MAGNETIC DRIVE FOR FOOD PROCESSING APPARATUS
Food processing apparati including magnetic drives are described herein. According to one exemplary embodiment, a food processing apparatus may include a motor having a motor shaft, a rotor rotatably mounted on the motor shaft, and a stator producing an electromagnetic field for interacting with the rotor. The rotor may magnetically drive a drive plate coupled to an impeller inside a food-contact chamber.
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This application is a continuation of and claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. §120 of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/391,864, titled “MAGNETIC DRIVE FOR FOOD PROCESSING APPARATUS,” filed on Feb. 24, 2009, which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
BACKGROUND OF INVENTION1. Field of Invention
Embodiments described relate to magnetic drives for food processing equipment, particularly for food processing equipment including a food contact chamber separable from a motor drive unit, such as blenders, mixers and the like.
2. Discussion of Related Art
Conventional home blenders and mixers typically incorporate a mechanically-driven impeller rotatably mounted within a removable blender cup. The base of the cup incorporates a generally circular connection plate with a pattern of projections and/or depressions formed on its lower face that is removably mateable, using a vertical, drop-in movement, with a corresponding pattern formed on a like plate attached to the shaft of a motor housed in a base of the machine. This mechanical coupling between the blender cup and the blender motor often requires a rotary seal at the base of the cup between the impeller and connecting plate. This seal is subject to considerable wear and tear over time, as is the mechanical coupling. Because seal failure can result in liquid leaking out of the cup, the seal and bearings in the base of the cup are typically built to ensure sealing at the expense of friction. The friction produces wear, heat, and loss of power. Moreover, the conventional blender produces much unwanted noise, and the mechanical interlocking coupling between the plates can make it awkward or difficult to remove the cup from, and return the cup to, the base.
Many drink mixers have the drive motor mounted in the base directly under the cup. If overall height is a concern, however, the motor may be positioned off to the side and coupled to the driving shaft by a belt or gear arrangement.
A commercially viable blender/shaver for the production of frozen drinks should preferably satisfy a variety of special and important design criteria. It should be compact, both in its footprint and overall height, so as to utilize limited space at a bar efficiently. It ideally has a comparatively low weight. The straight-forward approach of placing a conventional electric motor directly under the blender cup increases the overall height of the machine, and therefore considered undesirable in connection with mechanical linkages.
There should also be speed control, typically provided through gearing and electronics, to accommodate different power and speed requirements in different phases of operation. Rapid controlled braking is also desirable to limit the overall time required to blend, to avoid splashing of the blended material after blending is complete, and for safety. Control of vibration, prevention of overheating, or minimization of wear, ease of maintenance, and durability are also important.
It has also been known that an impeller within a blender cup may be driven magnetically or electromagnetically rather than mechanically. One type of magnetic drive couples a rotating permanent magnet outside a blender cup or the like, to another permanent magnet rotatably mounted in the blender cup. U.S. Pat. No. 2,459,224 to Hendricks; U.S. Pat. No. 2,655,011 to Ihle et al.; and U.S. Pat. No. 5,478,149 to Quigg are exemplary of this approach. Hendricks discloses a magnetically operated stirrer for mixing liquids, in which the stirrer has a magnet mounted at its lower end and within the container for the liquid. Quigg discloses a motor that drives a set of magnets, via gear box and shaft, to couple to another set of magnets mounted on an agitator.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,140,079 to Baermann uses a large rotating plate to carry a series of circumferentially spaced magnets that pass under one portion of a much smaller, rotatable conductive disc.
U.S. Pat. No. 1,242,493 to Stringham and U.S. Pat. No. 1,420,773 to Stainbrook disclose electrical drink mixers in which a stator of an AC motor surrounds and interacts with a rotor in a blender cup, or in its base. In Stringham, a squirrel cage rotor lies in the plane of the stator windings. In Stainbrook, an alternating current (AC) rotor is mounted in the base of the blender cup and stator coils are located below the cup. Such split AC motor arrangements are limited by the torque, speed control, eddy current loss, and emf interference problems of a.c motors, as accentuated by the physical separation of the stator windings and the rotor. They often do not provide good speed control. They do not utilize a direct current (DC) magnetic field coupling. Further, the inclusion of the rotor of the motor within the container or cup often adds unwanted weight to the cup assembly and makes the cup difficult to handle due to gyroscopic effects if it is picked up while the rotor is still spinning.
