Next Article in Journal
Experimental Study on Tribological and Leakage Characteristics of a Rotating Spring-Energized Seal under High and Low Temperature
Previous Article in Journal
Analysis of Manufacturing Methods and Die Design for Rice Transplanter Claws and Combine Harvester Blades in Bangladesh
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

Characterization of 2D Electrical Feedback Flow Control Valve

College of Mechanical Engineering, Zhejiang University of Technology, Hangzhou 310023, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Machines 2023, 11(2), 220; https://doi.org/10.3390/machines11020220
Submission received: 5 January 2023 / Revised: 31 January 2023 / Accepted: 1 February 2023 / Published: 2 February 2023
(This article belongs to the Section Machine Design and Theory)

Abstract

:
We proposed a novel 2D electric feedback flow control valve to solve the problem of low integration and control accuracy of flow control valves. The torque motor of the valve drives the 2D piston to rotate, and the rotational motion is converted to axial motion and drives the spool. The differential pressure feedback rod on the valve body can accurately measure the differential pressure of the oil inlet and outlet and cooperate with the spool displacement to form a closed loop of flow. This loop of flow then overcomes the influence of the valve port’s load change on the flow. We first established the mathematical model of the valve, obtained the transfer function, and performed the stability analysis. Then, we used AMESim as a platform for simulation analysis. Finally, we conducted the experimental verification of the valve. The verification showed the following characteristics of the valve. The hysteresis loop is 4.4%. The linearity is 1.6%. The response time is about 44 ms. The amplitude bandwidth is about 17 Hz. The phase bandwidth is about 28 Hz. The valve’s steady-state flow error is less than 8%, suggesting its broad application prospect in the aerospace and military fields.

1. Introduction

Electro-hydraulic servo valves with high control accuracy and fast response are generally used in fields that require high output power and high dynamic response, including aerospace, metallurgy, material testing, and military [1,2]. Micro valves, such as the vertically allocated SU-8 check valve formed by Mao et al. [3], can be used in less leaky microfluidic systems. The vertically allocated SU-8 check valve formed by photolithography has a limited overlap between an SU-8 cantilever and its valve seat, which was experimentally compared, and it was found that the fully overlapped SU-8 check valve possessed less leakage compared to the partially overlapped SU-8 check valve. Its diodicity (DI) is improved by about 2 times, from 1.7 to 3.5. If a stable flow rate is required, a pressure compensator must be used in conjunction with a flow sensor, which can form a closed-loop control of the flow rate [4,5,6]. However, pressure-compensated flow control valves are often disadvantaged due to low control accuracy, large flow overshoot, and large energy losses [7].
Researchers have worked extensively to improve the performance of electrohydraulic valves. Okhotnikov et al. [8] studied the steady-state flow state and hydraulic characteristics of rotating flow control valves for high-flow fluid systems. They used CFD simulations to predict the torque and pressure drop caused by steady-state flow and improved the controllable performance of the flow valves. Wang et al. [9] designed a mathematical model of a constant flow control valve to quantitatively analyze how the overflow area and gradient, among other factors, at the valve orifice, influence the valve characteristics. They further analyzed the mechanisms of these influences based on AMESim simulation. They found that adjusting the differential pressure compensator overflow area and gradient can significantly improve the static dynamics of the flow valve. Jin et al. [10] analyzed the force output of two proportional solenoids to minimize the variation of the current force gain. They proposed a different control method (DCM) to reduce the effect of the nonlinearity of proportional solenoids on the performance of a proportional reversing valve. Their experimental results showed that compared to the normal control method, the DCM can greatly improve the frequency response of proportional reversing valves at small current input.
Milecki et al. [11] proposed a novel proportional valve, which outputs the flow proportionally to the sum of the steps of two stepper motors. Through modeling and simulation of the valve, they found that the stepper motors have significant overshoot and further proposed a special control algorithm to achieve a high positioning accuracy. Wang et al. [12] performed a theoretical analysis to compare a flow control valve with controlled pressure that they proposed with a traditional flow control valve. The experimental results showed that the valve has a wider range of differential pressure compensation; the output flow can vary from 44% to 100% of the rated flow and attempts to compensate for the effects of hydrodynamic forces. Li et al. [13] and others designed a liquid-controlled proportional flow control valve by optimizing the spool throttle slot. They stabilized the output flow by adding a pressure compensator to the proportional reversing valve that has a pressure compensation range of 0.3~0.7 MPa. Both studies [12,13] used pressure compensators to compensate for the differential pressure between the import and export to stabilize the flow. However, the pressure compensation ranges are narrow, and the control accuracy is poor.
Subsequently, Huang et al. [14] proposed a flow control valve with a pilot digital pressure compensator. The compensator detects the pressure drop at the pilot valve metering port with a pressure sensor and compensates for the pressure compensation. A comparative analysis of the theory and experiment supported the feasibility of the scheme. Based on the principle of pilot flow amplification of the Valvistor valve, Zhao et al. [15] eliminated the differential pressure compensator and the flow sensor in the main valve circuit and used proportional amplification of the main valve’s pilot flow to control the main valve flow and reduce the pressure loss. Hao et al. [16] adjusted the pilot flow by changing the hydraulic pump speed to offset the flow fluctuations caused by the differential pressure changes.
However, many factors, such as pressure fluctuations, processing errors, and hydrodynamic forces [17,18,19], affect the amplification factor between the main flow and the inflow and directly affect the main valve flow, as the controlled object has a higher control accuracy. The 2D valve proposed by Ruan et al. [20,21] integrates the pilot and power stages of a traditional multi-stage valve into a spool with two degrees of freedom. This valve has only a simple structure but also excellent anti-pollution capability. The 2D electric feedback flow control valve designed on this basis achieves flow control by metering the differential pressure between the inlet and outlet and the spool displacement to ensure response speed. In this study, we describe the structure and operation principle of a 2D electric feedback flow control valve, establish the transfer functions of the pilot and power stages, simulate the valve as a whole using AMESim, and verify the valve through experiments.

