Jonath, Lucas; Luderich, Jörg; Brezina, Jonas Andreas; Gonzalez Degetau, Ana Maria; Karaoglu, Selim:
Improving the Thermal Behavior of High-Speed Spindles Through the Use of an Active Controlled Heat Pipe System
In: 3rd International Conference on Thermal Issues in Machine Tools (ICTIMT2023) / Ihlenfeldt, Steffen (Eds.). - ICTIMT 2023; Dresden, Germany; 21.03.-23.03.2023 - Cham: Springer, 2023-06-01, pp. 203 - 218
2023-06-02Essay (Conference) in Conference proceedingsOpen Access
Faculty of Process Engineering, Energy and Mechanical Systems » Institute of Product Development and Engineering Design
Title in English:
Improving the Thermal Behavior of High-Speed Spindles Through the Use of an Active Controlled Heat Pipe System
Author:
Jonath, LucasTH Köln
DHSB-ID
THK0002277
SCOPUS
58522210900
Other
person connected with TH Köln
;
Luderich, JörgTH Köln
DHSB-ID
THK0001813
SCOPUS
6504488862
Other
person connected with TH Köln
;
Brezina, Jonas AndreasTH Köln
DHSB-ID
THK0022254
SCOPUS
58522081700
Other
person connected with TH Köln
;
Gonzalez Degetau, Ana Maria
SCOPUS
58521567500
;
Karaoglu, SelimTH Köln
DHSB-ID
THK0036566
SCOPUS
58521445600
Other
person connected with TH Köln
Date published:
2023-06-02
„Publication Channel“:
Open Access
Scopus ID
Language of text:
English
Keyword, Topic:
Heat Pipes ; High-Speed Motor Spindle ; Thermal Control
Type of resource:
Text
Access Rights:
open access
Practice Partner:
No
Category:
Research
Part of statistic:
Part of statistic

Abstract in English:

The thermo-elastic behavior of high-speed spindles has a significant influence on the machine accuracy. The Tool Center Point (TCP) changes continuously, not only due to the different temperature levels and energy inputs during warm-up, full-load and part-load operation, but also during interruptions for workpiece or tool changes. In this paper a heat pipe based tempering system is presented to control the spindle temperature and thus to keep the TCP displacement at a constant level, regardless of speed and load. As effective passive heat transfer components, heat pipes can be used not only to cool the system but also to insert heat into it. This capability of reversing the heat flow enables a high controllability of the temperature field in a bidirectional way and allows innovative capabilities of using advanced control algorithms. This paper describes the overall heat pipe concept and focuses on its potential as a key element for dynamic temperature control systems. Experimental results prove the feasibility of the concept with a simple on-off controller, achieving the reduction of the TCP displacement variation of a 2.2 kW spindle by 62% of its original value. The potential of the tempering concept forms the base for the deployment of various advanced control systems, such as Model-based Predictive Control (MPC), Fuzzy or Reinforcement Learning.