If the permanent magnet rotor of a brushless DC motor were to be located in the base of a blender cup, the cup would not only become heavy and exhibit a severe gyroscopic effect, but it would also “stick” to steel or iron sinks and countertops, and would attract loose steel or iron objects such as some flatware, barware, or coins.
One or more of the present inventors have described magnetic drive food processing equipment in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,095,677, 6,336,603, 6,210,033, and 6,793,167.
SUMMARY OF INVENTIONAccording to one embodiment, a magnetic drive for food processing equipment including a food-contact chamber includes a driving member disposed outside the food-contact chamber, the driving member including a plurality of permanent magnet poles carried on a rotating shaft; and a driven member disposed within the food-contact chamber, the driven member including discrete bodies of magnetically soft material supported from a rotating shaft in opposed relationship to the plurality of permanent magnet poles.
According to another embodiment, a food processing apparatus having a rotary element to be driven by a rotating magnetic field includes a food-contact chamber defined by an exterior wall. A driven member is disposed within the food-contact chamber. The driven member including discrete bodies of magnetically soft material supported from a rotating shaft arranged to rotate responsive to the rotating magnetic field.
The accompanying drawings are not drawn to scale. In the drawings, each identical or nearly identical component that is illustrated in various figures is represented by a like numeral. For purposes of clarity, not every component may be labeled in every drawing. In the drawings:
This invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangement of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or of being carried out in various ways. Also, the phraseology and terminology used herein is for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting. The use of “including,” “comprising,” or “having,” “containing,” “involving,” and variations thereof herein, is meant to encompass the items listed thereafter and equivalents thereof as well as additional items.
An embodiment of a magnetic drive 26 for the impeller 24 is now described. With reference to
An embodiment of the drive magnet assembly 38A has multiple circumferentially-arrayed, axially-directed poles, eight as shown in
In the embodiment illustrated in
The air gap 54 is a slight clearance between the rotor, or the rotor over-molding, if present, and the wall 50a. The gap 56 is a slight clearance between the wall 22b and the drive plate 34, or any drive plate covering or over-molding, if present. As will be readily appreciated by those skilled in the art, this spacing is a significant source of reluctance in the magnet circuit between the drive magnet assembly 38A and the drive plate 34. Permanent magnet rotors of known DC brushless motors, e.g., the 5 inch disc-diameter motor sold by Integrated Motion Controls, LLC of Torrington, Conn., under its Model No. 50, while roughly comparable in size, construction and field strength to the drive magnet assembly 38A, cannot couple to the drive plate 34 across the spacing 46 with sufficient strength to drive the drive plate operating a blender/shaver.
An alternate embodiment of drive magnet assembly 38A is illustrated in
As an alternative to permanent magnet assemblies, such as assemblies 38A and 38B, motive force can be applied to drive plate 34 utilizing a rotating magnetic field generated by a plurality of electromagnets, as illustrated in
The utilization of a fixed ring of electromagnets 44C may provide advantages in terms of reliability and/or reduction of maintenance requirements by providing a means of inducing a rotating magnetic field capable of driving drive plate 34 without the need for moving parts in base 50. In some designs, this may be at a cost of lower torque capabilities.
In one or more further embodiments, electromagnets 44C may be positioned in more than one vertical level, and in some embodiments, be positioned so as to partially overlap one another, as is illustrated in
With reference to
The motor shaft (illustrated in
A five-inch diameter magnet assembly 38 may weigh approximately three pounds. With typical operating speeds varying from about 4,000 rpm to about 10,000 rpm, significant forces may be exerted on the mounting structures, particularly rapidly varying forces that may produce vibrations. The mounting structure is preferably made sufficiently rigid, through choice and dimensions of materials as well as the overall design, e.g., the use of wall reinforcements such as exterior ribs, to resist the forces and moments produced in normal operation, and thereby to control vibrations that would otherwise loosen, wear, and in the extreme, eventually destroy the motor.
Position of the rotor may be sensed by three conventional Hall effect sensors mounted in a known manner in the motor housing, or the base 50. Position signals provide input to an electronic control and drive circuit such as are known in the art that energizes then motor 28 to produce (i) a start-up torque, (ii) a ramp up of the rotor speed of rotation to a selected operating speed, (iii) a maintained rotation at that selected speed under load, and then (iv) a rapid and reliable braking. Operation of the motor is thus electronically controlled and programmable. Braking is electronic—in some aspects the braking currents induced in windings of the motor 28 (in aspects where motor 28 has windings) is dissipated in large resistors or FETs mounted on heat sinks.