2. Structure Principles

The 2D electric feedback flow control valve includes a torque motor, a main valve body, a differential pressure feedback rod, a damping piston, and some displacement sensor modules (Figure 1). The torque motor converts its angular displacement into axial displacement through the 2D piston that changes the valve opening. The differential pressure feedback rod can then be displaced in response to the change in pressure drop between the working port and the high-pressure port. The displacement sensors 1 and 2 integrated into the torque motor can feed back the displacement of the differential pressure feedback lever and the spool to the controller. The current flow rate at the working port is then calculated and compared with the input expected flow rate for the purpose of flow control.

2.1. Working Principle of the 2D Piston

A schematic of the 2D piston structure is shown in Figure 2. The 2D piston is the key module of the 2D electrical feedback flow control valve. The piston consists of a high-pressure chamber, a sensitive chamber, an oblique groove, a high-pressure groove, and a low-pressure groove. When the torque motor is fed with the current to the output torque and drives the 2D piston to rotate, the overlapping area of the oblique groove and the high- and low-pressure grooves on the valve body changes. The changes in flow rate from the high-pressure chamber to the sensitive chamber result in changes in the pressure in the sensitive chamber. The spool loses balance, and the pressure difference between the sensitive and high-pressure chambers drives the spool to axial displacement.

2.2. Differential Pressure Measurement Principle

In general, the differential pressure between the inlet and outlet of the flow valve is measured by a pressure sensor. However, on the one hand, as the servo valve works, the oil temperature rises, and the accuracy of the common pressure sensor will be significantly reduced. On the other hand, the pressure sensor would occupy extra space and increase the overall mass of the valve, making it unsuitable for small and low-mass working places. Therefore, we designed the differential pressure feedback rod outside the valve body to reduce the number of components and the volume of the valve. The structure principle of the differential pressure feedback rod is shown in Figure 3.
The pressure-sensing piston is connected to the pressure feedback rod through the ball. The right side of the displacement feedback rod is connected to the LVDT linear displacement sensor, which can feed the displacement collection to the controller. The controller can calculate the current import and export pressure difference according to the relationship between the import and export pressure differences and the displacement.
The force balance equation for the differential pressure feedback rod is
p s A i p k A o = K q Δ x
where A o is the effective force area on the right side of the pressure-sensing piston; A i is the effective force area on the left side of the pressure-sensing piston; p k is the oil outlet pressure; p s is the oil inlet pressure; K q is the pressure measuring spring stiffness; and Δ x is the magnitude of the differential pressure feedback rod displacement.
The relationship between the differential inlet and outlet pressure Δ p and the differential pressure feedback rod displacement Δ x can be obtained as follows:
Δ p = K q Δ x p s ( A i A o ) A o
Initially, the differential pressure feedback rod is at the zero position. When the pressure at the work port decreases, the differential pressure feedback rod loses balance and starts to move to the right, driven by the pressure at the oil inlet. As the compression of the pressure-sensitive spring increases, the spring force gradually increases, and the differential pressure feedback rod reaches the balance again. When the pressure at the work port increases, the force on the right increases, and the differential pressure feedback rod is displaced to the left. This elongates the pressure-sensitive spring. In turn, the spring force gradually increases to bring the feedback rod back to balance again. The linear displacement sensor directly connected to the displacement feedback rod sends feedback on the collected displacement to the controller and calculates the differential pressure.

2.3. Working Principle of the Torque Motor

The structure principle of the torque motor is shown in Figure 4. The torque motor’s components include an armature, a permanent magnet, and a coil. When no current is applied to the coil, the armature is at the zero position. When the torque motor is turned on, the coil produces the red magnetic flux due to the current (Figure 4). At air gaps 1 and 3, the blue flux produced by the permanent magnet is in the same direction as the red flux produced by the coil, while at air gaps 2 and 4, the fluxes are in different directions. This difference causes the armature to lose balance and rotate to the output torque until it regains balance by the zeroing spring. If the current is passed in the opposite direction, the armature is subjected to a force exactly opposite to the above situation, and the torque and angle in the opposite direction will be output.

2.4. Working Principle

Figure 5 illustrates the structure of the 2D electrical feedback flow control valve. The valve consists of a pilot stage 2D piston, a power stage spool, a differential pressure feedback rod, a damping piston, and a reset spring.
Initially, the valve opening is zero and the torque motor turning angle is zero, too. When the torque motor turns on the current and drives the 2D piston to turn counterclockwise, the overlapping area between the high-pressure groove and the oblique groove increases. This drives the high-pressure oil that is flowing into the sensitive chamber on the right to increase, resulting in a higher pressure in the sensitive chamber. The spool moves axially to the left due to the pressure difference between the high-pressure and sensitive chambers. The reset spring is compressed. As the 2D piston moves axially, it also changes the size of the overlapping area between the high- and low-pressure grooves and the oblique groove. In turn, the overlapping area between the oblique and high-pressure grooves, the flow into the sensitive chamber, and the pressure in the sensitive chamber all decrease, and the pressure in the high-pressure chamber remains unchanged. Thus, the force on the spool reaches equilibrium again, and the spool reaches the designated position. The flow at the working port has increased. When the torque motor outputs in the opposite direction, the spool moves in the opposite direction; the overlapping area of the high-pressure groove and the oblique groove decreases, and the high-pressure oil flowing into the sensitive chamber decreases. This results in a lower pressure in the sensitive chamber, and the spool is no longer balanced because of the force of axial movement to the right. As the 2D piston moves to the right, both the overlapping area of the high-pressure groove and the oblique groove and the pressure in the sensitive chamber gradually increase. The pressure in the sensitive chamber gradually increases, the pressure on the spool is rebalanced, and the flow rate of the working port is reduced. The 2D piston can amplify the smaller torque output from the torque motor into a greater hydraulic force and use it as a driving force to push the spool. It also has the characteristics of self-feedback.
When the load pressure of the working port changes, the differential pressure feedback rod starts to move axially because the force is imbalanced. The controller first collects the displacement of the differential pressure feedback rod through the displacement sensor. It then calculates the current pressure differences between the inlet and the outlet according to the relationship between the displacement of the differential pressure feedback rod and the differential pressure. It further calculates the current flow rate according to the pressure difference between the inlet and the outlet and the spool displacement collected by the displacement sensor. Then it compares the current flow rate with the expected input flow rate and adjusts the control signal through a control strategy to change the size of the torque motor angle. Finally, it adjusts the spool displacement of the 2D electric feedback flow control valve to ensure the stability of the output flow.

