Fluid power 101

engineer working with a fluid power machine

Fluid power is just what the name says: fluids generate or transmit power to where it’s needed. Specifically, fluid power is divided into hydraulics and pneumatics technologies:

  • Hydraulics: the fluid is a liquid, usually oil or water
  • Pneumatics: the fluid is a gas, typically compressed air. Nitrogen or argon can also be used, but the expense of producing and processing these gasses usually precludes their use

Fluid power systems

Are used in a variety of applications from braking systems on cars to robotics to heavy machinery. These systems produce linear motion using either hydraulic or pneumatic cylinders. Compare fluid power with two other methods of power transmission, electrical and mechanical, which usually need a mechanical device to convert rotational motion to linear motion.

Fluid power’s cylinders are compact, fitting smaller spaces, yet they have high-energy potential. Typically, fluid power systems use valves to control direction, speed, force and torque.

The advantages of hydraulics and pneumatics

Hydraulics

Pneumatics

High power-to-weight ratio

Inexpensive

High torque at low speed

Lightweight

Ability to hold torque constant

Simple control systems

Ruggedness

Clean & non-reactive in magnetic environments

Reliability

Speed and precision

hydraulic machine with various components

How hydraulics work

Hydraulics is all about physics. Pascal’s Law, also called Pascal’s Principle, states that when there’s an increase in pressure at any point in a fluid that’s enclosed, there’s an equal increase at every other point in the container. The fluid is incompressible.

Perhaps the best-known application of Pascal's law is the hydraulic press. Engineering.com gives us the math:

A force F1 is applied to a small piston of area A1. The pressure is transmitted through a liquid to a larger piston of area A2. Since the pressure is the same on both sides, we see that P = F1/A1 = F2/A2. Therefore, the force F2 is larger than F1 by multiplying factor A2/A1.

 

You’ll find this principle working in hydraulic brakes, car lifts, hydraulic jacks, and forklifts, for example.

Hydraulic brakes

Without hydraulics, pressing the brake pedal with your foot would not produce enough force to apply all four brakes hard enough to quickly stop. Hydraulic brakes rely on pipes filled with fluid that multiply force and transmit it where it’s needed.

How it works:

  • When you press on the brake pedal, you’re moving a lever that forces a piston into a long, narrow cylinder, which is filled with hydraulic fluid (usually glycol-ether, mineral oil or silicone-based).
  • The piston plunges into the cylinder, squirting hydraulic fluid through a long, narrow pipe at the end.
  • This pipe feeds into wider cylinders located next to the car’s four brakes.
  • When force is applied, it multiplies, because the cylinders near the brakes are wider than the one near the brake pedal. The multiplied force is able to clamp the brakes and stop your car.

Top hydraulics markets

According to the National Fluid Power Association (NFPA), these are the markets that use hydraulics the most:

Construction machinery

 

24%

Agricultural machinery

14%

Automotive (including light trucks)

9%

Class 4-8 trucks (including vocational trucks)

6%

Material handling (including conveying)

6%

Oil & gas machinery

4%

Lawn & garden

4%

 

Hydraulics are also widely used in heavy industrial equipment in factories.

 

a digger at work

How do pneumatics work?

Pneumatics work the same way hydraulics do, except that instead of liquids, power is transmitted by gas.

  • Typically, pneumatic systems use a continuous supply of compressed air, which is provided by a compressor.
  • The compressor sucks in air from its environment and stores it in a high-pressure tank known as a receiver.
  • The compressed air feeds the system via pipes and valves.
  • An advantage to pneumatics is that air in the atmosphere is free and plentiful – you have an unlimited supply.

The designs of pneumatic-system components make it ideal for simple automatic controls, which is why it’s often used in automation systems. You can use linear movement or angular rotational movement, with variable operational speeds.

Another place you’ll find pneumatic systems is in HVACs systems, where compressed air is used as a tool for communication:

  • From a controller, compressed air flows through copper and plastic tubes to a control device, normally a damper or valve actuator.
  • Control is based on sensors and the building’s thermostats that bleed or retain the line pressure, from sensor to control device to actuator.
  • Each sensor reacts to changes in temperature, static pressure, humidity and other conditions.
  • The sensors feed back in a control loop to open or close the actuator in order to maintain the control set point.
  • The actuators, which contain diaphragms, act in sequence with the control signal.
  • The building’s thermostat is connected to one or more air lines from the primary source of compressed air, and to a valve or other final device.

Top pneumatic markets

According to the NFPA, these are the markets that use hydraulics the most:

Class 4-8 trucks (including vocational trucks)

 

13%

Automotive (including light trucks)

5%

Food processing

4%

Medical equipment

4%

Packaging machinery

3%

Material handling (including conveying)

3%

Semiconductor

3%

 

Best practice & Advantages of Fluid Power

The NFPA recommends these practices to cut energy usage by nearly a third:

Hydraulics

Pneumatics

Effective flow control

Eliminating pressure drop

Smart use of accumulators

Repairing leaks

Pressure reducing valves

Reducing pressure

Load-sensing pumps

Evaluating plumbing and storage

Pressure compensated pumps

Optimizing air blow

Servo valves

Employing intermediate bore-size cylinders

Hydraulic power units vs. electric motors

Correctly sizing components

Eliminating parasitic losses

 

 

 

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