With reference to
The drive plate 34 may include a plurality of pole elements 34a (
Drive plate 34 may be subject to deformation forces when it is subjected to the significant attractive magnetic force of the plate drive magnet assembly 38 (for example, about five pounds) and may be placed in frictional contact with the cup base 22a. Optional ribs (not shown) may be formed on an upper surface of drive plate 34 in order to impart additional mechanical strength. However, it has been discovered that with a prudent selection of material for matrix 34b, such as, for example, fiber reinforced epoxy, and a suitable shape for pole elements 34a, such as that illustrated in
Matrix 34b may be formed of a continuous material or of multiple sections which may be mechanically coupled. Different portions of matrix 34b may be formed of different materials. Matrix 34b may in some aspects comprise a composite material including reinforcing elements such as glass or carbon fibers. In some aspects matrix 34b may be surrounded about its periphery by a reinforcing material such as a ring of ceramic or other non-magnetic material with a strength and/or resistance to creep greater than that of matrix 34b or by windings of glass or carbon fibers.
In some aspects, drive plate 34 may be formed in a molding operation in which pole elements 34a are placed in a mold into which a liquid epoxy or similar material is then introduced and allowed to cure to form matrix 34b. It has been discovered that the design of the shape of pole pieces 34a may facilitate the retention of pole pieces 34a in matrix 34b, and in some cases may reduce the need for an over-molding, which in some embodiments may have been utilized to facilitate the retention of pole pieces 34a in matrix 34b. For example, one or more holes H may be provided in pole elements 34a in order to facilitate securing pole elements 34a in matrix 34b of drive plate 34. Holes H may be through holes which pass completely through pole elements 34a. A portion of matrix 34b may fill all or a portion of one or more of holes H to securely retain one or more of pole pieces 34a in matrix 34b.
It has also been discovered that forming pole elements 34a in alternate shapes, such as those illustrated in
In other aspects, pole elements 34a may be press fit into a preformed matrix 34b or may be secured to matrix 34b with an adhesive, or with one or more fasteners, such as screws, bolts, rivets, or tabs and grooves.
Central boss 91 of drive plate 34 that surrounds the shaft 78 may be molded continuously with matrix 34b. In some aspects, central boss 91 may include a metallic central bore (not shown) that may be press fit or otherwise secured to matrix 34b. Shaft 78 may be molded, press fit, or otherwise secured to central boss 91 or to a metallic central bore included therein.
It has been discovered that by integrally molding shaft 78 into drive plate 34, an improvement in overall stability, balance, and weight of drive plate 34 may be achieved, resulting in a decrease in the potential for undesirable vibration or mechanical failure of drive plate 34 in use. Integrally molding shaft 78 into drive plate 34 may also result in a reduction in cost in the production of the magnetic drive assembly 26.
The attractive magnetic force acting on the drive plate 34 may be carried at a single, central pivot point formed by a hemispherical ball-bearing projecting from the bottom surface of the drive assembly and a plate 96, formed of, for example, stainless steel, and mounted flush with the upper surface of the cup base wall 22b. This arrangement resists the magnet forces pulling down on the plate 34 while at the same time facilitating a low-friction, low-wear rotation of the shaft 78.
With reference to
The desired level of traction depends on each application. It is selected to reliably couple the drive plate to the drive magnet when (i) the impellers 24 are started under the load of the shaved ice and liquid ingredients of a frozen drink in the blender cup, (ii) during a ramp up of the operating speed to a selected operating speed, typically thousands of rpm, and then (iii) as the impeller, and the slushy mass in the cup and interacting with the impeller, is brought to a stop. However, the traction is also selected to disconnect, and thereby automatically clutch, the drive 26 when the cup 22 is removed from its operating position on the base wall 50a under the ice chute 18, or when the load exceeds a preset maximum value. This latter situation can arise, for example, when the frozen drink “freezes up” in the cup, that is, becomes partially or totally a solid frozen mass, or when an object inadvertently falls into the blender as it is operating, e.g., a spoon, jewelry, or bottle cap. By de-coupling, the magnetic drive 26 automatically and immediately cuts off power to the impellers to avoid or minimize injury to person(s) near the blender and to the machine itself. This feature also avoids the cost of providing and maintaining a mechanical clutch.