3. Stability Analysis

3.1. Transfer Function

To shorten the response time, we replaced the traditional high- and low-pressure hole structure with a high- and low-pressure groove structure. In the 2D piston rotation schematic (Figure 6), the torque motor shaft is connected to a 2D piston. When the torque motor rotates at an angle of θ, the overlap height of the high-pressure groove and the oblique groove on the 2D piston is:
h = R θ sin β + h 0
where R is the radii of the 2D piston; β is the inclination angle of the oblique groove; θ is the rotation angle of the 2D piston rotation angle; and h 0 is the initial overlap height between the high-pressure trough and the inclined trough.
The 2D piston structure has a self-feedback link, that is, the axial displacement affects the overlap area of the high- and low-pressure grooves and the oblique grooves, which in turn affects the sensitive chamber pressure, causing the 2D piston to stop moving and reach a new equilibrium state. The relationship between the axial displacement of the spool and the change in the overlap height of the high- and low-pressure grooves of the 2D piston is:
Δ h = R θ sin β x v cos β
where x v is the spool displacement.
The flow continuity equation in the sensitive chamber, without accounting for oil compression and leakage, is:
q 1 q 2 = A s d x v d t + V c β e d p c d t
where q 1 is the flow rate from the high-pressure groove to the sensitive chamber via the oblique groove; q 2 is the flow rate of the sensitive chamber into the low-pressure groove through the inclined channel; A s is the effective area of the sensitive chamber pressure on the 2D piston; V c is the volume of the sensitive chamber; β e is the bulk modulus of elasticity of the oil; and p c is the pressure of the sensitive chamber.
q 1 = C d A 1 2 ( p s p c ) ρ
where C d is the flow coefficient; A 1 = w h 0 / sin β + R θ w is the overlap area between the high-pressure groove and the oblique groove; w is the width of the high- and low-pressure grooves; and ρ is the fluid density.
q 2 = C d A 2 2 p c ρ
where A 2 = w h 0 / sin β R θ w is the overlap area between the low-pressure groove and the oblique groove.
To improve the stability of the 2D electrical feedback flow control valve, we add a damped piston device, whose structure is shown in Figure 7.
According to the literature [22], adding a damping piston does not change the force on the main spool, but only increases the velocity-dependent damping B 1 , whose size is:
B 1 = 3 π μ l ( D 2 d 2 + 2 y 0 D ) ( D 2 d 2 ) 4 y 0 3 D + π μ l D ( 3 ( D 2 d 2 + 2 y 0 D ) 2 y 0 2 D + 1 y 0 )
where μ is the viscosity coefficient of the oil; l is the thickness of the damping piston; D is the large diameter of the damping piston; d is the small diameter of the damping piston; and y 0 is the thickness of the oil film.
The dynamic equilibrium equation of the spool can be expressed as:
p c A s p s A r = m d 2 x v d t 2 + ( B p + B 1 ) d x v d t + ( K v + K f ) x v + F L
where A r is the effective area of the high-pressure chamber; m is the mass converted to the spool; B p is the axial viscous damping coefficient; K v is the axial spring stiffness; F L is the external load force; K f is the hydraulic equivalent stiffness.
According to Equations (3)−(9), and neglecting leakage and some non-linear factors, we obtain the control block diagram (Figure 8) and then obtain the transfer function.
x ( s ) θ ( s ) = R tan β s s 2 ω n 2 + 2 ζ n s ω n + 1 cos β ( K 1 / A s ) + 1
where ω n is the intrinsic frequency of the 2D valve piston; K 1 is the flow gain coefficient of the 2D valve piston; and ζ n is the damping ratio of the 2D valve piston.
ω n = β e A s 2 m V c
K 1 = 2 C d w p s ρ
ζ n = A s 2 β e m V c 2 A s 2 ( B p + B 1 ) V c β e + m K 2
where K 2 is the coefficient of pressure flow gain of the 2D valve piston.
K 2 = 2 C d h 0 w ρ p s
Based on the known 2D piston displacement (spool displacement), the relationship between the working port flow and spool displacement can be obtained according to the following slide valve orifice flow formula:
Q = C d ω x v 2 Δ p ρ
where Q is the valve port flow; ω is the gradient of the valve port through-flow area; and Δ p is the differential inlet and outlet pressure.

3.2. Stability Analysis

According to the transfer function shown in Equation (10), the characteristic root equation can be obtained as:
s 3 ω n 2 + 2 ζ n s 2 ω n + s + cos β ( K 1 / A s ) = 0
By substituting the expressions of ω n and ζ n into Equation (13), the characteristic equation can be rewritten as:
m V c β e A s 2 s 3 + ( B p + B 1 ) V c β e + m K 2 s 2 A s 2 + s + cos β ( K 1 / A s ) = 0
According to the Routh stability criterion, we obtain:
( B p + B 1 ) V c β e + m K 2 > m V c K 1 cos β β e A s
After substituting the expressions of K 1 and K 2 into Equation (17) and performing term shifting, we obtain:
2 C d w h 0 ρ p s > 2 C d m V c w cos β m A s β e ( B p + B 1 ) V c A s m A s β e
From Equation (19), increasing the width of the high- and low-pressure grooves and the initial overlap height of the high- and low-pressure grooves can improve the stability of the 2D valve. However, this increase will lead to an increase in its leakage. Increasing the damping piston can increase the velocity-related damping without other negative effects, thus improving the overall stability of the 2D valve.
The values of the constant parameters used to calculate the equations are listed in Table 1. The set of interpretations of all parameters in this paper is shown in Appendix A.

