Imagine an elevator control system suddenly failing—how would a rapidly descending cabin avoid catastrophic impact? Elevator buffers serve as the last line of defense for passenger safety. Installed at the bottom of elevator shafts, these critical safety devices must reliably absorb impact energy under extreme conditions, ensuring smooth deceleration and protecting passengers. This article explores the technical principles, performance standards, and key considerations of elevator buffers.
Fundamentals and Classification of Elevator Buffers
Elevator buffers are designed to protect passengers when control systems fail, preventing cabins from crashing into the shaft bottom. Buffer selection must match elevator speed and mass to effectively absorb impact energy. While free-fall scenarios are rare, safety standards often assume free-fall conditions when specifying buffer performance requirements.
Elevator buffers fall into two categories based on energy absorption methods:
1. Energy Accumulation Buffers
These buffers store impact energy to achieve deceleration. Common types include mechanical springs and polymer buffers, which convert impact energy into strain energy. Some also dissipate energy during reset for smoother deceleration. Subcategories include:
2. Energy Dissipation Buffers
Typically hydraulic, these buffers convert impact energy into heat via fluid flow and throttling. Suitable for all elevator speeds, especially high-speed applications (>1.6 m/s), they provide stable and reliable deceleration, making them ideal for skyscrapers.
Performance Standards for Energy Dissipation Buffers
Key principles govern these buffers:
Buffer stroke length must equal the distance required to stop a fall at 115% rated speed. Most designs optimize space by adhering to minimum stroke requirements.
Emergency Terminal Speed-Limiting Devices
These devices automatically reduce cabin or counterweight speed by cutting power to the drive motor. By lowering speed below the buffer’s rated capacity, they reduce impact load. Independent of normal deceleration systems, these devices allow for "reduced-stroke" buffer designs.
Reduced-Stroke Calculations
Stroke reduction depends on elevator speed:
Standards like EN81.1 specify minimum strokes (e.g., 420 mm for 50% reduction, 540 mm for 33.3%). Some regulations exempt these requirements.
Buffer Performance Optimization
Hydraulic buffers closely match ideal performance by controlling fluid flow, but only for specific masses. Real-world applications require balancing deceleration across varying loads (e.g., empty vs. full cabins). While standards limit average deceleration and peak duration, some designs prioritize passenger comfort by minimizing instantaneous g-forces.
Safety Switches and Testing
Many buffers include switches to detect full extension, ensuring readiness for emergencies. If a switch fails, the elevator system shuts down.
Before market release, buffers undergo type testing per EN81.1 or ASME A17.1 standards. Tests include free-fall drops at temperature extremes (0°C–25°C), with measurements of displacement, velocity, and acceleration at ≥100 Hz sampling rates.
Modeling and Analysis
Advanced computer modeling and dynamic testing optimize buffer performance, enhancing safety, reliability, and cost-efficiency.
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