It is significant to note that the drive plate assembly 34, in some aspects including pole elements 34a, matrix 34b, and a plastic over molding, is light and non-magnetic. There is little detectable gyroscopic effect when the cup is removed from the blender/shaver after use. There is a low rotational momentum due to the impellers and drive plate assembly. The cup is easy to handle because it is light-weight and nonmagnetic.
The magnetic drive 26 of the present invention allows the cup 22 to be placed in an operating position on the blender/shaver 10 with a simple, lateral sliding movement of the smooth, flat cup base 22b over the smooth, flat base portion 50a. There is no need to drop the cup vertically onto a mechanically interlocking drive coupling, and then vertically lift the cup off this coupling. The lateral sliding insertion and removal movements are not only more convenient, but they also reduce the vertical clearance required above the cup. This slide-in arrangement also facilitates cleaning the blender base—one need only wipe a smooth surface. Spilled liquid and slush can flow or be pushed over the surface to a drain 94 formed in the base at the rear of the wall 50a. In the event of a safety hazard, blender overload, or any unusual situation requiring a rapid removal of the cup, it is simply and rapidly withdrawn from the machine with a sliding motion. Further, if an operator is impatient and removes the cup before the motor has fully stopped, a common problem in actual use in a bar, the process of removal itself automatically disconnects the impeller drive from the motor 28 (a misalignment and/or lifting of the cup moves the pole elements 34a out of a coupled relationship with the magnetic lines of force produced by the magnet assembly 38). In conventional belt driven, mechanically-clutched blender/shavers, such a premature removal causes stress and wear on the drive train and the clutch.
A further advantage of some embodiments of this drive is that the motor may be located directly under the blender, thus eliminating drive belts or chains and pulleys or sprockets, but does so while still maintaining vertical, as well as horizontal compactness, both in terms of the height of the motor itself, the vertical height of the coupling between the motor and the cup, and the vertical clearance needed to maneuver the cup onto and off the coupling. However, alternate embodiments, such as those illustrated in
While this invention has been described with respect to some illustrative embodiments, it will be understood that various additional modifications and variations will occur to those skilled in the art. For example, while a rotating magnet assembly has been described as the member coupling to the plate in the cup base, it is possible to produce a rotating electromagnetic or magnetic field using an assembly of electromagnets or other permanent magnet arrangements such as a single, one-piece permanent magnet magnetically configured, or acting in combination with ferromagnetic materials, to produce the desired array of magnetic poles. While the invention has been described with reference to a plate rotatable in the base of a blender cup, the driven element could assume a wide variety of other forms, and need not even be a liquid-holding vessel. While the magnets and plate have been described as having the same number of poles, this is not essential to the operating of this invention. A variety of mounting and rotational support arrangements are possible for both the magnet assembly 38 and the drive plate 34. Further, while individual plate-like elements have been described as forming the pole elements 34a and controlling eddy currents in the plate, one skilled in the art will readily see that a variety of other known arrangements for forming poles and controlling eddy currents are possible.
The magnetic drive 304 for the shaver includes a generally circular drive plate 308 rotatably mounted in the motor housing 309 of the ice shaver assembly and a motor 310 including a rotor 314.
The motor 310 is mounted in the motor housing 309 beneath the rotor 314. The motor 310 is constructed and operates in a manner analogous to the motor 28 of the magnetic drive 26 of the blender described above. In one or more aspects, the motor includes a stator energized by a motor drive circuit to produce a rotating electromagnetic field. The rotor 314 with the shaft 322 secured at its center may slide axially into a bearing in the motor. The rotor 314 may rotate in the bearing with clearance on all sides of the rotor 314.
As in the case of the rotor 32 of the magnetic drive 26 of the blender, described above, the position of the motor 314 can be sensed by three conventional Hall effect sensors mounted in the motor housing 309. Position signals provide input to an electronic control and drive circuit that energizes the motor 310 to produce a startup torque, a ramp up of the rotor speed of rotation to a selected operating speed, a maintained rotation at that selected speed under load, and a rapid and reliable braking torque. As in the case of the motor 28 described above, operation of the motor 310 thus can be electronic and programmable. Braking is electronic—with braking currents in some aspects induced in windings of motor 310 (in aspects where motor 310 comprises windings) being dissipated in large resistors or FETs mounted on heat sinks.