4. AMESim-Based Modeling and Simulation

4.1. Simulation Model Building

Figure 9 displays a block diagram of the closed-loop control of the 2D electric feedback flow control valve flow, where the current inlet and outlet pressure difference is calculated by the relationship between the differential pressure feedback rod displacement and differential pressure shown in Equation (2). The spool displacement is collected by the displacement sensor connected to the spool. Based on the known spool displacement and the size of the differential pressure between the inlet and the outlet, the current flow rate can be calculated using Equation (15) to perform the feedback control.
The overall simulation model of the 2D electrical feedback flow control valve is shown in Figure 10. The torque motor as the electrical-mechanical converter is the first stage of the overall model. In the second stage, the 2D piston will convert the torque motor’s angular signal into axial displacement. The main valve body is the third stage, which converts the axial displacement into flow output. The work port load can be simulated by adjusting different signal sources to simulate the load variations according to the needs.
AMESim simulation key parameter settings are shown in Table 2.

4.2. Step Response Characteristic Analysis

Based on the model described above and the parameters shown in Table 1, we set the input signal of the torque motor as a step signal to observe the effect of different key parameters on the response speed of the 2D electric feedback flow control valve under the no-load condition, as shown in Figure 10.
When the system pressure is 6 MPa, 9 MPa, and 15 MPa, the step response time is 44 ms, 40 ms, and 35 ms, respectively (Figure 11a). Increasing the system pressure will accelerate the response. Because increasing the system pressure reduces the pressure flow gain coefficient, the damping ratio will be reduced, thus increasing its response speed. However, the system pressure reduces the stability of the system.
When the damping piston length is 4 mm, 5 mm, and 6 mm, the step response time is 34 ms, 40 ms, and 43 ms, respectively (Figure 11b). As the length of the damping piston increases, the response speed gradually decreases, but it does not affect the steady-state value of the output flow. According to Equation (8), the length of the damping piston is proportional to its damping magnitude. Therefore, increasing the length of the damping piston will increase the damping ratio of the system and result in a slower response. In the meantime, this increase can improve the stability of the system.
If the initial overlap height is 0.001, 0.005, and 0.01 mm, the step response time is 43 ms, 40 ms, and 37 ms, respectively (Figure 11c). As the initial overlap height increases, the flow valve response time decreases, and the response speed increases. According to Equation (6), increasing the initial overlap height will increase the amount of high-pressure oil flowing into the sensitive chamber, and the pressure in the sensitive chamber will change faster, thus increasing the response speed. However, increasing the initial overlap height increases the leakage.
Therefore, adjusting the system pressure, the length of the damping piston, and the initial overlap height of the high- and low-pressure grooves can improve the response speed of the 2D electric feedback flow control valve. Increasing the system pressure and decreasing the length of the damping piston will reduce the stability of the system, whereas increasing the initial overlap height can improve the response speed but will increase the leakage. The step response curve also shows that the 2D electric feedback flow control valve is an over-damped system, and the step curve does not exhibit any oscillation or overshoot.

4.3. Load Characteristic Analysis

To obtain the steady-state characteristic curve of the 2D electric feedback flow regulating the valve spool displacement and output flow rate under flow compensation, we increased the load pressure from 1 MPa to 8 MPa and observed the changes in the main valve spool displacement and outlet flow rate. The simulation results are shown in Figure 12.
The steady-state load flow curve of the 2D electric feedback flow control valve with flow compensation is shown in Figure 12a. The 2D electric feedback flow control valve under flow compensation control has good flow control accuracy, but the flow control accuracy decreases as the load pressure gradually increases. When the input flow signal is 30 L/min, 60 L/min, 90 L/min, and 120 L/min, the maximum errors of the output flow are 2.1%, 1.8%, 1.3%, and 0.8%, respectively. The higher the output-rated flow, the higher the flow control accuracy.
The curve of spool displacement variation of the 2D electric feedback flow control valve under load variation when flow compensation is available is shown in Figure 12b. The spool displacement increases as the load increases. Under the same load variation, the higher the flow rate, the greater the change in the spool displacement.
To understand the load step response characteristics of the 2D electric feedback flow control valve under flow compensation, we conducted a simulation analysis for the same output flow rate and different output flow rates; the simulation results are shown in Figure 13.
Figure 13a shows the dynamic load flow characteristic curve of the 2D electric feedback flow control valve when the inlet pressure of the main valve is kept constant and the load pressure is stepped from 3 MPa to 4 MPa, 5 MPa, and 6 MPa, respectively. When the load pressure rises, the fluctuation of the flow curve also increases, but the adjustment time remains unchanged at approximately 20 ms, and there is no overshoot. After re-entering a steady state, the flow rates before and after the loading step remain.
According to the dynamic load flow characteristic curve of the 2D electric feedback flow control valve (Figure 13b), the output flow rate is 30 L/min, 60 L/min, and 90 L/min, respectively, when the load pressure is increased from 3 MPa to 6 MPa. If the output flow rate was higher, the flow rate fluctuation generated during the load step is also higher. However, the time required for the flow rate to return to the steady state is not affected by the output flow rate, and the output flow rate is unchanged before and after the load step.
Figure 13c shows the effect of the magnitude of damping provided by different differential pressure feedback rod damping pistons on the flow curve for a 2D electric feedback flow control valve output flow rate of 150 L/min and a load pressure step from 3 MPa to 6 MPa. When the damping is larger, the overshoot and oscillation of the flow curve are smaller, but the response speed decreases. This is because the greater the damping, the slower the differential pressure feedback rod feeds the differential pressure back to the controller. Nonetheless, the displacement of the feedback rod will be more stable. Therefore, the size of the differential pressure rod damping should be optimized to respond to differential pressure changes promptly and ensure a stable flow curve.

