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Pneumatic Components & Systems Team 1640 Clem McKown – mentor November 2008
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Pneumatic Components & Systems

Dec 30, 2015

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Pneumatic Components & Systems. Team 1640 Clem McKown – mentor November 2008. Topics. What are pneumatics? What are pneumatics good for? How pneumatics work The pneumatic system Variations on the theme. What are pneumatics. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Pneumatic Components & Systems

Pneumatic Components & Systems

Team 1640Clem McKown – mentor

November 2008

Page 2: Pneumatic Components & Systems

Topics

What are pneumatics? What are pneumatics good for? How pneumatics work The pneumatic system Variations on the theme

Page 3: Pneumatic Components & Systems

What are pneumatics Mechanisms which

use air pressure to apply mechanical force and displacement (work)

The pneumatic devices we use are basically binary actuators – either retracted or extended

RetractedCylinder

ExtendedCylinder

Page 4: Pneumatic Components & Systems

What are pneumatics good for?

Mechanisms requiring (2) discrete states Gear shifters Gripper articulation Lifters Brakes

…and a significant force or displacement

Page 5: Pneumatic Components & Systems

Strengths

Page 6: Pneumatic Components & Systems

Strengths Simple

Page 7: Pneumatic Components & Systems

Strengths Simple Easy to control

Page 8: Pneumatic Components & Systems

Strengths Simple Easy to control Can apply a lot of force from a small,

light package

Page 9: Pneumatic Components & Systems

Strengths Simple Easy to control Can apply a lot of force from a small,

light package Force is limited by air pressure and

cylinder diameter

Page 10: Pneumatic Components & Systems

Strengths Simple Easy to control Can apply a lot of force from a small,

light package Force is limited by air pressure and

cylinder diameter No adverse consequence if cylinder is

stopped (no stalled motors) or reversed – compressed air is a spring

Page 11: Pneumatic Components & Systems

Drawbacks

Page 12: Pneumatic Components & Systems

Drawbacks

A significant weight “investment” (~10 lbm) in a pneumatic system is needed for the first pneumatic device

Page 13: Pneumatic Components & Systems

Drawbacks

A significant weight “investment” (~10 lbm) in a pneumatic system is needed for the first pneumatic device

Cylinders can be subject to damage

Page 14: Pneumatic Components & Systems

Drawbacks

A significant weight “investment” (~10 lbm) in a pneumatic system is needed for the first pneumatic device

Cylinders can be subject to damage

Repair impossible

Page 15: Pneumatic Components & Systems

Drawbacks

A significant weight “investment” (~10 lbm) in a pneumatic system is needed for the first pneumatic device

Cylinders can be subject to damage Repair impossible Not well suited for non-binary

actuation

Page 16: Pneumatic Components & Systems

In Industry Pneumatic actuators are extensively

used by the Chemical Process Industry due to their intrinsic safety and their ability to fail safe (w/ spring return)

2-positionpneumatic

actuatordriving a

4-wayball valve

pneumaticallydriven flowcontrol valves(butterfly type)

Page 17: Pneumatic Components & Systems

How it works

Piston

Cylinder

Seals

⅛” NPTF Air Port (Extension)

⅛” NPTF Air Port (Retraction)

Rod

Force = Area (in2) x Pressure (lbf/in2)Extension Area = Cylinder CS AreaSubtract Rod CS Area for Retraction

Typically,pressureis appliedto one portwhile theother isvented toatmosphere- so P isregulatedgauge pressure (60 psi max)

Page 18: Pneumatic Components & Systems

More works We may specify

Cylinder Diameter – sets Force @ a pressure Stroke Length Mounting Options Rod Material Rod Extensions Spring Return ….

Stroke

Length

Page 19: Pneumatic Components & Systems

Cylinder Specs (Bimba DXP/DX/DP)

Air Pressure (gauge): 60 lbf/in2

Length (in)Nominal Cyl ID Rod OD Extend Retract Extend Retract Base per inch Base

3/4" 0.750 0.250 0.44 0.39 27 24 0.21 0.03 3.757/8" 0.875 0.250 0.60 0.55 36 33 0.32 0.03 3.56

1-1/16" 1.063 0.313 0.89 0.81 53 49 0.33 0.05 3.841-1/4" 1.250 0.438 1.23 1.08 74 65 0.71 0.08 4.721-1/2" 1.500 0.438 1.77 1.62 106 97 0.73 0.08 4.381-3/4" 1.750 0.500 2.41 2.21 144 133 1.64 0.11 5.75

2" 2.000 0.500 3.14 2.95 188 177 1.62 0.15 5.622-1/2" 2.500 0.500 4.91 4.71 295 283 2.27 0.17 5.62

3" 3.000 0.625 7.07 6.76 424 406 3.87 0.26 6.50

Dimension (in) Area (in2) Force (lbf) Mass (lbm)

Page 20: Pneumatic Components & Systems

The pneumatic system I(the investment)

Motor

Compressor

Pressure

Switch

PressureSafetyValveH

igh

-Pre

ssu

reA

ir S

tora

ge

Hig

h-P

ress

ure

Air

Sto

rage

Pressure

Gauge

Pressure

Gauge

PressureVentValve

Pressure

Regulator

Hig

h P

ress

ure

Low

Pre

ssure

Users

Controller Spike

Page 21: Pneumatic Components & Systems

The pneumatic system II(the solenoid valve)

Air Supply(Pressure)

Vent B

Vent A

Port A

Port B

Supply/Vent Side

Output Side

A B

V P V

State AA B

V P V

State B

All ports⅛” NPTF

Page 22: Pneumatic Components & Systems

The pneumatic system III(device control)

SpikeController

AirPressure

A restrictor valve in Vent Bslows extension speedwithout affecting retractionspeed

¼” flexible tubing

State A – Extends rodState B – Retracts rod

Page 23: Pneumatic Components & Systems

The pneumatic system III(device control)

SpikeController

AirPressure

A restrictor valve in Vent Bslows extension speedwithout affecting retractionspeed

¼” flexible tubing

State A – Extends rodState B – Retracts rod

If you are using pairs ofcylinders which are activatedtogether, they can be drivenby common solenoids

Page 24: Pneumatic Components & Systems

Plumbing – Tubing Fittings

Tee - SMC KQT07-00

Male Elbow - SMC KQL07-34SMale Connector - SMC KQH07-34S

Restrictor Elbow - SMC NAS2201F-N01-07S

Page 25: Pneumatic Components & Systems

Something outside the box

In 2006Team 386 created high

vacuumwith cylinders

Page 26: Pneumatic Components & Systems

Team 386 (2006) a better vacuum

Team 386 used suction to lift ringers,but was underwhelmed by the vacuumdeveloped by venturi

Page 27: Pneumatic Components & Systems

Team 386 (2006) a better vacuum

Retracting the smaller cylinder

Team 386 used suction to lift ringers,but was underwhelmed by the vacuumdeveloped by venturi

Page 28: Pneumatic Components & Systems

Team 386 (2006) a better vacuum

Retracting the smaller cylinder

Generates a highvacuum on the larger cylinder

Page 29: Pneumatic Components & Systems

Team 386 (2006) a better vacuum

Retracting the smaller cylinder

Generates a highvacuum on the larger cylinder

Separate cylinder sets were used foreach suction cup, providing redundancy

Page 30: Pneumatic Components & Systems

Team 386 (2006) a better vacuum

Extending the smaller cylinder

Breaks the vacuum

Separate cylinder sets were used foreach suction cup, providing redundancy

Extending the small cylinders releasedthe vacuum and dropped the ringer