The drive plate 308 can be structured in a manner analogous to the drive plate 34 of the magnetic drive 26 of the blender described above. The drive plate 308 is non-rotatably secured to the lower end of a drive shaft 326. The motor gear 328 is non-rotatably attached to a motor gear shaft 329 which in turn is attached to the upper end of the drive shaft 326. The motor gear 328 is preferably a helical gear having a plurality of helical gear teeth 350. The drive shaft 326 axially fits within the gear shaft 329 and is non-rotatably secured to the gear shaft 329 and the gear 328 to permit the drive shaft 326 and the gear 328 to rotate in unison. Thus, rotational torque from the drive plate 308 can be transmitted to the gear 328 through the drive shaft 326. The drive shaft 326 and the gear shaft 329 of the motor gear 328 are rotatably supported by a pair of journal bearings 330a and 330b.
The compound idler gear 332 is mechanically coupled to the motor gear 328 and the output gear 334 to transmit rotational torque from the motor gear 328 to the output gear 334. The idler gear 332 includes an elongated, cylindrically-shaped upper gear portion 332a having a plurality of helical gear teeth 352 and a generally disk-shaped lower gear portion 332b. The lower gear portion 332b is provided with a plurality of helical gear teeth 354 complementary in size and shape to the gear teeth 350 of the motor gear 328. The gear teeth 350 of the motor gear 328 engage the gear teeth 354 of the lower gear portion 332b to transmit rotational motion and torque from the motor gear 328 to the idler gear 332. The compound idler gear 332 is non-rotatably secured to a gear shaft 356 which is rotatably supported by a pair of journal bearings 333a and 333b.
The output gear 334 is generally cylindrical in shape and is non-rotatably attached to the output shaft 302 to rotate with the output shaft 302. In particular, the output gear 334 is axially disposed over the output shaft 302 such that the output shaft is fitted within the central opening of the output gear 334. The output gear 334 is provided with a plurality of helical gear teeth 334a complementary in size and shape to the gear teeth 352 of the upper gear portion 332a of the idler gear 332. The gear teeth 352 of the upper gear portion 332a engage the gear teeth 334a of the output gear 334 to transmit rotational motion and torque from the idler gear 332 to the output gear 334. The output shaft 302 and the output gear 334 are rotatably supported by a pair of journal bearings 336a and 336b.
The rotor gear 328, the idler gear 332, and the output gear 334 may be helical gears, having helically oriented gear teeth, constructed of light weight, high strength plastic material, such as an acetal such as polyoxymethane, polycarbonate, or nylon. One skilled in the art will recognize, however, that other gear types, such as spur gears, worm gears, or combinations thereof, and other materials, such as metals or composites, can be used in the gear assembly 306 of the present invention.
The gear ratio of the gear assembly 306 of the present invention can be adjusted to increase or to decrease the rotational speed and torque transmitted from the drive shaft 326 of the magnetic drive 304 to the output shaft 302 of the ice shaver. For example, the gear ratio of the gear assembly 306 can be adjusted to reduce the rotational speed, and thus increase the torque, transmitted from the drive shaft 326 to the output shaft 302. Conversely, the rotational speed transmitted by the gear assembly 306 can be increased, thereby reducing the torque transmitted, by adjusting the gear ratio of the gear assembly 306. The gear ratio can be adjusted by changing the number of gear teeth, the number of gears, and/or the size of gears of the gear assembly, as known in the art.
In an embodiment of the ice shaver of the present invention, the desired speed of the output shaft 326 of the ice shaver may be approximately 540 rpm for effective operation of the ice shaver. The magnetic drive 300 of the present invention may generate an operational speed of approximately 6000 rpm. Accordingly, the gear ratio of the gear assembly 306 may be approximately 11.1:1.
One skilled in the art will readily appreciate that the magnetic drive and gear assembly of the present invention can be used in a wide variety of applications, in addition to the ice shaver described above, where it is desired to transmit power from a rotary output of a motor to a driven member under a load, including in other food processing equipment such as blenders, food mixers, food processors, and juicers.
Additionally, although the ice shaver of the present invention is described as a component of a combination blender/ice shaver machine, one skilled in the art will readily appreciate that the ice shaver can be a stand alone unit, i.e., the ice shaver can be independent of the blender.
Moreover, one skilled in the art will appreciate that the type and number of gears, the size of the gears, and the number of gear teeth of the gear assembly described herein in connection with the ice shaver of the present invention is exemplary only. These features, as well as other features of the gear assembly, can be varied to achieve the same, similar or, different gear ratios, as is desired for a specific application, without departing from the scope of the present invention. For example, design considerations, such as weight and size limitations, can dictate the number, type, and size of gears, as well as the number of gear teeth, employed to achieve the desired gear ratio.