5. Experimental Studies

5.1. Physical Introduction

The actual size of the 2D electric feedback flow control valve prototype is 70 mm × 70 mm × 147 mm, the mass is 1535 g, and the maximum output flow rate is 200 L/min. The physical object is shown in Figure 14, and the key parameters of the flow valve are shown in Table 3.

5.2. Experimental Platform

We built a relevant experimental platform to experimentally verify the 2D electrical feedback flow control valve. Figure 15 shows a schematic diagram. The equipment of the experimental system mainly includes a signal generator, LVDT linear displacement sensor (model CD375, range 1.26 mm), pressure sensor (model CYYZ11, range 0–40 MPa, accuracy 0.1 MPa), flow meter (model MF1, range 0–200 L/min, accuracy 0.2%), 2D electric feedback flow control valve, oscilloscope, and computer. We used a signal generator to generate the input signal for the experiment. We controlled the torque motor using the controller of a 2D electric feedback flow control valve. The flow meter is used to observe and judge whether the current flow rate meets expectations. The oscilloscope is used to display the operation of each signal. A physical diagram of the experimental platform is shown in Figure 16a; a physical diagram of the experimental equipment is shown in Figure 16b.

5.3. Static Characteristics

5.3.1. Flow Static Characteristics

To test whether the static characteristics of the 2D electric feedback flow valve meet the design requirements, the system pressure is set to 9 MPa, and the load pressure is 0 MPa. We assigned the signal generator output frequency to a 0.02 Hz sine wave voltage signal, full-scale input, through the flow meter to detect the output flow signal. An oscilloscope was used to record the change in the flow signal with the input signal in multiple cycles, intercepting one of the complete cycles, after collating the experimental data to obtain a 2D electric feedback flow valve flow static characteristic curve (Figure 17).
The curves shown in Figure 17 show that the hysteresis size of the 2D electric feedback flow valve is 4.4%, and the linearity is 1.6% under no load. Both meet the design criteria of hysteresis and linearity of less than 5%. The theoretical value is better than the experimental value probably because the hysteresis size of the torque motor is not considered in the simulation, and some parameters are linearized when establishing the displacement angle equation.

5.3.2. Differential Pressure Measurement

In the displacement curve of the differential pressure feedback rod (Figure 18), when the differential pressure changes, the system pressure is 9 MPa. The throttle port size is adjusted so that the 2D electrical feedback flow control valve inlet and outlet pressure drop gradually increased, and this was repeated several times to obtain several groups of differential pressure feedback rod displacements and differential pressures against each other.
In general, the displacement curve of the differential pressure feedback rod is linear, and the individual position is non-linear, which is caused by friction. When the pressure drop of the inlet and outlet increases to approximately 8 MPa, the displacement of the differential pressure feedback rod is almost unchanged because of the limitation of the spring cavity. Therefore, the effective differential pressure measurement range is approximately 8 MPa.

5.4. Dynamic Characteristics

5.4.1. Step Response

Figure 19 shows the step response curve of the 2D electric feedback flow valve, where the system pressure is 9 MPa, the load pressure is 0 MPa, and the signal generator output amplitude is set to a 0–3 V (full-scale input) square wave signal. We recorded the step change in the flow signal, with the input signal recorded using the oscilloscope. The data are normalized.
The step response curve of the 2D electric feedback flow valve is overdamped without any overshoot, which is consistent with the simulation results. The step response time is approximately 44 ms. This meets the design standard of 50 ms but is slower than the simulation result of 40 ms, probably because the simulation does not consider the effect of torque motor hysteresis. The response time of the same level of flow valve is about 50 ms. The response speed of the 2D electric feedback flow control valve is faster, mainly because of the 2D valve structure and some system optimization such as changing the high- and low-pressure orifices into high- and low-pressure grooves.

5.4.2. Frequency Response

The signal generator is set up to generate a sine wave with an amplitude of 0~0.75 V (25% of full scale), and the frequency of the sine wave is varied. We processed these data to obtain the frequency characteristic curve of amplitude and phase angle with frequency change. When the amplitude ratio decays to 70.7% or the phase lag is 90°, the 2D electric feedback flow control valve no longer has good following characteristics. The following curves at 1 Hz, 5 Hz, 10 Hz, and 20 Hz flow are shown in Figure 20.
Figure 21 shows the frequency characteristic curve of the processed 2D electrical feedback flow control valve. The flow signal of the 2D electro-feedback flow control valve decays to −3 dB at a control signal frequency of about 17 Hz, with a phase lag of 90° at about 28 Hz. Therefore, the actual operating frequency width of the 2D electric feedback flow control valve is 17 Hz, consistent with the simulation results. Compared with the traditional differential-pressure-compensated flow valve, the 2D electrical feedback flow control valve flow valve has a significantly improved and enhanced frequency response.

