claim 2, wherein the vibration damping material includes a plurality of discrete members.
14. The air mover assembly of claim 1, wherein the first and second air movers are secured in a computer chassis without a vibration isolation system coupling the first and second air movers to the computer chassis.
15. The air mover assembly of claim 2, wherein the vibration damping material is homogeneous.
16. The air mover assembly of claim 2, wherein the vibration damping material is heterogeneous.
17. The air mover assembly of claim 2, wherein the vibration damping material includes a plurality of layers.
Type: Application
Filed: Dec 23, 2010
Publication Date: Jun 28, 2012
Applicant: INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION (Armonk, NY)
Inventors: Eric T. Gamble (Raleigh, NC), Kenton C. Green (Cary, NC), Billy W. Medlin (Cary, NC), Matthew L. Nickerson (Raleigh, NC)
Application Number: 12/978,224
International Classification: F01D 25/04 (20060101);