These and other modifications and variations which will occur to those skilled in the art having read the foregoing specification in light of the accompanying drawings are intended to fall within the scope of the appended claims.
In one aspect, the stator 430 may include at least one Hall effect sensor for determining the position of the rotor 420 according to schemes previously described herein.
As shown in
Generally, the hub 450 may include a hub upper surface 452 facing away from the stator 430 and a hub lower surface 454 facing toward the stator 430. The hub 450 may be substantially centered and/or substantially symmetric about the motor shaft 410. The drive magnet 38B may be coupled to the hub upper surface 452, and the rotor magnet 460 may be coupled to the hub lower surface 454. The hub upper surface 452 may include a recess 456 for receiving the drive magnet 38B. The recess 456 may be designed so that the hub upper surface 452 substantially encloses the drive magnet 38B. Alternately, the recess 456 may be designed so that a portion of the drive magnet 38B extends upward from the hub upper surface 452. The hub lower surface 454 may include a sidewall 458 extending downward from the hub lower surface 454, and the rotor magnet 460 may be coupled to the sidewall 458. The sidewall 458 may include an inner surface 459 facing toward the motor shaft 410, and the rotor magnet 460 may be coupled to the inner surface 459.
A variety of different configurations of the rotor 420 are possible. For example, the hub upper surface 452 and/or the hub lower surface 454 may be substantially planar. Also, the hub upper surface 452 may include a sidewall extending upward from the hub upper surface, and the drive magnet 38B may be coupled to the sidewall in a manner similar to that previously described with respect to the rotor magnet 460. Additionally, the hub lower surface 454 may include a recess for receiving the rotor magnet 460 in a manner similar to that previously described with respect to the drive magnet 38B.
The hub 450 may be formed at least in part from a metal or a magnetizable material. Alternately, the hub 450 may be formed at least in part from a plastic material.
The drive magnet 38B and the rotor magnet 460 may have multiple circumferentially arrayed poles. The drive magnet 38B and the rotor magnet 460 may be disposed so that their poles are aligned.
The drive magnet 38B and the rotor magnet 460 may be coupled to the hub 450 so that the drive magnet 38B, the rotor magnet 460, and the hub 450 rotate together about the motor shaft 410. The drive magnet 38B and the rotor magnet 460 may be coupled to the hub 450 by using a variety of conventional schemes. For example, the drive magnet 38B and/or the rotor magnet 460 may be removably and replaceably attached to the hub 450 by using removable and replaceable fasteners, such as clips, dowels, nails, nuts and bolts, screws, spikes, rivets, tacks, and/or other conventional mechanical fasteners. Alternately, the drive magnet 38B and/or the rotor magnet 460 may be press fit to the hub 450. Also alternately, the drive magnet 38B and/or the rotor magnet 460 may be attached to the hub 450 by using an adhesive, a braze, and/or a weld.
As shown in
As shown in
As previously indicated, in one embodiment, the rotor magnet 460 may include multiple rotor magnets disposed about the motor shaft 410. In such an embodiment, at least one of the multiple rotor magnets 460 may include an inner rotor magnet surface 462 that at least partially faces the outer stator surface 472.
A variety of different configurations of the motor 400 are possible. For example, the rotor magnet 460 may be disposed within the at least one stator coil 30. In such an embodiment, the rotor magnet 460 may include an outer rotor magnet surface facing away from the motor shaft 410, and the at least one stator coil 30 may include an inner stator surface facing toward the motor shaft 410. The motor 400 may then be assembled so that the inner stator surface at least partially faces the outer rotor magnet surface.
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
Control unit 710 may include at least one application-specific processor (ASP) familiar to those of ordinary skill in the art. In one embodiment, control unit 710 may include a digital signal processor (DSP), and the DSP may include at least one analog-to-digital converter (ADC) and/or other operating component(s) familiar to those of ordinary skill in the art.