5.5. Flow Stability

To verify the change of flow rate and spool displacement at the valve port when the load pressure at the working port increases, we fixed the input signal and gradually reduced the throttle opening to simulate the load change. We observed the pressure gauge and oscilloscope. When the spool displacement and outlet flow rate return to a steady state, the current values of spool displacement and output flow rate are recorded, and the control relationship between flow rate and spool displacement and load pressure can be obtained by changing the size of the input signal. The experimental results are shown in Figure 22.
The 2D electric feedback flow control valve does not change with the increase in load when the load increases from 0 MPa to 7.5 MPa (Figure 22a). When the output flow rate is 30 L/min, 60 L/min, 90 L/min, and 120 L/min, the steady-state errors corresponding to the output flow rate are 7.56%, 6.95%, 4.2%, and 3.43%, respectively. The larger the rated flow rate is, the smaller the steady-state error is. This finding is consistent with the previous simulation results, but the experimental error is larger probably due to some listed factors such as the processing error, pressure feedback accuracy, and oil temperature variation.
The trend of spool displacement is consistent with the previous simulation results, but as the rated flow rate increases, the actual spool displacement is larger compared to the simulation (Figure 22b). This may be caused by machining errors that lead to large differences between the theoretical and actual values of the valve port flow coefficient.

6. Conclusions

In this study, we have proposed a new 2D electrical feedback flow control valve. We further derived, simulated, and verified experimentally the mathematical model using AMESim. Our conclusions are:
(1)
The 2D electric feedback flow control valve not only has a simple structure and a high integration, but also, like the 2D servo valve, it is small, responds fast, and has a strong anti-pollution ability.
(2)
We have analyzed the 2D electrical feedback flow control valve by mathematical model and AMESim simulations. We found that the key parameters of the 2D piston would affect the response speed of the flow valve and verified the feasibility of closed-loop flow through differential pressure feedback rod and spool displacement. Through the simulation, we found that when the rated flow rate is larger, the flow steady-state error is smaller; the stability of the differential pressure feedback lever also affects the flow stability, so one should pay attention to the size of the differential pressure feedback lever damping when designing the prototype.
(3)
We have obtained the suitable key parameters by simulation and processed the prototype for experimental verification. The experimental results show that the 2D electro-feedback flow control valve has good dynamic, static characteristics, and flow stability. Compared with the same type of electric feedback flow valve, such as the flow control valve proposed previously [13], the 2D electric feedback flow control valve we proposed has better dynamic characteristics and a smaller size.

Author Contributions

Prototype design modeling, J.Z.; guidance, S.L. and W.J.; simulation, Q.D.; experiments, Q.D. and J.Z.; resources, S.L.; data organization, Q.D.; writing—original draft preparation, Q.D.; writing—review and editing, Q.D.; supervision, W.J.; project management, S.L.; funding acquisition, S.L. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by The National Key Research and Development Program of China, grant number 2019YFB2005201.

Data Availability Statement

Not applicable.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest. The funders had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses, or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript, or in the decision to publish the results.

Appendix A

The parameters used in the equations in this paper have been listed in the following table.
Table A1. Table of parameters collection.
Table A1. Table of parameters collection.
ParametersParaphrase
A o Effective force area on the right side of the pressure-sensing piston
A i Effective force area on the left side of the pressure-sensing piston
K q Pressure measuring spring stiffness
Δ x Magnitude of the differential pressure feedback rod displacement
A 1 Overlap area between the high-pressure groove and the oblique groove
A 2 Overlap area between the low-pressure groove and the oblique groove
p k Oil outlet pressure
p s Oil inlet pressure
K q Pressure measuring spring stiffness
Δ x Differential pressure feedback rod displacement
R 2D piston radii
β Inclination angle of the oblique groove
θ 2D piston rotation angle
h 0 Initial overlap height of the high-pressure trough and the inclined trough
x v Spool displacement
q 1 Flow rate from the high-pressure groove to the sensitive chamber via the oblique groove
q 2 Flow rate of the sensitive chamber into the low-pressure groove
A s Effective area of the sensitive chamber pressure on the 2D piston
V c Volume of sensitive chamber
β e Bulk modulus of elasticity of the oil
p c Sensitive chamber pressure
C d Flow coefficient
w Width of the high- and low-pressure grooves
ρ Fluid density
μ Viscosity coefficient of the oil
l Thickness of the damping piston
D Large diameter of the damping piston
d Small diameter of the damping piston
y 0 Oil film thickness
ω n Intrinsic frequency of the 2D valve piston
K 1 2D valve piston flow gain coefficient
K 2 2D valve piston pressure flow gain coefficient
ζ n 2D valve piston damping ratio
Q Valve port flow
ω Gradient of the valve port through-flow area
Δ p Differential inlet and outlet pressure