An exemplary operation of control system 700 may be understood in the following manner. Based on data 762 received from input/output device 760, control unit 710 may determine an operating parameter for motor 740. For example, control unit 710 may determine an operating speed of a rotor of the motor 740. Control unit 710 may provide a corresponding control signal 712 to actuator 730, and, based on the control signal 712, actuator 730 may provide an actuating signal 732 to motor 740 sufficient to actuate motor 740 to the desired operating parameter. Control unit 710 may monitor the operating parameter measured by sensor 750, and may adjust the control signal 712 provided to actuator 730 based on a difference between a desired operating parameter and the measured operating parameter. Control unit 710 may also monitor the feedback signal 734 provided by actuator 730.
Generally, control system 700 may control a current provided to motor 740 and/or to a component associated with motor 740, such as a component previously described herein, for example, a blender, a food processor, and an ice shaver. For example, control system 700 may control a current provided to a blender and/or an ice shaver connected to the blender. Control system 700 may control a speed of the motor 740 and/or a speed of a component associated with the motor 400. Control system 700 may be designed to control motors similar to those previously described herein, including brushless motors and 3-phase brushless motors.
Having thus described several aspects of at least one embodiment of this invention, it is to be appreciated various alterations, modifications, and improvements will readily occur to those skilled in the art. Such alterations, modifications, and improvements are intended to be part of this disclosure, and are intended to be within the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the foregoing description and drawings are by way of example only.
Claims
1. A magnetic drive for food processing equipment including a food-contact chamber, comprising:
- a driving member disposed outside the food-contact chamber, the driving member including a plurality of permanent magnet poles carried on a rotating shaft; and
- a driven member disposed within the food-contact chamber, the driven member including discrete bodies of magnetically soft material supported from a rotating shaft in opposed relationship to the plurality of permanent magnet poles.
2. The magnetic drive of claim 1, further comprising an electric motor disposed outside the food-contact chamber and mechanically coupled to the driving member.
3. The magnetic drive of claim 2, wherein the driving member is disposed coaxially with the electric motor and wherein the driving member and the electric motor share a common shaft.
4. The magnetic drive of claim 2, wherein the driving member is disposed non-coaxially with the electric motor and wherein a shaft of the motor is coupled to a shaft of the driving member by at least one of a belt and a gear train.
5. The magnetic drive of claim 1, wherein the discrete bodies comprise a ferromagnetic material.
6. The magnetic drive of claim 1, wherein the discrete bodies comprise a ceramic ferrite.
7. The magnetic drive of claim 1, wherein the discrete bodies comprise a laminated structure.
8. The magnetic drive of claim 1, wherein the discrete bodies are embedded in a non-magnetic matrix.
9. The magnetic drive of claim 8, wherein the matrix comprises reinforcing fibers.
10. The magnetic drive of claim 8, wherein the discrete bodies are retained in the non-magnetic matrix, and this retention is facilitated by the inclusion of at least one of at least partially non-parallel sidewalls on the discrete bodies and one or more holes in the discrete bodies.
11. The magnetic drive of claim 1, wherein the discrete bodies comprise non-parallel sidewalls.
12. The magnetic drive of claim 1, wherein the discrete bodies comprise one or more through holes.
13. The magnetic drive of claim 1, wherein the driven member is at least partially enclosed in an over-molding.
14. Food processing apparatus having a rotary element to be driven by a rotating magnetic field, comprising:
- a food-contact chamber defined by an exterior wall;
- a driven member disposed within the food-contact chamber, the driven member including discrete bodies of magnetically soft material supported from a rotating shaft arranged to rotate responsive to the rotating magnetic field.
15. The food processing apparatus of claim 14, further comprising a driving element including a rotor disposed in a base of the food processing apparatus.
16. The food processing apparatus of claim 14, wherein the driven member further comprises a reinforced matrix at least partially surrounding the discrete bodies.
17. The food processing apparatus of claim 14, wherein the discrete bodies comprise a plurality of materials.
18. The food processing apparatus of claim 14, wherein the rotating magnetic field is generated by a plurality of electromagnets.
19. The food processing apparatus of claim 18, wherein at least a first of the plurality of electromagnets at least partially vertically overlaps at least a second of the plurality of electromagnets.
20. The food processing apparatus of claim 14, further comprising a housing containing a means for generating the rotating magnetic field, said means having no moving parts.
Type: Application
Filed: Oct 5, 2012
Publication Date: Jan 31, 2013
Applicant: ISLAND OASIS FROZEN COCKTAIL CO., INC. (Walpole, MA)
Inventor: Island Oasis Frozen Cocktail Co., Inc. (Walpole, MA)
Application Number: 13/645,912
International Classification: B01F 13/08 (20060101);