References

  1. Cheng, M. Modeling and analysis of a pressure compensated flow control valve. In Proceedings of the ASME Fluids Engineer Summer Meeting, Houston, TX, USA, 19–23 June 2005. [Google Scholar]
  2. Murrenhoff, H. Trends in Valve Development. In O+P Ölhydraulik und Pneumatik; Vereinigte Fachverlage: Mainz, Germany, 2003; Volume 46, pp. 1–36. [Google Scholar]
  3. Mao, Z.; Yoshida, K.; Kim, J. A micro vertically-allocated SU-8 check valve and its characteristics. Microsyst. Technol. 2018, 25, 245–255. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  4. Lin, T.; Lin, Y.; Ren, H. A double variablecontrol load sensing system for electric hydraulic excavator. Energy 2021, 233, 119999. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  5. Wu, D.; Burton, R.; Schoenau, G.; Bitner, D. Analysis of a pressurecompensated flow control valve. J. Dyn. Syst. Meas. Control. 2007, 129, 203–211. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  6. Lu, Y. New progress in flow control technology. Chin. Hydraul. Pneum. 1982, 2, 23–29. [Google Scholar]
  7. Kuehnlein, M.; Liermann, M.; Ewald, J.; Murrenhoff, H. Adjustable Flow-Control Valve for the Self-Energising Electro-Hydraulic Brake. Int. J. Fluid Power 2012, 13, 5–14. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  8. Okhotnikov, I.; Noroozi, S.; Sewell, P.; Godfrey, P. Evaluation of steady flow torques and pressure losses in a rotary flowcontrol valve by means of computational fluid dynamics. Int. J. Heat Fluid Flow 2017, 64, 89–102. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  9. Wang, J.; Liu, X.; Wang, Z.; Chen, J.; Han, Y.; Wang, Y. Flow characteristics analysis of constant flow control valve based on AMESim. J. Jilin Univ. (Eng. Technol. Ed.) 2022, 1–9. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  10. Jin, B.; Zhu, Y.; Li, B.; Zhang, D.; Zhang, L.; Chen, F. A differential control method for the proportional directional valve. J Zhejiang Univ. Sci. C (Comput. Electron.) 2014, 1, 892–902. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  11. Milecki, A.; Ortmann, J. Electrohydraulic linear actuator with two stepping motors controlled by overshoot-free algorithm. Mech. Syst. Signal Process. 2017, 96, 45–57. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  12. Wang, B.; Liu, H.; Hao, Y.; Quan, L.; Li, Y.; Zhao, B. Design and Analysis of a Flow-Control Valve with Controllable Pressure Compensation Capability for Mobile Machinery. IEEE Access 2021, 9, 98361–983682021. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  13. Li, M.; Ye, J.; Xie, B.; Yang, S.; Zeng, B.; Liu, J. Design and Test of Hydraulic Proportional Flow Valve forHydraulic Chassis in Tractor. Trans. Chin. Soc. Agric. Mach. 2018, 49, 397–403. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  14. Huang, J.; Dai, J.; Quan, L.; Lan, Y. Performance of proportional flow valve with pilot pressure drop–spool opening compensation. J. Dyn. Syst. Meas. Control. 2017, 139, 011009. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  15. Zhao, B.; Quan, L.; Huang, J.; Zhang, Y. Characteristics of Electro-hydraulic Proportional Valve with Pilot Pressure Variation-Displacement Adjustment. Chin. J. Mech. Eng. 2017, 53, 195–201. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  16. Hao, Y.; Quan, L.; Huang, J. Research on the performance of electro-hydraulic proportional flow valve controlled by active pilot pump. Proc. Inst. Mech. Eng. Part E 2017, 231, 720–731. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  17. Huang, J.; Wang, X.; Wang, H.; Hao, H. Development of a flow control valve with digital flow compensator. Flow Meas. Instrum. 2019, 66, 157–169. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  18. Zhang, J.; Deng, Y.; Zhang, N.; Zhang, B.; Qi, H.; Zheng, M. Vibration Performance Analysis of a Mining Vehicle with Bounce and Pitch Tuned Hydraulically Interconnected Suspension. Chin. J. Mech. Eng. 2019, 32, 195–211. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  19. Xu, Y.; Liu, X.; Xu, J. Research on the Structural Rigidity Characteristics of a Reconfigurable TBM Thrust Mechanism. Chin. J. Mech. Eng. 2019, 32, 45–57. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  20. Ruan, J.; Burton, R.; Ukrainetz, P. An Investigation into the Characteristics of a Two Dimensional ‘‘2D’’ Flow Control Valve. J. Dyn. Syst. Meas. Control. 2002, 124, 214–220. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  21. Ruan, J.; Ukrainetz, P.; Burton, R. Frequency domain modeling and indentification of 2D digital servo valve. Int. J. Fluid Power 2000, 1, 76–85. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  22. Long, Q.; Ruan, J.; Li, S.; He, J. Stability of 2D pressure servo valve considering cavitation effect. Acta Aeronaut. Astronaut. Sin. 2020, 41, 423281. Available online: https://kns.cnki.net/kcms/detail/11.1929.V.20190917.1003.012.html (accessed on 17 September 2019).
Figure 1. Schematic diagram of 2D electric feedback flow control valve. 1. plug; 2. reset spring; 3. damping piston; 4. main spool; 5. pressure-sensing piston; 6. differential-pressure-damping piston; 7. pressure-sensing spring; 8. seal; 9. zero adjustment screw; 10. torque motor housing; 11. torque motor bracket; 12. permanent magnet; 13. armature; 14. LVDT linear displacement sensor; 15. coil; 16. low-pressure groove; 17. high-pressure groove; 18. 2D piston; 19. thrust bearing; 20. bushing; 21. left end cap.
Figure 1. Schematic diagram of 2D electric feedback flow control valve. 1. plug; 2. reset spring; 3. damping piston; 4. main spool; 5. pressure-sensing piston; 6. differential-pressure-damping piston; 7. pressure-sensing spring; 8. seal; 9. zero adjustment screw; 10. torque motor housing; 11. torque motor bracket; 12. permanent magnet; 13. armature; 14. LVDT linear displacement sensor; 15. coil; 16. low-pressure groove; 17. high-pressure groove; 18. 2D piston; 19. thrust bearing; 20. bushing; 21. left end cap.
Machines 11 00220 g001
Figure 2. Schematic diagram of 2D piston rotation.
Figure 2. Schematic diagram of 2D piston rotation.
Machines 11 00220 g002
Figure 3. Schematic diagram of differential pressure feedback rod.
Figure 3. Schematic diagram of differential pressure feedback rod.
Machines 11 00220 g003
Figure 4. Torque motor schematic diagram. 1. armature; 2. permanent magnet; 3. coil.
Figure 4. Torque motor schematic diagram. 1. armature; 2. permanent magnet; 3. coil.
Machines 11 00220 g004
Figure 5. Structure principle of the 2D electric feedback flow regulating valve.
Figure 5. Structure principle of the 2D electric feedback flow regulating valve.
Machines 11 00220 g005
Figure 6. Schematic diagram of 2D piston rotation.
Figure 6. Schematic diagram of 2D piston rotation.
Machines 11 00220 g006
Figure 7. Schematic diagram of damping piston structure.
Figure 7. Schematic diagram of damping piston structure.
Machines 11 00220 g007
Figure 8. Control block diagram of 2D piston.
Figure 8. Control block diagram of 2D piston.
Machines 11 00220 g008
Figure 9. Flow feedback control block diagram.
Figure 9. Flow feedback control block diagram.
Machines 11 00220 g009
Figure 10. Simulation model of the 2D electric feedback flow control valve.
Figure 10. Simulation model of the 2D electric feedback flow control valve.
Machines 11 00220 g010
Figure 11. The effect of key parameters on the step response. (a) Effect of system pressure on the step; (b) effect of damping piston length on the step; (c) effect of initial overlap height on the step.
Figure 11. The effect of key parameters on the step response. (a) Effect of system pressure on the step; (b) effect of damping piston length on the step; (c) effect of initial overlap height on the step.
Machines 11 00220 g011
Figure 12. Steady state load characteristic curve. (a) Flow rate variation curve; (b) valve spool displacement variation curve.
Figure 12. Steady state load characteristic curve. (a) Flow rate variation curve; (b) valve spool displacement variation curve.
Machines 11 00220 g012
Figure 13. Load step response curve. (a) Effect of different load steps on the flow rate; (b) effect of load steps on different flow rates; (c) load step with different damping.
Figure 13. Load step response curve. (a) Effect of different load steps on the flow rate; (b) effect of load steps on different flow rates; (c) load step with different damping.
Machines 11 00220 g013
Figure 14. Physical diagram of the 2D electric feedback flow control valve.
Figure 14. Physical diagram of the 2D electric feedback flow control valve.
Machines 11 00220 g014
Figure 15. Schematic diagram of the experimental system. 1. oil tank; 2. hydraulic pump; 3. relief valve; 4. pressure gauge; 5. 2D electrical feedback flow control valve; 6. flow meter; 7–10. shut-off valve.
Figure 15. Schematic diagram of the experimental system. 1. oil tank; 2. hydraulic pump; 3. relief valve; 4. pressure gauge; 5. 2D electrical feedback flow control valve; 6. flow meter; 7–10. shut-off valve.
Machines 11 00220 g015
Figure 16. Test bench and some experimental equipment. (a) Actual picture of the experimental platform; (b) real picture of experimental equipment.
Figure 16. Test bench and some experimental equipment. (a) Actual picture of the experimental platform; (b) real picture of experimental equipment.
Machines 11 00220 g016
Figure 17. Static flow characteristic curve.
Figure 17. Static flow characteristic curve.
Machines 11 00220 g017
Figure 18. Displacement–differential pressure curve.
Figure 18. Displacement–differential pressure curve.
Machines 11 00220 g018
Figure 19. Step response curve.
Figure 19. Step response curve.
Machines 11 00220 g019
Figure 20. Flow-following curves at different frequencies. (a) Flow-following curve at an input signal frequency of 1 Hz; (b) flow-following curve at an input signal frequency of 5 Hz; (c) flow-following curve at an input signal frequency of 10 Hz; (d) flow-following curve at an input signal frequency of 20 Hz.
Figure 20. Flow-following curves at different frequencies. (a) Flow-following curve at an input signal frequency of 1 Hz; (b) flow-following curve at an input signal frequency of 5 Hz; (c) flow-following curve at an input signal frequency of 10 Hz; (d) flow-following curve at an input signal frequency of 20 Hz.
Machines 11 00220 g020aMachines 11 00220 g020b
Figure 21. Frequency response curve.
Figure 21. Frequency response curve.
Machines 11 00220 g021
Figure 22. Load characteristic curve. (a) Flow curve under static load variation; (b) spool displacement curve under static load variation.
Figure 22. Load characteristic curve. (a) Flow curve under static load variation; (b) spool displacement curve under static load variation.
Machines 11 00220 g022
Table 1. Constant parameters used for calculation formulas.
Table 1. Constant parameters used for calculation formulas.
ParametersValues
Oil density ρ /(kg·m−3)860
Absolute viscosity of oil μ /(Pa·s)0.03956
Maximum flow rate coefficient C d 0.62
Inclined trough inclination angle β 84
Bulk modulus of elasticity β e /MPa700
2D piston radii R /mm6
Table 2. Key parameters of AMESim simulation.
Table 2. Key parameters of AMESim simulation.
ParametersValues
Oil source temperature/°C20
Oil density/(kg·m−3)860
System input oil pressure/MPa9
Absolute viscosity of oil/(Pa·s)0.03956
Valve spool diameter/mm25
Valve spool quality/g104
Maximum flow rate coefficient0.62
Inclined trough inclination angle/°84
Sensitive chamber area/mm293.46
Initial overlap height/mm0.005
Magnetic pole area/mm232.5
Number of turns of coils500
Bulk modulus of elasticity/MPa700
Table 3. Key parameters of the 2D electric feedback flow control valve.
Table 3. Key parameters of the 2D electric feedback flow control valve.
ParametersValues
System input oil pressure/MPa9
Valve spool diameter/mm25
Valve spool quality/g96
Inclined trough inclination angle/°84
2D position diameter/mm12
High-pressure groove width/mm5
Initial overlap height/mm0.005
Damping piston diameter/mm15.82
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content.

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Dai, Q.; Zhao, J.; Li, S.; Jia, W. Characterization of 2D Electrical Feedback Flow Control Valve. Machines 2023, 11, 220. https://doi.org/10.3390/machines11020220

AMA Style

Dai Q, Zhao J, Li S, Jia W. Characterization of 2D Electrical Feedback Flow Control Valve. Machines. 2023; 11(2):220. https://doi.org/10.3390/machines11020220

Chicago/Turabian Style

Dai, Quanchao, Jiantao Zhao, Sheng Li, and Wenang Jia. 2023. "Characterization of 2D Electrical Feedback Flow Control Valve" Machines 11, no. 2: 220. https://doi.org/10.3390/machines11020220

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop